Skip to content
  • MyNewMarkets.com
  • Claims Journal
  • Insurance Journal TV
  • Academy of Insurance
  • Carrier Management
Insurance Journal - Property Casualty Industry News

Featured Stories

  • Shareholders Sue Microsoft Over Cloud Business, AI
  • Wall Street Is Gaining New Cat Models to Predict Wars
  • Articles
  • Jobs
  • Markets

Current Magazine

current magazine
  • Read Online
  • Subscribe
  • Login
  • Front Page
    • National
    • International
    • Most Popular
    • Magazine
    • Forums
    • Blogs
    • Videos/Podcasts
    • Newsletters
  • News
    • Most Popular
    • National
    • International
    • East
    • Midwest
    • South Central
    • Southeast
    • West
  • Magazines
  • Research
  • Directories
  • Jobs
  • Features
    • Events
    • Forums
    • Market Directories
    • Quotes
    • Polls
    • Rankings & Awards
    • Insurance Giving Back
  • Subscribe

EU Prepares to Get Tougher on Asset Managers that ‘Greenwash’ Sustainable Credentials

By Simon Jessop and Kate Abnett | March 10, 2021
Email This Subscribe to Newsletter
  • Article

LONDON/BRUSSELS – For money managers and advisers keen to market their sustainable investing credentials to European clients, going green is about to get a lot tougher.

Under a suite of new EU finance rules due to be rolled out in stages, beginning on March 10, firms including fund houses, insurers and pension funds that provide financial products or services in the European Union will have to begin disclosing how sustainable they really are.

The new rules “should make it harder for market participants to talk up environmental credentials without following through with action, so-called ‘greenwashing’….”

The new EU legislation, called the Sustainable Finance Disclosure Regulation (SFDR), aims to help drive 1 trillion euros ($1.19 trillion) into green investments over the next decade, iron out the patchy climate-related information currently provided by financial market participants, and give firms with genuinely sustainable products an edge.

“The crucial point is that this covers any entity or financial product,” said Lucien Firth, a partner at law firm Simmons & Simmons. “It doesn’t matter if you market all of your products as sustainable or none of them – it covers all of them.”

The SFDR rules should make it harder for market participants to talk up environmental credentials without following through with action, so-called ‘greenwashing’, and could also determine how big a slice firms can win of the fast-growing market for products with a focus on environmental, social and governance (ESG) issues.

Demand to invest in ESG funds jumped last year, driving assets under management up 29% in the fourth quarter from the prior quarter to nearly $1.7 trillion, according to asset management industry tracker Morningstar.

“Those that already have a good offering in place are going to stand to benefit,” said Alexandra Mihailescu Cichon, executive vice president of sales and marketing at ESG data firm RepRisk.

Disclosures

Set to roll out in several stages over the next two years, SFDR contains reporting obligations at both the company and product level, although investment managers say regulators’ last-minute release of final details of some of the rules is hindering their preparations.

From this week, all funds must disclose in their pre-contractual information how they factor sustainability risks into their investment decisions.

Additionally, those funds promoting environmental or social characteristics, or sustainability objectives, must explain both in their marketing and on their websites the objectives and how they plan to meet them.

Firms must also give an assessment of the main negative impacts their investments will have on the environment and society, or explain why they have not done so. From June, firms with more than 500 staff will be required to report the impacts.

“Any sustainability-related claim by a financial product must be well justified,” a European Commission spokesperson said. National financial market authorities will enforce potential penalties for non-compliance.

Andy Pettit, director of EMEA policy research at Morningstar, said the rules would “go a long way on the greenwashing front… (it will be) much easier to compare different products.”

Within funds, greenwashing could include one that is marketed as “sustainable,” but which includes lots of companies with high carbon emissions. The lack of a firm definition of greenwashing means it is often in the eye of the beholder.

From March 10, funds will also begin deciding whether to label themselves as an Article 9, 8 or 6 fund – fully focussed on sustainable objectives; fully or partly focussed on environmental, social issues or sustainability issues; or not focused on sustainability, respectively – with a hard deadline to do so by the end of 2021.

Article 8 or 9 funds will eventually have to make additional disclosures about what their sustainable objectives are, and from next year report on them against a set of granular sustainability criteria.

Disclosures at a company level will also expand to include data specified by the EU, such as CO2 emissions and water usage across an investment firm’s entire investment portfolio.

Mike Everett, governance and stewardship director at Aberdeen Standard Investments, said his team had analyzed all the company’s products, updated pre-contractual documentation, secured regulatory approval and notified clients of the changes.

The company would also publish additional company-level descriptions of its ESG process and policies and details of how the fund managers consider adverse impacts in the investment process.

“These developments require significant effort and management, but are necessary in order to meet the requirements of the regulation,” Everett said.

Ill Prepared

Many other firms, however, have yet to get to grips with the rules, according to fund servicing firm Apex Group, which pointed to a recent client webinar where just 17% of the audience said they felt fully prepared to meet the rules.

While EU regulators have yet to confirm some of the data that asset managers will need to provide to back up their sustainability claims, there is also concern that some data does not even exist.

Under the EU’s current Non Financial Reporting Directive, for example, smaller companies do not have to provide the same level of data as larger companies on factors such as carbon emissions and boardroom diversity – which could make it tougher for a small-cap fund manager to provide evidence of its portfolio’s sustainability under SFDR.

