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Sustainable finance
- Issued:09 April 2026
- Effective from:09 April 2026
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Sustainable finance
This guidance sets a clear and consistent baseline for managing sustainability-related risks, with a focus on climate change risks and sustainability-related claims by firms in Jersey.
It is designed to support firms in meeting their existing obligations under the codes of practice in two areas:
Principle 3: identifying, assessing and managing sustainability-related risks, with a focus on climate change
Principle 7: ensuring that any sustainability-related claims are fair, clear and not misleading
Our approach is proportionate, aligns with recognised international standards, and supports Jersey’s reputation as a well-governed financial centre.
1 Sustainability risk management
1.1 Purpose and scope
This section supports compliance with Principle 3 of the codes of practice by setting practical guidance for how firms can identify, assess and manage sustainability-related risks, with a focus on climate change.
It uses a single financial-materiality lens, consistent with the International Sustainability Standards Board (ISSB). This means that the focus is on how climate change may influence a firm’s financial position, performance or cash flows. A double-materiality assessment, meaning also assessing the firm’s impact on the environment, is not required, but firms are able to undertake such assessment if desired.
1.2 Code requirements
Principle 3 expects firms to identify, consider and adequately manage the risks they face. Sustainability-related risks, particularly climate change risks, should form part of this work.
Principle 3 does not require a separate governance framework for sustainability risk. As such, this guidance aims to help firms integrate such risks into their existing risk management frameworks under the codes.
1.3 Key definition
Sustainability-related risks may arise from a range of environmental, social and governance factors. This guidance focuses on climate-change risk as the most immediately material category.
Climate risk: a subset of sustainability risk arising from climate-related events, trends or conditions. Examples include:
physical risks: damage or disruption from acute or chronic climate events (for example severe weather, flooding, heat stress) that may impair assets, supply chains or operations
transition risks: financial impacts from changes in policy, regulation, technology, markets or preferences associated with the transition to a lower‑emissions or more resource‑efficient economy (for example asset re‑pricing, credit deterioration in exposed sectors, higher input costs)
1.4 Baseline good practice
The following are non-exhaustive options to support firms in considering climate change risk.
Firms should consider the following:
- Assess climate risks as part of their ordinary risk management processes, focusing on material financial impacts.
- Document the assessment of climate risks in a manner proportionate to the business.
- Escalate the assessment and conclusions to the board (or equivalent) for oversight and direction.
If the board concludes that risks are not material, no further action is required, other than periodic review. Where risks are material, the board should set proportionate risk management responses within existing frameworks.
Existing governance and responsibilities
the board oversees financial risks - it seeks and challenges information to understand implications for strategy, the business model and financial resources, and instructs management to maintain proportionate controls
clear allocation of responsibilities should exist for day‑to‑day management (for example through existing risk committees or accountable individuals), with defined escalation and periodic reassessment mechanisms
senior management should ensure they have the skills and resources needed to carry out assessments (for example targeted training where relevant) and keep them under review
Integration into existing frameworks
Climate change risks should sit within existing governance, risk management and internal control processes, rather than stand apart from them. Integration may include:
mapping climate change risk drivers to current risk categories (credit, market, liquidity, operational, strategic, reputational) and reflecting this in the risk register
using existing risk-appetite statements, metrics and limits where appropriate
including climate-change considerations in product approval, outsourcing or vendor oversight, and internal audit or review cycles where relevant
Proportionality in practice
Firms should tailor their efforts and activity to the level of risk they’ve identified.
Examples include:
Less material risk
a qualitative, desktop assessment conducted every 3 years (or on material change)
a short board paper
simple monitoring of key risk indicators
For firms with the lowest level of complexity where risks do not ordinarily change, an assessment once every three years is generally acceptable.
More material risk
deeper analysis
clearer metrics and limits within management information
periodic monitoring of risk and board reporting
Firms may find it helpful to refer to recognised standards such as the ISSB framework when considering the scope and depth of their assessment.
Documentation and evidence
It may help firms to keep proportionate records, such as:
the risk assessment (scope, methodology, judgements on materiality, and conclusions)
board papers or minutes evidencing oversight and direction
any metrics, limits or controls adopted, and the schedule for periodic review
1.5 Supervisory approach
Our supervisory engagement on climate risk will be proportionate. When supervising a firm’s approach, we will generally look at whether the firm has taken reasonable steps, consistent with baseline good practice outlined in section 1.4, to identify, assess and manage climate-change risks within its existing frameworks.
1.6 Operating beyond baseline practice
Some firms will go beyond our recommended good practice outlined in this guidance. This may arise for various reasons including voluntary commitments, group-level obligations or situations where one or more sustainability-related risk has been identified which merit further investigation and management. Firms may find it helpful to refer to the ISSB standards for further guidance where other sustainability-related risks are identified as financially material.
2 Anti‑greenwashing guidance
2.1 Purpose and scope
This section provides practical guidance to help firms so that they take reasonable steps to ensure that sustainability-related claims about the firm, its products or services are fair, clear and not misleading, and that firms can support such claims with evidence. It applies to claims made through websites, marketing, investor or client reports and social media.
The intention is not to deter firms from making sustainability-related claims. It is to ensure claims are presented in a clear, fair and accurate way, consistent with Principle 7.
For the purposes of this guidance, references to “sustainability claims” relate specifically to claims about environmental or social characteristics. Greenwashing is the practice of misrepresenting those claims to make them seem more sustainable than they actually are.
2.2 Code requirements
Code requirements 2021
Anti-greenwashing provisions apply to certified funds (via CIF code), fund services businesses (via FSB code), Jersey private funds (JPFs) and their service providers (via JPF guide) and investment businesses providing advice (via IB code). These codes address transparency around sustainability-related characteristics of products.
