SFDR
SFDR — ESG reporting standard overview with scope, requirements, and implementation guidance. Open-access sustainability resource.
SFDR — ESG reporting standard overview with scope, requirements, and implementation guidance. Open-access sustainability resource.
The SFDR is an EU regulation requiring financial market participants and financial advisers to disclose how they integrate sustainability risks, consider adverse sustainability impacts, and provide sustainability-related information for financial products.
Regulation (EU) 2019/2088, commonly known as SFDR, entered into force in March 2021 with Level 2 requirements (Regulatory Technical Standards) applying from January 2023. SFDR is a key component of the EU's sustainable finance framework, working alongside the EU Taxonomy and CSRD to create a comprehensive disclosure regime.
SFDR classifies financial products into three categories based on their sustainability ambitions. Article 6 products are those that do not integrate sustainability in any specific way but must disclose how sustainability risks are integrated into investment decisions. Article 8 products ("light green") promote environmental or social characteristics alongside other financial objectives. Article 9 products ("dark green") have sustainable investment as their objective.
SFDR requires financial market participants to consider and disclose the principal adverse impacts (PAIs) of their investment decisions on sustainability factors. The regulation specifies 18 mandatory PAI indicators covering greenhouse gas emissions, biodiversity, water, waste, social and employee matters, human rights, and anti-corruption. Additional opt-in indicators are available for more comprehensive reporting.
The European Commission launched a comprehensive review of SFDR in 2023, acknowledging challenges with the Article 6/8/9 classification system, which was designed as a disclosure framework but has been used by the market as a de facto labelling system. Proposed reforms may introduce a formal product categorisation system with clearer definitions and criteria, addressing concerns about greenwashing and investor confusion.