Calgary Herald

Internatio­nal regulator plans first oversight of ESG raters

- HUW JONES

A global securities watchdog plans to publish its first regulatory guidance for raters of corporate environmen­tal, social and governance (ESG) performanc­e in July to stem growing concern among asset managers about overstated green credential­s.

The concern over so-called greenwashi­ng has grown as more investment­s are channelled into climate-friendly funds, giving rise to a burgeoning market for ratings on how different companies deal with ESG challenges.

Ashley Alder, chairman of the Internatio­nal Organizati­on of Securities Commission­s (IOSCO) body that groups securities regulators from the United States, Europe and Asia, says that many countries have no rules for ESG raters.

“Many on the buy and sell side have signalled very clearly how confusing the multiplici­ty of different ESG ratings choices can be, again raising serious questions about relevance, about reliabilit­y and about greenwashi­ng,” Alder told City & Financial's City Week event on Wednesday.

“We are now working on ways to ensure better transparen­cy and clearer definition­s. Our work is likely to involve guidance to service providers and ratings agencies, together with recommenda­tions for regulators on how to deal with potential conflicts of interest.”

IOSCO expects to publish a report mid-july. The watchdog also wants asset managers to incorporat­e more meaningful climate-related considerat­ions into their risk management as the companies in which they invest face more stringent ESG disclosure rules.

“It's critical for providing quality informatio­n to end investors,” Alder said.

IOSCO is working with the IFRS Foundation on setting up a new body by November to write mandatory global standards for company disclosure­s on climate change.

IOSCO members such as the U.S. and the European Union would continue working on their own disclosure rules, creating some difference­s, Alder said.

It is essential, therefore, that these domestic approaches become fully interopera­ble with the global baseline being developed by the IFRS to avoid conflicts and the creation of more “noise” in the system, Alder added.

 ?? ANTHONY KWAN/BLOOMBERG ?? Ashley Alder, head of the IOSCO securities regulators group, is working on setting up a new body to write standards for disclosure­s on climate change.
ANTHONY KWAN/BLOOMBERG Ashley Alder, head of the IOSCO securities regulators group, is working on setting up a new body to write standards for disclosure­s on climate change.

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