In the news
This section focuses on key developments globally, in the U.S., India, and the Middle East. It dissects the most recent news and analyzes its potential to influence regional landscapes, businesses, and consumers. Uniqus provides insights into recent developments that may shape current market dynamics and set the stage for future opportunities and challenges.
Global
Canada publishes final anti-greenwashing guidance
On 5 June 2025, the Competition Bureau of Canada published its final Environmental Claims Guidelines, concluding a year-long consultation that garnered over 400 public submissions. The document provides companies with a practical roadmap for communicating environmental benefits without breaching the Competition Act, which was amended in June 2024 to include explicit anti-greenwashing provisions.
The Bureau does not dictate what businesses may or may not say about sustainability; rather, it has one principle: claims must be accurate, not misleading, and backed by defensible evidence. Product-level assertions must now be based on “adequate and proper testing,” while statements about a firm’s overall operations must be substantiated using internationally recognized methodologies. Together, these requirements aim to eliminate vague or exaggerated promises and to align Canadian practice with global expectations for credible climate disclosures.
Penalties for non-compliance can be steep. Corporations that violate the deceptive-marketing sections of the Act face fines up to CAD 10 million for a first offence and CAD 15 million for subsequent ones. Where regulators cannot easily calculate the benefit a company gained from misleading claims, the penalty may rise to three percent of worldwide annual revenue or triple the advantage obtained, whichever is greater.
Beyond the legal risk, the new guidance reflects growing scrutiny from investors, customers, and regulators who want verifiable environmental information. Marketing and sustainability teams are therefore advised to review existing green language, tighten data collection processes, and consult third-party standards before launching new campaigns. A backgrounder summarizing the consultation feedback and offering additional compliance tips is available on the Bureau’s website.
Investors remain committed to ESG amid uncertainty
BNP Paribas’ latest ESG Survey, conducted by CoreData Research, gathered insights from 420 asset owners, asset managers, and private capital firms across 29 global markets. Despite ongoing global uncertainty, the findings indicate that institutional investors remain deeply committed to sustainable investing, now viewed not as a constraint but as a source of long-term opportunities and innovation.
The 2025 survey reveals a shift away from generic ESG approaches toward more thematic, impact-driven strategies. The energy transition remains a dominant theme, but this year also sees a heightened focus on the social dimension, particularly the importance of a “just transition” that ensures climate action supports workers and communities. Investors are increasingly recognizing the interconnectedness of climate, biodiversity, and social impact, integrating these elements into their broader investment strategies.
Regional insights reveal that Asia-Pacific and EMEA investors are taking a particularly active role in advancing ESG practices and influencing standards. North American investors are also accelerating their adoption of sustainability themes, linking ESG to alpha generation and competitive advantage.
The survey also identifies key behaviors among ESG leaders, including deeper engagement with portfolio companies and the strategic use of external partnerships to enhance internal capabilities. Notably, private capital managers are emerging as influential champions of ESG, with sustainability increasingly embedded in both their operations and culture.
Overall, the research highlights a more dynamic, integrated approach to ESG, where collaboration, thematic focus, and long-term thinking are guiding the next wave of sustainable investment.
EFRAG Delivered First ESRS Simplification Update
On 20 June 2025, the European Financial Reporting Advisory Group (EFRAG) delivered an update to the European Commission on its efforts to simplify the European Sustainability Reporting Standards (ESRS).
EFRAG published its progress report (as of 20 June) providing an update of the work performed so far, with final decision expected by the end of July. A public consultation will occur from August to September.
The revisions respond to widespread concerns about the complexity of the ESRS under the Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive (CSRD). EFRAG aims to streamline disclosures while preserving quality. Changes will address overlap between standards, improve clarity, and align with frameworks like the ISSB and the Sustainable Finance Disclosure Regulation (SFDR).
Chiara del Prete, chair of EFRAG’s technical expert group, said the updates will prioritize material, decision-useful information. Areas under review include double materiality and reducing excessive documentation demands.
The simplification process coincides with broader Omnibus negotiations in the European Parliament, which could narrow the scope of the CSRD and the Corporate Sustainability Due Diligence Directive (CSDDD).