Sustainable Finance: Political Challenges of Development and Implementation of Framework Conditions

Research output: Journal contributionsJournal articlesResearchpeer-review

Standard

Sustainable Finance: Political Challenges of Development and Implementation of Framework Conditions. / Kemfert, Claudia; Schmalz, Sophie.
In: Green Finance, Vol. 1, No. 3, 01.01.2019, p. 237-248.

Research output: Journal contributionsJournal articlesResearchpeer-review

Harvard

APA

Vancouver

Bibtex

@article{7ee37664e3334e34bab462aabb69d505,
title = "Sustainable Finance: Political Challenges of Development and Implementation of Framework Conditions",
abstract = "According to the 2015 Paris Agreement, a long-term goal is the commitment to “making finance flows consistent with a pathway towards low greenhouse gas emissions and climate-resilient development.” Reconciling climate change objectives and financial flows is an enormous challenge in the 21st century. States in general and Germany in particular have various instruments at their disposal to initiate appropriate measures. On the one hand, the state can exert direct influence by orienting its own activities towards sustainability, for example by meeting sustainability standards for investments and participations by public institutions and by anchoring divestment strategies in law. On the other hand, the development of suitable framework conditions is a requirement for encouraging private financial market players towards sustainability.A key requirement for the development of sustainable financial system is a uniform taxonomy of sustainability. Standards and labels for identifying business activities can then be implemented. The development of political framework conditions is currently facing far-reaching challenges at European and national level: There is a risk that current approaches will only be applied to a limited extent. Sustainable investments currently account for approximately 3% of the total market (2017).This article aims to focus on the extent to which policy frameworks currently being developed at national and European level can contribute to the development of sustainable finance. In addition to the challenges of implementing and developing new policy approaches, the limits of existing instruments will be identified. Beyond the indirect influence of the state, investment strategies and criteria of public institutions and procurement are analysed, which represent a direct influence of the state for the development of a sustainable financial sector. A case study on the Divestment Strategies is used for this purpose.",
keywords = "Economics, sustainable finance, ESG, divestment, procuvement, european union",
author = "Claudia Kemfert and Sophie Schmalz",
year = "2019",
month = jan,
day = "1",
doi = "10.3934/GF.2019.3.237",
language = "English",
volume = "1",
pages = "237--248",
journal = "Green Finance",
issn = "2643-1092",
publisher = "American Institute of Mathematical Sciences - AIMS Press",
number = "3",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Sustainable Finance

T2 - Political Challenges of Development and Implementation of Framework Conditions

AU - Kemfert, Claudia

AU - Schmalz, Sophie

PY - 2019/1/1

Y1 - 2019/1/1

N2 - According to the 2015 Paris Agreement, a long-term goal is the commitment to “making finance flows consistent with a pathway towards low greenhouse gas emissions and climate-resilient development.” Reconciling climate change objectives and financial flows is an enormous challenge in the 21st century. States in general and Germany in particular have various instruments at their disposal to initiate appropriate measures. On the one hand, the state can exert direct influence by orienting its own activities towards sustainability, for example by meeting sustainability standards for investments and participations by public institutions and by anchoring divestment strategies in law. On the other hand, the development of suitable framework conditions is a requirement for encouraging private financial market players towards sustainability.A key requirement for the development of sustainable financial system is a uniform taxonomy of sustainability. Standards and labels for identifying business activities can then be implemented. The development of political framework conditions is currently facing far-reaching challenges at European and national level: There is a risk that current approaches will only be applied to a limited extent. Sustainable investments currently account for approximately 3% of the total market (2017).This article aims to focus on the extent to which policy frameworks currently being developed at national and European level can contribute to the development of sustainable finance. In addition to the challenges of implementing and developing new policy approaches, the limits of existing instruments will be identified. Beyond the indirect influence of the state, investment strategies and criteria of public institutions and procurement are analysed, which represent a direct influence of the state for the development of a sustainable financial sector. A case study on the Divestment Strategies is used for this purpose.

