EU Plans Major Sustainable Finance Rules Update
A major “Omnibus” package to simplify and streamline the EU’s sprawling sustainable-finance rules has been proposed, potentially shifting what would counts as “sustainable” investment across the bloc.
The proposals aim to simplify and “right-size” sustainability rules that have expanded rapidly in recent years. Nothing is final yet, however the direction of travel is becoming clear: fewer companies in scope, lighter reporting, delayed timelines, and simpler standards.
Here’s what’s currently under consideration:
1. Higher Reporting Thresholds (CSRD)
Under both the Commission proposal and Parliament/Council positions, only very large companies would be required to report under the Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive (CSRD).
The Council’s negotiating mandate sets the bar at:
This would remove a large share of mid-sized businesses from mandatory sustainability reporting.
2. Delayed Timelines: The “Stop-the-Clock” Mechanism
A separate directive, already adopted, temporarily pauses and delays parts of CSRD and the Corporate Sustainability Due Diligence Directive (CSDDD).
Key impacts include:
This provides regulators and companies extra breathing space before full enforcement.
3. Slimmer European Sustainability Reporting Standards (ESRS)
The Omnibus package pushes for:
4. Adjusted Due Diligence Scope (CSDDD)
The proposals narrow the scope of due-diligence obligations to direct (tier-1) business partners, limiting deep supply-chain requirements to only the very largest companies.
Civil liability remains in place under national law.
5. Taxonomy Reporting Simplification
A delegated act currently under consultation would:
6. A Voluntary Standard for Smaller Companies
The proposal introduces a voluntary sustainability reporting framework (based on EFRAG’s SME standard).
Large companies would not be able to demand more detail from smaller suppliers than what this voluntary standard requires. This in theory eases the “trickle-down” reporting burden.
7. Early Signals of SFDR Changes
While the Omnibus package doesn’t formally overhaul the Sustainable Finance Disclosure Regulation (SFDR), officials have signalled that fund-labelling and ESG data requirements will be revisited in a separate update.
Key Considerations to Note
Policy direction
The EU appears to be shifting from its early “deep and broad” sustainability regime toward a more targeted, business-friendly model.
Supporters welcome the reduced administrative burden; critics argue this risks slowing progress, weakening transparency, and narrowing the ESG data ecosystem.
Market impacts
Investors:
Businesses:
ESG Funds:
Policy Watchers:
Political Scrutiny & Pushback
Civil society groups & some investors warn the simplification could weaken Europe’s sustainability ambitions.
The European Ombudsman has even launched an inquiry into whether the Commission’s approach to easing green rules lacked adequate transparency and consultation.
Final Takeaway
The EU’s proposed overhaul marks a significant shift: simpler rules, higher thresholds, slower implementation — and a more selective approach to sustainability reporting.
If these proposals are finalised in their current form, Europe’s sustainability framework will become leaner but also narrower. For investors and companies committed to genuine impact, credibility will increasingly hinge on transparent, consistent, and verifiable data — not just regulatory compliance.
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