Greenwashing is currently front and center in Australia as regulators flex their muscles. Indexing giant Vanguard Investments Australia Ltd was fined by Australian Securities and Investments Commission, or ASIC, for not delivering the full extent of promised exclusions outlined in their Product Disclosure Statement, or PDS.
Ironically, this case was based on a technicality. Whilst a few of Vanguard's sustainable strategies did not implement all aspects of the exclusions promised, this ended up a moot point, as despite the oversight, there was no impact on the portfolio composition. Even if Vanguard had properly implemented the exclusions, the portfolio would have held the same underlying securities. Further, Vanguard itself identified the issue and self-reported to the regulator.
The latest development in greenwashing enforcement is ASIC’s federal court claim against Mercer Superannuation Ltd over alleged greenwashing of fossil fuels, alcohol, and gambling. The regulator claims that Mercer invested in businesses exposed to these industries while professing to exclude these industries from some of its sustainable investment options. It will be interesting to see how this case plays out as it will serve as a precedent for others.
These cases follow ASIC’s intention, flagged back in 2022, to review investment funds and determine whether they live up to their green claims. The Australian Competition and Consumer Commission, or ACCC, also flagged that it would be focusing on environmental, social, and governance claims under Australian Consumer Law.
Greenwashing is defined as making unsubstantiated or misleading claims about the sustainability characteristics and benefits of a company or a managed investment product. Greenwashing is seen as intentional, occurring when asset managers overclaim and oversell their green credentials. However, sometimes greenwashing may not be intentional but instead result from differing definitions of sustainability and/or a mismatch between an investor's expectations and the specific approach used by a sustainable investment fund.
Certainly, a lack of clarity around what constitutes a green investment doesn’t help. There is no universal, accepted standard for sustainable investing. It is estimated there is upward of more than 200 different ESG taxonomies in existence, which can make it difficult to undertake meaningful comparisons and to ascertain the extent of a fund's greenness.
ASIC helped to provide clarity to the local industry by releasing an information sheet targeted at superannuation and managed fund issuers on how to avoid greenwashing when offering or promoting sustainability-related products.
The industry has responded. In 2022, we saw some asset managers and superannuation funds walk away from their involvement in organisations that require certain green commitments and milestones to be met, which they did not feel were achievable. Examples of this include Australian industry super fund CBUS' withdrawal from the Glasgow Finance Alliance for Net Zero, or GFANZ, to focus on internal climate change activities, and Vanguard’s withdrawal from the Net Zero Asset Managers initiative, a subset of GFANZ, in 2022. It is likely there will be more departures from similar alliances in the future.
Greenwashing Is an Insidious Scourge
Greenwashing is an insidious scourge on sustainable investing—at its worst it siphons away capital from genuinely green strategies, and the practice is corrosive to long-term trust and credibility. In fact, both ASIC and ACCC have identified greenwashing as amongst their highest enforcement priorities. However, it remains tempting for asset managers to greenwash. Asset managers typically seek to gather assets, and fees earned are often based on the volume of funds under management, so it makes sense that they would want to capture funds that are being deployed into sustainable investing. There is no question of the rising popularity of sustainable investing; we see it in Morningstar's data, and each quarter new products are launched and more capital is deployed into sustainable strategies.