AB - According to the 2015 Paris Agreement, a long-term goal is the commitment to “making finance flows consistent with a pathway towards low greenhouse gas emissions and climate-resilient development.” Reconciling climate change objectives and financial flows is an enormous challenge in the 21st century. States in general and Germany in particular have various instruments at their disposal to initiate appropriate measures. On the one hand, the state can exert direct influence by orienting its own activities towards sustainability, for example by meeting sustainability standards for investments and participations by public institutions and by anchoring divestment strategies in law. On the other hand, the development of suitable framework conditions is a requirement for encouraging private financial market players towards sustainability.A key requirement for the development of sustainable financial system is a uniform taxonomy of sustainability. Standards and labels for identifying business activities can then be implemented. The development of political framework conditions is currently facing far-reaching challenges at European and national level: There is a risk that current approaches will only be applied to a limited extent. Sustainable investments currently account for approximately 3% of the total market (2017).This article aims to focus on the extent to which policy frameworks currently being developed at national and European level can contribute to the development of sustainable finance. In addition to the challenges of implementing and developing new policy approaches, the limits of existing instruments will be identified. Beyond the indirect influence of the state, investment strategies and criteria of public institutions and procurement are analysed, which represent a direct influence of the state for the development of a sustainable financial sector. A case study on the Divestment Strategies is used for this purpose.

KW - Economics

KW - sustainable finance

KW - ESG

KW - divestment

KW - procuvement

KW - european union

UR - https://www.mendeley.com/catalogue/35e043f6-58b7-3c44-9d42-0b74ca2427b0/

U2 - 10.3934/GF.2019.3.237

DO - 10.3934/GF.2019.3.237

M3 - Journal articles

VL - 1

SP - 237

EP - 248

JO - Green Finance

JF - Green Finance

SN - 2643-1092

IS - 3

ER -

Links

DOI

Recently viewed

Researchers

  1. Ilka Wäsche

Publications

  1. Konstruktion kategorialer Zugehörigkeit
  2. Facetten von Körperkultur
  3. Welches Wissen brauchen Lehrkräfte für inklusiven Unterricht?
  4. Beschäftigungsmanagement
  5. Waldwissen aus Genderperspektive
  6. Die europäische Union als Innovationsverbund – Innovationsverfassung und rechtliche Innovationen in der EU
  7. Kinder leben Räume
  8. »Ich zwinge niemanden, freiwillig zurück zu gehen.« Die institutionelle Umsetzung der Politik der geförderten Rückkehr durch staatliche und nicht-staatliche Akteure
  9. Bildungsstandards und Verstehenskompetenz
  10. Commentary to article 27
  11. Sachunterricht für das 21. Jahrhundert - Weltorientierung durch Bildung für eine nachhaltige Entwicklung
  12. Gesellschaft und Kultur der siebziger Jahre
  13. Der Bestseller und die Werteproblematik
  14. Societal Culture and Leadership in Germany
  15. Rechnungslegung über originäre immaterielle Vermögensgegenstände und den derivativen Geschäfts- oder Firmenwert
  16. Zirkulierende Spotify-Playlisten als Visualisierung und Katalysator von attachement zwischen Usern, Milieu und Geschmack
  17. Aspekte der Nachhaltigkeit in der ambulanten Versorgung von Menschen mit Demenz
  18. Stärkung der Corporate Governance durch eine externe Geschäftsführungsprüfung in der Aktiengesellschaft?
  19. Energiewende steht für die Chance auf Re-Industrialisierung, nicht für De-Industrialisierung
  20. Das Interieur als psychische Installation
  21. German Part in: The International Guide to the Taxation of Sportsmen und Sportswomen
  22. Die Bundeswasserstraßen als Energiespeicher
  23. Weltmilitär
  24. O que é uma boa participação pública? Conceitos, desafios e guias para reflexão
  25. Die niedersächsische Landtagswahl vom 20. Januar 2013
  26. Die Blockade der Energiewende wird die USA teuer zu stehen kommen
  27. Gender in Lehre und Didaktik - eine europäische Konferenz in Erfurt, hrsg. von Gesine Spieß; Cilie Rentmeister
  28. Bürgerbeteiligungsmodelle für erneuerbare Energien
  29. Zur Konfliktfähigkeit deutscher Großunternehmen bei Tarifauseinandersetzungen
  30. Time poverty and price dispersion: Do time poor individuals pay more?
  31. The development of sexuality and love
  32. Belastung von Krankenhausabwasser mit gefährlichen Stoffen im Sinne §7a WHG
  33. Sprachbildung und Sprachkontakt im deutsch-polnischen Kontext
  34. „A new era in the settlement of investment disputes?“ – Reformvorschläge der EU-Kommission zum Investitionsschutz in TTIP
  35. Nichts als das ? Christoph Brumme erzählt eine autoritäre Erziehung
  36. Banal militarism