This is a regular publication from ÀÖÓ㣨Leyu£©ÌåÓý¹ÙÍø's EMA Financial Services Regulatory Insight Centre, providing key updates on the latest ESG regulatory developments impacting financial services firms in the UK and the EU.
This edition of ESG Regulatory Essentials is shorter than usual. 2024 is a year of elections, and both the EU and UK saw a pause in major regulatory announcements as a result in the run-up to the summer break. Significant updates are unlikely until policymakers return from their summer recesses and engage with post-election political priorities. In the UK, the new Labour government has committed to making the UK `the green finance capital of the world' via key initiatives on credible transition plans and aligning UK sustainability disclosure requirements with the ISSB and TPT frameworks. In the EU, policymakers will be challenged to enact a more competitiveness-focused agenda without downplaying climate aspirations.Â
In the meantime, global standard-setters have continued to progress their work programmes. Nature-related financial risk continues to be in focus, with the Financial Stability Board (FSB) publishing its stocktake on regulatory initiatives across jurisdictions and the Network for Greening the Financial System (NGFS) developing a conceptual framework.Â
The International Association of Insurance Supervisors (IAIS) is consulting on insurers' climate-related public disclosures and the inclusion of climate risks in regulatory reporting. The Pensions Regulator (TPR) conducted a review of pension scheme disclosures, finding that trustees need to do more to comply with their ESG duties.Â
Finally, the EU Banking Package (which includes ESG risk-related provisions) and the Corporate Sustainability Due Diligence Directive (CSDDD) have both been published in the Official Journal of the EU (OJEU), completing lengthy negotiation processes.Â
For more information on these and other updates, read on.Â