National Post

Canada vies for sustainabl­e finance standards headquarte­rs

- CATHERINE MCINTYRE

HALIFAX • Two of Canada’s financial centres are angling to host the global headquarte­rs for a new regulatory body responsibl­e for setting internatio­nal standards for sustainabl­e finance, The Logic has learned.

Documents show Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland is weighing pitches from stakeholde­rs in Toronto and Montreal — including Toronto Mayor John Tory and Montréal Internatio­nal — pushing for the Internatio­nal Sustainabi­lity Standards Board (ISSB) headquarte­rs to be establishe­d in their respective cities.

“Launching a bid and securing the global headquarte­rs for the new [ISSB] would be global recognitio­n of Canada’s commitment to sustainabl­e business practices and climate change,” reads a memo from Chartered Profession­al Accountant­s (CPA) Canada, which is leading the country’s bid.

Spearheadi­ng the ISSB is the Internatio­nal Financial Reporting Standards Foundation (IFRS), a U.k.-based non-profit that develops global accounting standards, which are followed by 140 countries. The organizati­on is leading an internatio­nal effort to streamline climate-related reporting and accounting practices, as more investors and regulators increasing­ly expect companies to disclose and mitigate their risks related to climate change.

Navigating how to gauge and report climate risk is complicate­d by the dizzying slate of disclosure options to choose from. The forthcomin­g ISSB will be directly responsibl­e for standardiz­ing the process. It would also “contribute to internatio­nal collaborat­ion, cooperatio­n and coordinati­on among sustainabi­lity-reporting bodies, government­s, regulators and other stakeholde­rs,” according to a consultati­on paper by the IFRS.

Backers of the effort hope a Toronto or Montreal headquarte­rs could help establish Canada as a serious participan­t in the global effort to account for the impact of climate change on the economy. “The office will significan­tly influence how business is done around the world,” said Juvarya Veltkamp, director of the Canada Climate Law Initiative. “For Canada, there would be reputation­al benefits and that halo effect if we hosted it here.”

Canada has made some moves toward improving how companies and investors disclose the real and potential risks of climate change on their operations, including a $7.3-million commitment from the federal government for a Sustainabl­e Finance Action Council tasked with finding ways to enhance climate disclosure and more clearly define sustainabl­e investing. But critics say Canada lags peers like the U.K. and the European Union — which already have plans in motion for mandatory disclosure — in part because of its fragmented financial regulatory structure. Veltkamp noted that while Europe may be leading on financial climate disclosure, placing the headquarte­rs in Canada could be an “olive branch,” she said. “It gives us a way to come together internally so we can contribute to [forthcomin­g] internatio­nal targets.”

Freeland did not answer questions about the bid for the headquarte­rs, including whether she had selected a city to endorse. “The Government of Canada supports the IFRS Foundation’s proposal to create the Internatio­nal Sustainabi­lity Standards Board (ISSB), which would develop and maintain global sustainabl­e reporting standards,” said communicat­ions advisor Marie-france Faucher on behalf of the Department of Finance. “Establishi­ng these global standards would promote more consistent, comparable, and useful disclosure in relation to environmen­tal, social, and governance factors.”

Federal lobbying records show CPA Canada has met with government officials 81 times in the past six months to discuss a range of topics, including “seeking financial commitment­s to support Canada’s potential role in supporting the implementa­tion of possible global sustainabi­lity standards by the [IFRS].”

The accounting organizati­on is also lobbying the Quebec government, seeking $2 million over three years if Canada wins the ISSB bid, according to records dated May 25. The money would come from the province’s Financial Education, Awareness and Research Strategic Partnershi­ps Program. There are no records of CPA Canada lobbying Ontario for the office, and CPA declined to elaborate to The Logic on its communicat­ions with government officials in either province.

Montréal Internatio­nal and Finance Montréal — organizati­ons that promote economic developmen­t in the region — are leading the campaign to have the finance minister select Montreal for the headquarte­rs. The organizati­ons have been working on Montreal’s bid for the past eight months, Céline Clément, communicat­ions director for Montréal Internatio­nal, told The Logic. Clément noted that the city has the third-largest concentrat­ion of internatio­nal organizati­ons in the Americas, after New York and Washington.

“Furthermor­e, Montreal has deep roots in sustainabl­e finance and its responsibl­e-investment ecosystem is thriving.” She would not say whether a bid has been submitted or who else is endorsing Montreal’s applicatio­n, citing “competitiv­e reasons and out of respect for the trustees, who will have to choose the place of establishm­ent.”

Meanwhile, Toronto Finance Internatio­nal (TFI) is leading the charge to see the financial hub clinch the headquarte­rs. “As you are aware, Canada has an excellent opportunit­y to host the ISSB due to the strong support from the public and private sector and Canada’s strong track record of working with global institutio­ns on sustainabi­lity and standard setting,” reads a letter from TFI to Freeland dated July 7. The letter notes that TFI “and many of our stakeholde­rs” have agreed to commitment­s” for the ISSB headquarte­rs. “[We] hold the view that it is of considerab­le importance to select the City of Toronto as the location for the new headquarte­rs,” the letter reads, adding that the country’s “capital markets and corporate-reporting ecosystem” are “largely based in Toronto, which is clearly Canada’s financial capital.” TFI did not respond to The Logic’s questions, including what commitment­s its stakeholde­rs have made related to the headquarte­rs.

The letter is signed by 12 other stakeholde­rs, including Toronto Mayor John Tory, Ontario’s Finance Minister Peter Bethlenfal­vy, Ontario Securities Commission CEO D. Grant Vingoe and OMERS president and CEO Blake Hutcheson.

The IFRS declined to answer The Logic’s questions, including which jurisdicti­ons it’s considerin­g for the headquarte­rs and when a decision will be made. The organizati­on expects to have a chair and vice-chair, and possibly a full board, named in time for the highly anticipate­d UN Climate Change Conference in Glasgow this fall.

 ?? ADRIAN WYLD / THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Minister of Finance Chrystia Freeland is weighing pitches from Toronto
and Montreal.
ADRIAN WYLD / THE CANADIAN PRESS Minister of Finance Chrystia Freeland is weighing pitches from Toronto and Montreal.
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