By Mark Yeow, Workflow contributor
On February 18, the announcement of Singapore’s 2022 budget included a host of widely reported environmental measures such as significant hikes in its carbon tax and the issuing of specialised “green bonds” to fund sustainable infrastructure. Yet behind the headlines, a quieter and more fundamental greening of the country’s corporate and finance sectors is underway.
At the start of 2022, the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) began rolling out new disclosure standards that put a spotlight on how retail ESG-focused investment funds classify and select their ESG investments.
Such approaches have been criticised in the past for providing gaps that companies have exploited to buff up their ESG credentials without taking real action, so-called greenwashing. The latest moves offer consistent ways to measure and compare ESG progress.
“With the enhanced disclosure in place, investors will be able to better understand the criteria that an ESG fund uses to select its investments,” said Ravi Menon, managing director of the MAS, in a public address last year. “Investors will also obtain from a single offering document more information on the fund’s investment process, as well as the risks and limitations associated with the fund’s ESG strategy.”
That bodes well for Singapore if its regulators and financiers can deliver and transform the small island nation into a hub for ESG investing. In a 2021 global survey, more than half of respondents said they planned to completely or “to a large extent” incorporate ESG issues into their investment choices by year end. A reputation for good ESG governance and transparency could put Singapore’s financial industry at the forefront of this new wave of sustainable investing. Yet the country faces significant challenges to realise that goal, which have stymied other regional and global markets before.