The European Council has now agreed its negotiating mandate on SFDR 2.0. In several areas, it represents a significant regression from the Commission's proposal and the Parliament's subsequent draft report.
Whereas the Parliament's draft report acknowledged and closed the loopholes we flagged in our analysis of the Commission’s November proposal, the Council is reopening them.
Nonetheless, the Council position still holds the line in certain respects, such as maintaining the non-categorised product disclaimer, as well as the mandatory core Principle Adverse Impact (PAI) indicators, although now only requiring the three PAIs most relevant for the product. The details are left for Level 2 legislation to determine.
In addition, a systemic gap remains with entity-level SFDR disclosures being out of scope across the Commission, Parliament and Council positions. Combined with a possible CSRD/ESRS exemption for asset managers, large parts of the investment sector risk escaping meaningful sustainability reporting altogether.
The Parliament's ECON committee will vote on the Parliament's official position on 15 July, with a plenary vote expected in September. Trilogue negotiations are set to open in Q4 2026, with Level 1 agreement targeted by year-end — followed by Level 2 technical standards developed with ESMA.
After one year of rushed and frenzied political decision-making on the Omnibus 1 package, the EU has come to a decision.
The revised EU Sustainability Reporting Standards have been significantly reduced down to just one-third of the original disclosures.
Under intense pressure to cut reporting obligations and prioritise deregulation over transparency and safeguards against greenwashing, Europe's leadership in setting sustainability standards is at risk. While the new standards provide a functional framework, their application relies on companies approaching implementation in good faith.
For the first time, the European People's Party (EPP) in the European Parliament is relying on the support of the anti-European, right-wing groups to pass a legislative text - its position on the Omnibus 1 simplification package. This represents a clean break with the cordon sanitaire that previously kept such alliances off-limits.