EFAMA has joined together with the European Sustainable Investment Forum (Eurosif), the Principles for Responsible Investment (PRI), the Institutional Investors Group on Climate Change (IIGCC) and over 90 investors and financial market participants, to call on the European Commission to uphold the integrity and ambition of the first set of European Sustainability Reporting Standards (ESRS).
Sustainability reporting (NFRD/CSRD)
To integrate ESG consideration into investment decisions, asset managers need reliable, comparable and standardised information on how companies perform against pre-defined sustainability criteria. At the same time, asset managers require better ESG company data for their own compliance with reporting obligations under the Taxonomy and SFDR.
EFAMA advocates expanding the scope of entities and adopting mandatory EU sustainability reporting standards under proposed Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive. Sustainability information disclosed under CSRD should be subsequently centralised in a publicly-accessible European Single Access Point. At the same time, the EU should encourage developments towards a harmonized global sustainability disclosures ecosystem. To ensure consistency, transparency and accountability, we also advocate for the development of a European regulatory framework for providers of sustainability data, research and ratings.
Joint industry letter on corporate sustainability reporting
Ensuring alignment between the Disclosure Requirements of Investee Companies and the Sustainable Finance Obligations
The draft ESRS Delegated Act presents several potential implications for investors and entails major inconsistencies across the Sustainable Finance legislative framework. In our policy paper we focus on the alignment of ESG reporting on two crucial areas: (1) the requirements of the Sustainable Finance Disclosure Regulation (SFDR), notably the Principal Adverse Impact indicators (PAIs), and (2) the Transition Plans and targets.
ISSB's Exposure Drafts on Sustainable Reporting Standards
EFAMA shares the urgent need to improve the consistency and comparability of sustainability reporting at a global level. Therefore, we welcome the opportunity to respond to the ISSB consultation on the Exposure Drafts on “General Requirements for Disclosure of Sustainability Related Financial Information” (IFRS S1) and on “Climate-Related Disclosures” (IFRS S2).
IMF 2021: Thought-provoking discussions and insightful presentations
This year’s Investment Management Forum featured an incredible number of high-level speakers and thought-provoking discussions.
The European Single Access Point: a powerful tool for investors to assess the ESG performance of companies
EFAMA sees the European Commission’s proposal for the creation of a European Single Access Point (ESAP) as a crucial step in addressing the limited availability and scattered nature of financial and sustainability-related entity information at EU level.
EFAMA supports the formation of the International Sustainability Standards Board
We wholeheartedly support the formation of the International Sustainability Standards Board (ISSB) as announced today by the IFRS Foundation. The investment management industry is keen to actively engage in its governance and technical work, as it develops.
Market Insights | Issue #4 | ESG investing in the UCITS market: a powerful and inexorable trend
The report looks at the major trends in the ESG UCITS market, the impact of the coronavirus pandemic, and the behaviour of ESG and non-ESG funds.
3 questions to Thierry Bogaty on the EU Ecolabel for retail financial products
Q #1 Can the EU Ecolabel for retail financial products help channel individual investors’ savings into environmentally sustainable projects?
A well-designed EU Ecolabel has the potential to provide clear guidance on the financial products retail investors can invest in if they wish to support environmentally sustainable projects and activities - in line with the EU Taxonomy Regulation. The European Commission wants to create a trusted and verified label for retail investors, who would benefit from better comparability of financial products.