Yesterday, the European Commission released its proposal to adjust the Sustainable Finance Disclosure Regulation (SFDR), which addresses several persistent challenges and represents an important step towards a more coherent, effective and user-friendly EU sustainable finance framework.
Smarter sustainable finance disclosures should be investor-friendly, focused, pragmatic and aligned with corporate reporting
EFAMA publishes recommendations for the SFDR review
EFAMA’S views on the upcoming Level 1 Review of the Sustainable Finance Disclosure Regulation (SDFR REVIEW)
EFAMA’s latest research shows Article 9 funds experienced net outflows in 2024
Upcoming SFDR review is an opportunity to make sustainable investing easier and more attractive for investors
EC Consultation on EU Taxonomy Delegated Acts
Simplification Omnibus reduces regulatory burden while maintaining important sustainability ambitions like double materiality
Yesterday, the European Commission published its first regulatory simplification Omnibus, which aims to reduce the sustainability reporting burden on EU companies through amendments to the Corporate Sustainability Due Diligence Directive (CSDDD), Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive (CSRD) and EU Taxonomy Regulation. We support this initiative as a positive and necessary step to increase the competitiveness of European companies and reduce regulatory burden, while still maintaining the ambitions of the EU Green Deal.
Positive developments include:
Financial sector calls for a coordinated approach by regulators when changing sustainable finance disclosures
Joint letter asks European Commission to delay technical changes by supervisors until broader review of SFDR is complete
Joint industry letter asks European Commission to delay technical changes by supervisors until broader review of SFDR is complete
In a joint letter, EFAMA, together with the European Banking Federation (EBF), Insurance Europe, European Savings and Retail Banking Group (ESBG), Alternative Investment Management Association (AIMA), Association for Financial Markets in Europe (AFME), and the European Association of Cooperative Banks, have released a joint letter asking the European Commission to better coordinate the publication of new rules for the Sustainable Finance Disclosure Regulation (SFDR).
Key messages on the Implementation of SFDR
The Sustainable Finance Disclosure Regulation (SFDR) has promoted transparency in sustainable finance, however its use by market participants as a de facto ESG labelling regime has stretched it beyond its original intentions and not always been helpful. The current European Commission review needs to address how SFDR can provide clearer, more meaningful information for retail investors, promote transition finance, and align well with other relevant legislation.