Responding to news that the European Commission's proposal for amendments to the Sustainable Finance Disclosure Regulation (SFDR) have begun to emerge, Heike Schmitz, partner in the ESG practice at Herbert Smith Freehills Kramer has said that "this revision marks a turning point for sustainable finance in Europe — clarity, simplicity, and impact are finally at the heart of SFDR."
Heike adds: "By recognising impact investing for the first time, SFDR 2.0 sends a clear signal: measurable outcomes matter as much as ambition and with four new product categories it will reshape how investors approach sustainability, so it's a bold step towards transparency and trust. SFDR 2.0 also introduces more flexibility by allowing professional investor products to opt out from product categories that are designed with retail investors in mind.
"Encouragingly, the EU Commission clearly does not want to halt or hinder innovation. The revision clearly rejects regulatory ambitions to exclusively tie strategies to other concepts, such as EU Taxonomy. Removing unnecessary complexity obligations is a win for both investors and the industry as sustainability should be accessible, not bureaucratic. Now we wait to see how regulators will respond."
Heike's comments come ahead of the firm hosting a webinar exploring the implications that a revised SFDR will have on financial institutions. Taking place on 25 November 2025 at 11.00 GMT it will offer an overview of the main elements of SFDR 2.0, an analysis of the main changes and their impact on the market and a view about next steps for the industry. Registration is free via this URL.