ESG
You're Out Of Line Over Climate Disclosure Rule, Academics Tell SEC

The trend of becoming more environmentally aware has become a big wealth management issue. Moves by the US financial regulator to force publicly listed firms to disclose climate impact have drawn praise, but not everyone is happy. A group of US academics say the SEC is stepping over the line.
A group of 22 law and finance professors in the US have urged the
Securities
and Exchange Commission to scrub plans to force publicly
listed companies to
disclose the climate impact of their activities. The
academics say the SEC is significantly exceeding its
authority.
The watchdog, under the chairmanship of Gary Gensler, wants
companies to spell out how they affect the environment – an
example of how regulators and other entities are trying to push
ideas on cutting carbon dioxide emissions.
“We respectfully urge the SEC to withdraw the Proposal. We are
concerned that the passions of this topic have led the SEC to
overzealous rulemaking that exceeds its authority. Governments,
above all, must adhere to the rule of law, especially when
officials believe honestly and fervently in a specific agenda.
The federal securities laws focus on investor protection
generally, while the Proposal prioritizes the demands of a subset
of the global investment industry. We encourage the SEC to focus
on all American investors, not just the most vocal and activist
voices,” the letter said.
The letter is signed by figures such as Stephen M Bainbridge
(UCLA), Bernard S Black (Northwestern), Jessie M Fried
(Harvard), Paul G Mahoney (Virginia), Julia D Mahoney
(Virginia), and Todd J Zywicki (George Mason).
Some commentators and politicians worry that the drive
toward achieving “Net Zero” carbon emissions by a certain
target date, and all the regulatory and reporting requirements
involved, is increasing costs to business and ultimately, to the
consumer. At present, sharp rises in energy costs such as for
gasoline have become hot political issues, and are likely to
figure in the November mid-term elections. A decade of central
bank money printing, supply-chain disruptions, Russia’s invasion
of Ukraine, and policies to reduce the use of oil and gas, have
arguably combined to create the energy price spike.
When the SEC’s idea of requiring firms to disclose environmental
impact first surfaced, it drew praise from pro-environmental
groups, but also prompted political concerns.
The letter writers say that the SEC does not have the legal
authority to impose environmental disclosure impacts, however
meritorious the ideas may be.
“The undersigned, a group of professors of law and finance, are
concerned that the SEC’s recent proposal to impose extensive
mandatory climate-related disclosure rules on public companies
(the `Proposal’) exceeds the SEC’s authority. In addition, rather
than provide `investor protection,’ the Proposal seems to be
heavily influenced by a small but powerful cohort of
environmental activists and institutional investors, mostly index
funds and asset managers, promoting climate consciousness as part
of their business models,” it said.
“The investors demanding climate-related information are
overwhelmingly institutional asset managers who are managing
other people’s money, not their own. This raises the obvious
question whether their advocacy is prompted by concern for their
beneficiaries’ returns or their own profitability. Two of the
SEC’s current major rulemaking proposals relating to private fund
advisors each contain dozens of references to potential conflicts
of interest between private advisors and their sophisticated
clients,” the letter said. “Yet this Proposal makes not a single
reference to potential conflicts of interest between retail asset
managers and their less-sophisticated clients, instead taking it
as given that what is good for the asset manager is good for the
beneficiary.”
Argument continues over whether climate-linked investment ideas
are able to produce investment returns that match, or even beat,
more conventional ones. Defenders of “Green” investing claim they
are as good, and can beat other investment
approaches.
Asset managers such as BlackRock, which oversaw
more than $10 trillion at the end of 2021, have pushed their
weight about environmental and sustainability ideas. The firm has
defended itself against the charge that it is becoming
increasingly political in its investment conduct.
It is now almost risqué for a wealth or asset management firm not
to make regular reference to such ideas in speeches, marketing
material and product launches.
The SEC unveiled its draft rule under which companies would
disclose their own direct and indirect greenhouse gas emissions,
otherwise dubbed Scope 1 and Scope 2 emissions. Under the
proposals, firms would also have to disclose greenhouse gases
generated by suppliers and partners – Scope 3
emissions – if these are material or included in any
emissions targets the company has set.
Defenders of mandatory disclosure say that it helps steer
investors’ decisions and even helps to avoid problems such as
“greenwashing” – the attempt to make a business appear more
environmentally responsible than it really is.
Senator Patrick Toomey, the Senate Banking Committee's top
Republican, has blasted the SEC’s move, saying it "extends far
beyond the SEC's mission.” Texas Congressman Dan Crenshaw, a
Republican, has argued, for example, that US policy to press down
on fossil fuels has made the US less able to stand up to the
likes of Russian president Vladimir Putin, and has also added to
high gasoline prices. Around the world, countries are moving
rapidly to reconsider their so-called "green" policies. In
Germany, which under former Chancellor Angela Merkel took steps
to wind down nuclear energy, a rapid rethink is taking place. The
country has been a large user of Russian oil and gas.