Given the uncertainty, some investment managers are proving reluctant to commit to labeling themselves as fully sustainable and may wait until later in the year before finally deciding whether to define themselves as an Article 8 or 9 fund.

“Investors are put in a difficult position as (some company)data needed to report on …(the) mandatory indicators are not readily available from their investee companies,” said Anna Hirai, co-head of ESG Research at consultants SquareWell Partners.

For Neil Robson, financial services and funds partner at law firm Katten Muchin Rosenman, the greater transparency provided by the new rules should help drive change and potentially expose any lack of action at odds with funds’ green claims.

“Despite the green agenda being front-and-center in the general media, many fund managers are still following a purely financial, profit-led strategy without any particular ESG focus.”

($1 = 0.8418 euros) (Reporting by Simon Jessop and Kate Abnett; editing by Susan Fenton)

Copyright 2026 Reuters. Click for restrictions.

Topics Europe

Was this article valuable?

Thank you! Please tell us what we can do to improve this article.

Thank you! % of people found this article valuable. Please tell us what you liked about it.

Here are more articles you may enjoy.

US P/C Industry Records $16 Billion Underwriting Income in Q1
Stafford / United Kingdom - November 15 2020: Airbnb app logo seen on the screen of smartphone, placed on dollar bills.Virginia Says Airbnb Lacks Insurance License to Offer Host Damage Protection Plan
WR Berkley Founder and Executive Chairman Dies at 80
Oil Tankers Go Dark to Sneak More Barrels of Oil Through Hormuz

Written By Simon Jessop

More From Author

Written By Kate Abnett

More From Author

The most important insurance news,
in your inbox every business day.

Get the insurance industry's trusted newsletter

Email This Subscribe to Newsletter
  • Categories: International & Reinsurance NewsTopics: asset management, asset managers, environmental social and governance (ESG) criteria, EU climate change, greenwashing, sustainable development goals (SDG), sustainable investments
  • Have a hot lead? Email us at newsdesk@insurancejournal.com
More News
Read the 14-Point Draft Memorandum of Understanding Between the US and Iran
Hacking Group Claims Major Hack of Novo Nordisk and Attempted $25M Extortion
Group business people handshake at meeting table in office together with confident shot from top view . Young businessman and businesswoman workers express agreement of investment deal.Appetite for Insurance M&A Remains as AI Enters the Chat, Says PwC
Evergrande Liquidators Seek to Quash Regulator’s PwC HK Deal
More News Features

Read This Next

  • EU Prepares to Get Tougher on Asset Managers that 'Greenwash' Sustainable Credentials
  • Oil Tankers Go Dark to Sneak More Barrels of Oil Through Hormuz
  • Consultant Diversity Labs Forced to Shut Down After DEI Investigation by FTC
  • Nonprofit Hospital Entitled to Liability Cap But Not Immunity, Says NJ Supreme Court
  • Acrisure Goes After Former Owners of Businesses it Acquired for Leaving to Compete

Insurance Jobs

  • Claims Adjuster Team Lead - California, CA
  • Senior Trial Attorney (Remote – Fresno, CA) - California, CA
  • Senior Data Engineer Con II - Illinois, IL
  • Digital Product Manager (Multiple Levels Available) - Remote, IL
  • Insurance Premium Auditor – REMOTE - Remote
MyNewMarkets
  • Rational Market? How About 'Dumb' and 'Bizarre'?
  • Workers’ Comp: What to Know About Workplace Violence; Victims Are Most Often Healthcare Workers and Teachers
  • Emerging Risks to Watch: AI, Data Centers, and Autonomous Vehicles
  • AI Disintermediation
  • If an Endorsement Is Missing from a Policy's Schedule of Forms, Is It Enforceable?
Claims Journal
  • AI Is Reshaping Insurance: What Claims Pros and Lawyers Must Know Now
  • Home Insurance And The Unraveling of Florida Communities
  • Judge Dismisses Musk's xAI Trade Secret Lawsuit Against OpenAI
  • Ship Owner Seeks Dismissal of All Economic Loss Claims From Baltimore Bridge Collapse
  • Danone US Sues Chobani Over High-Protein Yogurt Labeling Claims
Academy of Insurance education
  • June 18th Agency Best Practices Revisited: Why The Order Taker Standard Does NOT Work to Your Detriment
  • July 9th Business Auto Pollution Myths
  • July 16th Your Supply Chain. The Cybercriminal's Playground
  • July 30th We Don't Believe in No-Win Scenarios: AI & Human Judgment in Insurance

Insurance News

  • News by Region
  • News by Topic
  • Yesterday

Site Search

Features

  • Insurance Markets Directory
  • Forums
  • A.M. Best Company Ratings
  • Industry Events
  • Agencies For Sale
  • Newswire
  • Insurance Jobs
  • Rankings & Awards

Connect with us

  • Email Newsletters
  • Magazine Subscriptions
  • For Your Website
  • RSS Feeds
  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • LinkedIn
  • Do Not Sell My Info

Insurance Journal

  • Submit News
  • Advertise
  • Subscribe
  • Reprints
  • Link to Us
  • Contact Us

Wells Media Group Network

  • Insurance Journal
  • MyNewMarkets.com
  • Claims Journal
  • Insurance Journal TV
  • Academy of Insurance
  • Carrier Management
© 2026 by Wells Media Group, Inc. Privacy Policy | Terms & Conditions | Site Map