Take Five: Green Means Green

A selection of the major stories impacting ESG investors, in five easy pieces. 

European regulators have ratcheted up efforts to eliminate greenwashing from the investment sector.

End of an era I – The fight against greenwashing inched ahead with the release of final guidelines for naming ESG- or sustainability-related funds by the European Securities and Markets Authority (ESMA). It had previously been possible to launch an EU environmental opportunities fund, claiming Article 8 classification under the Sustainable Finance Disclosure Regulation (SFDR), while allocating as little as 10% of assets to demonstrably green investments. ESMA has now declared that era to be over, with new guidelines and thresholds including a minimum of 80% of investments to meet funds’ environmental or social characteristics, or sustainable investment objectives. Initial reactions suggested the market has welcomed some aspects – such as definitions for what could be included in a fund with an ‘impact’ or ‘transition’ label – but is baffled by others. These include ditching plans to require funds labelled ‘sustainable’ to contain at least 50% sustainable investments as defined by SFDR – due to feedback saying this was too open to discretion – instead opting to introduce a commitment to invest “meaningfully” in sustainable investments – whatever that means.

End of an era II – Until recently, opportunistic portfolio managers could stuff their ‘green’ portfolios with tech stocks to deliver strong returns at relatively little expense to the planet. That scam has long been rumbled, but the gig is definitely up now that Microsoft – which in 2020 pledged to become carbon negative by the end of the decade – has admitted its carbon emissions jumped 30% last year, as it pursued dominance in the AI market. The upsurge – confirmed in the tech giant’s annual sustainability report this week – followed news of a deal with asset manager Brookfield to build 10.5 gigawatts of renewable energy capacity to support its plans to rely solely on clean power sources by 2030. With Microsoft having offered to relocate staff amid rising US-China tensions, its AI strategy might face as many ‘S’ and ‘G’ as ‘E’ headwinds. But a sector-wide power grab seems likely, within the context of wider demand trends, with the International Energy Agency forecasting data centres will double their energy needs to 800 terrawatts by 2026, fuelled by both cryptocurrencies and AI.

Levels of engagement – More evidence was provided this week