Home Law Climate Corporate Governance: Europe vs. USA?
Article
Licensed
Unlicensed Requires Authentication

Climate Corporate Governance: Europe vs. USA?

  • Sabrina Bruno
Published/Copyright: December 10, 2019

According to economic literature, climate change is a financial factor: this is the logical premise of the European Directive N. 2014/95/EU requiring disclosure on the policies adopted by big corporations on climate change risks and opportunities. Through disclosure, climate change imprints the contents of directors’ duty of skill and care in Europe. On the contrary, in US there is no federal legislation or SEC regulations specifically on climate disclosure. Absent any binding decision yet, the current assessment of directors’ fiduciary duties under state law does not include consideration of climate change risks and opportunities according to American authors, even though fiduciary duties may evolve. The sole effective tool is the Martin Act. Levels of disclosure of US and EU corporations are therefore already significantly different both in terms of climate risks and opportunities. This situation can drive the financial sector to direct capital to Europe. Institutional investors in US have been trying to increase disclosure through shareholders’ proposals under Rule 14a-8 but these efforts have been recently undermined by the micro-management argument used by SEC. The conclusion is that the market cannot govern climate change by itself: because of regulation, European corporations are better positioned to mitigate the “carbon bubble”. What is at stake is the profitability of American corporations.

Acknowledgement

I wish to thank: Joseph Grundfest, Full Professor of Law and Business at Stanford Law School, for his sponsorship to my Visiting Scholarship at Stanford Law School during which I wrote this paper; Karina Litvack, Non-executive Director at ENI S.p.a., for having introduced me to the climate change issue almost four years ago; Stefano Pareglio, Professor of Environmental and Energy Economics at Università Cattolica (Italy) and Research Coordinator at Fondazione Enrico Mattei, for the thoughtful discussions we have had in the past years and for having expanded my knowledge on climate change science; Susan Mac Cormac Taylor, lecturer of Social Enterprise Law at Berkeley Law School and corporate partner at Morrison & Foerster, for the interesting exchange of views on European and US climate governance during last summer.

Published Online: 2019-12-10
Published in Print: 2019-12-06

© 2019 Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Berlin/Boston

Downloaded on 10.3.2026 from https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.1515/ecfr-2019-0027/html
Scroll to top button