Ambiguous sustainable investing will land investors in the dock

Source:Global Times Published: 2020/1/1 21:08:40

A drone photo shows a heart-shaped island in Bihu Lake in Zhangzhou City, East China's Fujian Province, Nov. 13, 2019. The lake has become a popular tourist attraction as the local environment has improved. Photo:China News Service

The business of adding some kind of environmental, social or governance (ESG) analysis to investment decisions is snowballing. Such practices grew 34 percent in the two years after 2016 and are now a factor in $31 trillion of assets under management, according to the Global Sustainable Investment Alliance. In 2020, the downside of that surge could put certain players in the dock.

The sector's headaches have already caught out some big names. Fidelity had to review a filter on its investment platform after SCM Direct determined in November that funds flagged as socially responsible did not actually have such an investment focus. InfluenceMap discovered that a State Street fund marketed as "fossil fuel reserves free" still held stakes in energy and mining companies active in thermal coal. The 2 Degrees Investing Initiative found that 85 percent of all so-called green-themed funds, a specific niche of the wider overall market, have misleading marketing. 

Most of those called out can escape with a spot of bad PR and some pledges to clarify what's on offer. There is, though, a lack of clarity over what firms and consumers mean by and expect from sustainable and green investment products, the UK's Financial Conduct Authority concluded in October. But regulators also want to encourage innovation. Products that might initially look misleadingly badged are often just a reflection of the bewildering array of different ESG-focused investment products. These range from the outright exclusion of polluters and sin stocks, to using third-party ESG ratings to pick investments, to pushing companies to become more sustainable.

But a situation where no one really knows who's greenwashing and who's legitimate provides perfect cover for actual wrongdoers. Initiatives to better define sustainability like the European Union's Taxonomy, or to improve data on companies' climate-transition risks, like the global Task Force on Climate-Related Financial Disclosures, should help clear the mist.

But these take time to get right and implement. Meanwhile, the current fuzzy definitions can encourage and, for a time, obscure mis-selling and fraud. It makes a greenwashing scandal likely sooner rather than later. Victims will be hard-pressed to argue they weren't warned.

The authors is George Hay, Reuters Breakingviews columnist. The article was first published on Reuters Breakingviews. bizopinion@globaltimes.com.cn



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