Opinion
Europe’s ESG rulebook overhaul aims to cut costs for businesses
Europe has signalled it’s willing to accommodate international concerns about its ESG rules
November 25, 2025 | 12:00 AM
Environmental, social, and governance (ESG) investing accounts for concerns from gender equality to worker rights to new ways to provide funding to charities working in poor countries.
ESG envisages an investing principle that prioritises environmental and social issues, and corporate governance.
The European Commission has unveiled a significant rewrite of its ESG rulebook for the investment industry, marking the latest step in a fundamental overhaul designed to help improve competitiveness in the bloc.
In the proposal put forward on Thursday, the Sustainable Finance Disclosure Regulation (SFDR) will no longer require asset managers to report the negative environmental or social impacts of their entire portfolio.
Instead, so-called exclusion thresholds will be introduced as part of a revised range of ESG fund categories, including one dedicated to environmental and social transitions.
"The current framework results in disclosures that are too long and complex, making it difficult for investors to understand and compare” products, the commission said. "The revised rules will be more retail friendly and usable for companies.”
The recommendations, which are largely similar to a draft leaked earlier this month, follow years of complaints from investors and even some national regulators over the existing framework.
Fund-disclosure categories have been criticised for being confusing, while the pressure placed on portfolio managers to collect a large number of data points was regularly slammed as unrealistic.
The proposed changes, which still need approval from lawmakers and member states, represent an "earthquake” for the European Union’s financial industry, law firm Simmons & Simmons said in a comment based on the draft proposal.
The commission is recommending fossil fuel companies with expansion plans be excluded from the two greenest of the three new ESG fund categories.
The World Wildlife Fund called the recommendation a "welcome step,” but added that companies should be excluded entirely. Otherwise, "the climate credibility of the framework” is undermined, WWF said.
The environmental part of ESG is now emerging the primary focus for investors ahead of social and governance-related issues, with the majority viewing "climate as a material investment factor.”
"Mainly, the asset owners seem less concerned about what ESG is called versus how it is implemented across their global portfolios,” according to a Morningstar report in June.
Asset owners also are increasingly concerned these days about rising geopolitical tensions caused by the Trump administration-led trade war, the Russia-Ukraine conflict and US-China relations.
The result is many investors are "waiting for more clarity before making short-term portfolio moves,” according to Morningstar.
Despite years devoted to trying to make ESG investing financially appealing, there still aren’t enough structures to encourage banks and asset managers to allocate capital in ways that will ultimately protect the planet and its inhabitants, scholars at the Centre for Sustainable Finance at the University of Cambridge Institute for Sustainability Leadership (CISL) has said in a study.
ESG, which enjoyed a brief boom during the pandemic, has struggled to right itself as higher interest rates and supply-chain bottlenecks have hampered the progress of capital-intensive green infrastructure.
As a result, the theme has rapidly lost investors, with Morningstar noting in April that ESG funds suffered their worst outflows on record in the first quarter.
Europe has signalled it’s willing to accommodate international concerns about its ESG rules, as the bloc fields threats from the US.
It follows a barrage of complaints targeting the EU’s corporate sustainability reporting and due diligence directives, known as CSRD and CSDDD. Though both directives are in the process of being wound back, they’re still set to apply to companies outside the bloc if they do business inside the EU.
The commission’s latest proposal is part of a broader overhaul of the EU’s ESG framework to streamline regulations and cut costs for businesses.
ESG envisages an investing principle that prioritises environmental and social issues, and corporate governance.
The European Commission has unveiled a significant rewrite of its ESG rulebook for the investment industry, marking the latest step in a fundamental overhaul designed to help improve competitiveness in the bloc.
In the proposal put forward on Thursday, the Sustainable Finance Disclosure Regulation (SFDR) will no longer require asset managers to report the negative environmental or social impacts of their entire portfolio.
Instead, so-called exclusion thresholds will be introduced as part of a revised range of ESG fund categories, including one dedicated to environmental and social transitions.
"The current framework results in disclosures that are too long and complex, making it difficult for investors to understand and compare” products, the commission said. "The revised rules will be more retail friendly and usable for companies.”
The recommendations, which are largely similar to a draft leaked earlier this month, follow years of complaints from investors and even some national regulators over the existing framework.
Fund-disclosure categories have been criticised for being confusing, while the pressure placed on portfolio managers to collect a large number of data points was regularly slammed as unrealistic.
The proposed changes, which still need approval from lawmakers and member states, represent an "earthquake” for the European Union’s financial industry, law firm Simmons & Simmons said in a comment based on the draft proposal.
The commission is recommending fossil fuel companies with expansion plans be excluded from the two greenest of the three new ESG fund categories.
The World Wildlife Fund called the recommendation a "welcome step,” but added that companies should be excluded entirely. Otherwise, "the climate credibility of the framework” is undermined, WWF said.
The environmental part of ESG is now emerging the primary focus for investors ahead of social and governance-related issues, with the majority viewing "climate as a material investment factor.”
"Mainly, the asset owners seem less concerned about what ESG is called versus how it is implemented across their global portfolios,” according to a Morningstar report in June.
Asset owners also are increasingly concerned these days about rising geopolitical tensions caused by the Trump administration-led trade war, the Russia-Ukraine conflict and US-China relations.
The result is many investors are "waiting for more clarity before making short-term portfolio moves,” according to Morningstar.
Despite years devoted to trying to make ESG investing financially appealing, there still aren’t enough structures to encourage banks and asset managers to allocate capital in ways that will ultimately protect the planet and its inhabitants, scholars at the Centre for Sustainable Finance at the University of Cambridge Institute for Sustainability Leadership (CISL) has said in a study.
ESG, which enjoyed a brief boom during the pandemic, has struggled to right itself as higher interest rates and supply-chain bottlenecks have hampered the progress of capital-intensive green infrastructure.
As a result, the theme has rapidly lost investors, with Morningstar noting in April that ESG funds suffered their worst outflows on record in the first quarter.
Europe has signalled it’s willing to accommodate international concerns about its ESG rules, as the bloc fields threats from the US.
It follows a barrage of complaints targeting the EU’s corporate sustainability reporting and due diligence directives, known as CSRD and CSDDD. Though both directives are in the process of being wound back, they’re still set to apply to companies outside the bloc if they do business inside the EU.
The commission’s latest proposal is part of a broader overhaul of the EU’s ESG framework to streamline regulations and cut costs for businesses.
November 25, 2025 | 08:07 PM