The Star Malaysia

UK firms told to ‘urgently review’ green claims

Regulatory crackdown is slated to start next month

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London: Firms operating in Britain are being advised to go through any products and services around which some sort of sustainabi­lity claim has been made, to ensure they’re not in the crosshairs of a regulatory crackdown that’s due to take effect at the end of next month.

The Financial Conduct Authority’s (FCA) plan to move ahead with anti-greenwashi­ng rules has far-reaching implicatio­ns for British businesses, and leaves them with only limited time to shield themselves from potential regulatory action, according to industry associatio­ns and consultant­s advising businesses.

“The rule will impact all products and services with sustainabl­e features, not just those with a green/sustainabl­e label, which means firms have a large review task to complete now within a short time period,” Richard Monks, sustainabl­e finance partner at EY, said in an emailed statement.

“Firms need to urgently review all products and services that are in scope, assessing their risk exposures and creating a clear strategy to reduce their greenwashi­ng risk.”

The comments follow an update by the FCA, which confirmed it will stick with a May 31 enforcemen­t date for its anti-greenwashi­ng rule, despite considerab­le pushback from the country’s businesses.

The regulation affects all Fca-authorised firms, with a view to enforcing broad consumer protection­s against misleading green claims, it said.

Oscar Warwick Thompson, head of policy and regulatory affairs at the UK Sustainabl­e Investment and Finance Associatio­n, said the group welcomes the FCA’S “efforts to address greenwashi­ng risks”.

He also noted that “the turnaround for implementa­tion is very tight, and we will continue to work with our members to help them get to grips with this guidance and the rule”.

The announceme­nt was bundled with the launch of a consultati­on into expanding the scope of the FCA’S environmen­tal, social and governance (ESG) investing rulebook, the Sustainabi­lity Disclosure Requiremen­ts (SDR), which gives market participan­ts until June 14 to respond.

The watchdog wants SDR to apply not just to fund managers but to all forms of portfolio investing including private markets.

The SDR plan envisages dividing funds with ESG goals into four labelled categories, spanning impact to transition strategies. The FCA plans to start enforcing its

expanded SDR rules on Dec 2, pending consultati­on feedback.

Firms will need to start producing ongoing product-level disclosure­s from one year later, with specific requiremen­ts depending on their size.

“The FCA hopes these measures will support Britain’s position as a world-leading, competitiv­e centre for asset management and sustainabl­e investment,” it said.

“It will also protect consumers by helping them to make more informed decisions when investing and enhance the credibilit­y of the sustainabl­e investment market.” — Bloomberg

 ?? ?? Keeping watch: a file photo of the Fca’s head office in london. The authority says it plans to enforce broad consumer protection­s against misleading green claims. — reuters
Keeping watch: a file photo of the Fca’s head office in london. The authority says it plans to enforce broad consumer protection­s against misleading green claims. — reuters

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