Certain forms of greenwashing can also be challenged via EU and national laws against unfair commercial practices or requiring standarised labeling.
The EU Taxonomy Regulation sets the standard for sustainability of financial products across Europe, including which economic activities may be considered and advertised as environmentally sustainable and which may not.
Supervisory authorities such as the European Securities and Markets Authority (ESMA) or the German Federal Financial Supervisory Authority (BaFin) are increasingly finding difficulties and deficiencies in classification of ‘green‘ products, driven in part by the lack of specifications and guidelines for supervisory and rating authorities to make sustainability criteria measurable. Consequences can include liability risks, fragmentation of markets, distribution problems due to diverging sustainability criteria or misinvestment, which can also lead to misjudgment or lack of understanding of greenwashing risks. This may result in claims for damages by investors, who are faced with incorrect or insufficient information.
While the content of the required ESG disclosures is largely prescribed at EU level, the creation of the legal framework for monitoring and enforcing the requirements is the responsibility of member states. The problem is that it is not enough to know the minimum standards of categorisation, but also how these are to be measured and documented. This is a matter of ongoing concern for some EU member states.
In Germany, BaFin has published a guidance notice which defines the term “sustainability” on the basis of ESG criteria and illustrates physical and transition risks that may increasingly unfold. However, a planned BaFin directive on this has recently been suspended.
The French supervisory authority (AMF) has published an official guideline on how non-financial approaches should be incorporated in the management of the investment scheme now that the sole inclusion of such criteria no longer constitutes a change subject to the prior approval of the AMF. At the same time, the pressure to impose sanctions is being increased, with the French legislature passing a law in April for the first time that sanctions the advertising of products as "sustainable" without them meeting the necessary requirements.
Global standards-setting body the International Organization of Securities Commissions (IOSCO) recently published a Recommendation on Sustainability-Related Practices, Policies, Procedures and Disclosure in Asset Management (79-page / 706KB PDF), which aims to set standards to avoid greenwashing-related risks and to allow regulators to collect and process relevant, comparable ESG data as part of the investment management process. This will allow regulators, businesses and customers alike to better evaluate and monitor companies' ESG risks, progress and performance.
The approach in different jurisdictions demonstrates the need to look at regulation in other countries, particularly when there are plans to operate there in the future, or as an indication of what law mays be adapted and enacted in your country.
Routes of investor action
In the UK, the 2000 Financial Services and Markets Act 2000 offers a potential cause of action if an investor has suffered loss as a result of greenwashing – for example, buying shares in a company where the green credentials of the company have been overstated, or where a financial product is marketed as ‘green’ and therefore sold at a premium (or ‘greenium’).