Core disclosure requirements for funds
‘When a fund or JPF is marketed as investing in sustainable investments, disclosures (via website, prospectus, pre-contractual documents or subscription agreements) must include:
alignment with any specific taxonomy (or state if none applies)
the proportion of sustainable investments
the basis on which due diligence, benchmarking, performance measurement, and reporting are conducted
limitations to methodologies and data
Investment business requirements
‘When a registered person provides investment advice to its Client in relation to a fund that is marketed on the basis of investing in a Sustainable Investment as part of its investment objective, the registered person must inform, and make available to the Client, the appropriate disclosure information in relation to the sustainable investment strategy and objectives of the fund. If no such disclosure information is available, the Client must be informed of that fact.’
Code
From Q1 2027, enhancements to Principle 7 (Principle 4 for money services businesses) apply to all firms governed by the codes of practice. The following wording will be added, noting there will be sector specific amendments to include references to the fund and permit holder where applicable:
‘Sustainability-related claims regarding the registered person, products or services, must be backed by robust evidence and must not be unclear, misleading or unfair.’
This guidance helps firms meet these expectations.
* Included within sections 7.2, 7.3, or 7.6 depending on the codes of practice.
2.3 Core principles for sustainability‑related claims
Firms may find the following principles helpful when forming or reviewing claims:
- Correct and capable of substantiation
Claims must be factually accurate and supported by reasonable, verifiable evidence available on request (such as date sources, methods, third‑party assurance where used). Firms should keep evidence current and update claims when material changes occur.
- Clear and understandable
Use plain language that fits the audience. Define terms such as “green”, “sustainable” or “net zero.” Avoid vague or aspirational statements without specifics.
- Complete and balanced
Do not omit important information, limits or trade‑offs (such as thresholds, exclusions, scope of emissions covered or known uncertainties). Visuals must reflect the true position.
- Fair and meaningful comparisons
Comparisons must be between like‑for‑like products or services, with clear bases, methods and time periods. Avoid selective or market‑wide claims built on partial samples.
2.4 Applying the principles across the product or service lifecycle
Firms may find it helpful to consider how sustainability-related claims are formed, governed and communicated throughout the product or service life cycle. Areas that may be relevant include:
Design and approval
document the sustainability claim clearly, including its intended meaning, the evidence required to support it, and the governance arrangements for reviewing, updating or retiring the claim
Distribution and communication
ensure staff and intermediaries understand the claim and its limitations and evidentiary basis
keep messages consistent across channels and reflect the substance of the claim
Marketing
avoid undefined labels and imagery suggesting benefits without substantiation
define any screens, metrics and objectives used
firms should ensure that any implied sustainability features can be evidenced and accurately reflect the product’s characteristics
Data and disclosures
claims must be factual and supported by verifiable data and evidence
firms should be able to demonstrate the source, completeness, and uncertainty for any data used
any limitations or shortcomings in the data underpinning a claim should be clearly disclosed to ensure the accuracy and level of uncertainty are transparent
Governance and oversight
allocate responsibility for reviewing, approving and overseeing claims
embed checks within existing risk, compliance or product governance processes
maintain an escalation route for concerns
Ongoing review
periodically assess whether the claims remain accurate and appropriate
amend or withdraw claims when underlying information changes
track progress on long-term targets
2.5 Records and evidence
Firms should keep proportionate records that show how claims were reviewed and approved, what evidence they used, and how they explained limitations.
2.6 Common pitfalls to avoid
Areas that may give rise to misunderstanding include:
use of broad terms such as “eco‑friendly”, “sustainable”, “fossil‑fuel free” without defining scope, thresholds or exceptions
over‑reliance on third‑party ratings or labels without understanding their method or ensuring they align with the stated claim
visuals or colour schemes that imply unsupported benefits
comparisons that are not like-for-like or based on selective data
2.7 Supervisory approach
Supervisors will typically consider whether sustainability-related claims meet existing conduct requirements. Firms that support claims with evidence, communicate them clearly and completely, and update them when needed, should meet expectations.
2.8 Summary – guidance at a glance
|
Sustainability risk management |
Anti-greenwashing guidance |
|
Perform a proportionate assessment |
Identify and document sustainability claims already being made |
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Document appropriately |
Establish procedures to identify and manage new claims made |
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Escalate assessment and conclusions to the board |
Make use of relevant data to justify any claims made |
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Manage material risks through existing risk management frameworks |
Establish appropriate governance and oversight of any new and ongoing sustainability claims |
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Review periodically |
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Glossary
Defined terms are indicated throughout this document as follows:
|
Term |
Meaning |
|
Banks |
Deposit-taking business |
|
Climate risk |
A subset of sustainability‑related risk linked to climate‑related events, trends or conditions that may affect a firm’s business activities, clients or counterparties. |
|
Codes of practice/codes |
Collectively, related to this consultation paper only, they include: Collective Investment Code Banking Code Fund Services Business Code General Insurance Mediation Business Code Investment Business Code Insurance Business Code Money Services Business Code Trust Company Business Code |
|
Firm |
A person who is registered, or holds a permit or certificate, as applicable, under one or more of the Banking Business (Jersey) Law 1991, the Collective Investment Funds (Jersey) Law 1988, the Financial Services (Jersey) Law 1998 and the Insurance Business (Jersey) Law 1996. |
|
Greenwashing |
Refers to the practice of exaggerating the sustainable credentials of a company or product. In a financial context, it is often associated with concerns over the potential mis-selling of investments and services on the ground of false or misleading sustainability claims. |
|
ISSB |
International Sustainability Standards Board |
|
Single materiality |
An approach that assesses sustainability-related matters solely through their potential financial effects on the firm. |
|
Sustainability-related risks |
A generic term to refer to a range of ESG focus areas. |
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