For
Exxon's aggressive oil and gas strategy has been rewarded by investors, with its shares more than doubling in the past three years. For Europe's second-biggest oil company, in contrast, pressure on the region's asset managers to invest using environmental, social and governance standards has capped gains and prompted Pouyanne to
The French oil giant isn't alone in pointing to the skewing effect of ESG regulations that critics say have put European businesses at a competitive and valuation disadvantage to their U.S. peers, with potentially long-lasting effects for the bloc's economy. Companies from Mercedes-Benz Group AG to
Over the past five years — a period during which Europe started formulating the world's most ambitious ESG regulatory framework — the U.S.'s S&P 500 Index has soared more than twice as much as Europe's benchmark Stoxx 600 Index. Although
European energy firms broadly trade at a 40% discount to their U.S. peers. If TotalEnergies were valued in line with the average big U.S. crude producer, its market capitalization would be boosted by $108 billion, based on earnings multiples calculated by Bloomberg.
TotalEnergies reaffirmed the views expressed by its CEO on Europe's ESG policies, declining to say more. Exxon, for its part, said its strategy is to provide products the world needs, while it also invests $20 billion through 2027 in areas like carbon capture and low-emission fuels.
Faced with diverging ESG rules between the U.S. and Europe, some companies have
"The biggest risk of the European approach is that it has put energy-intensive industry at a significant competitive disadvantage,"
The number of EU companies in the Fortune Global 500
"While EIIs (Energy Intensive Industries) in other regions face neither the same decarbonisation targets nor require similar investments, they benefit from more generous state support," former European Central Bank President
European officials acknowledge problems with the fast pace and complexity of the regulations rolled out since 2019, adding, however, that the measures are needed to avoid a dual climate and biodiversity crisis. "There are short-term pains, obviously, because it requires some effort, but the benefits are starting to emerge," said
The U.S. has reams of environmental-protection rules, but its overall framework is dwarfed by the breadth and depth of the EU's, particularly around disclosure. Also, the
As the EU expands regulations — over the European Parliament's last five-year term about 8,000 acts were adopted, many environment-related — the U.S. is offering incentives. President Joe Biden's signature climate law — the Inflation Reduction Act of 2022 — is a package of tax credits and rebates intended to propel investment in everything from electric vehicles to solar panels. Goldman Sachs Group Inc. estimated it could unleash as much as
Europe's approach is more about "telling companies what to do," said Tal Lomnitzer, a senior investment manager on the global sustainable equity team at Janus Henderson Investors.
The EU's
But the appeal of the U.S. program is sucking up investment, with more than 60 European and Asian companies announcing projects in the year after the IRA was passed, an analysis by Bank of America Global Research showed.
"A lot of corporates have found this scheme very attractive, very efficient, very quick to implement versus Europe, where things are a bit slower sometimes," said Panos Seretis, head of global sustainability research at Bank of America.
Norway's FREYR is
"The IRA creates a positive and stable investment environment with a simple regulatory framework," RWE CEO Markus Krebber said.
For Estelle Brachlianoff, the CEO of French water-treatment company Veolia Environnement SA, "the US wins." Dutch Bank ING Groep NV's CEO, Steven van Rijswijk, said the U.S. is doing better on luring investments. European regulations are "out of touch, they put a break on investments," said Repsol CEO Josu Jon Imaz San Miguel, an oil and gas producer shifting toward cleaner energy. He wants Europe to "learn a lot from what's being done in the U.S."
Unlike the U.S., where the federal government can offer tax breaks, EU taxation rests with member states, leaving the bloc to work largely through
Climate directives — with acronyms like CSRD, SFDR or CSDDD — have cemented Brussels' reputation as the ultimate
The Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive will compel companies to provide
The Corporate Sustainability Due Diligence Directive mandates detailed corporate transition plans and opens businesses to lawsuits if there are ESG violations in their value chains. For companies with hundreds of global suppliers, that can get "very complex," said
Compliance costs are soaring. Olga Smirnova, internal audit director at Heineken NV, says money spent by the Dutch brewer on ESG reporting has grown at an "exponential" rate. Desiree Fixler, previously a sustainability head at Deutsche Bank AG's investment arm DWS before becoming a high-profile whistleblower, now denounces European ESG regulations on social media.
"Most companies are absolutely suffocating in the amount of data capture they have to do," Fixler said.
While the EU has encouraged electric vehicles, investors in Porsche AG recently
Despite the protestations, though, there are some who warn of a climate reckoning further down the road.
For now, "oil and gas may outperform, but if that sector doesn't shrink, then the effects in terms of extreme weather and so on will cause absolute performance across large portfolios to actually be lower than it could otherwise have been," said Eric Pedersen, head of responsible investments at Nordea Asset Management.
Onerous as disclosure rules are, Johan Floren, senior ESG adviser at $100 billion Swedish pension fund AP7, says he needs them to do his job. "Without information, the market doesn't work," he said.
Some of Europe's biggest financial firms are purging their books of ESG risks. BNP Paribas SA, the EU's largest lender by assets, is
The fund will only invest in companies that "are on a pathway in the transition to a sustainable economy and companies that don't harm climate or biodiversity," Harmen van Wijnen, chairman of ABP's board of trustees, told Bloomberg.
The EU may just be ahead of the game on ESG regulations. Efforts are underway to make sustainability-reporting global, with countries representing almost
Some say there is no other way. After two decades of coaxing markets to address climate change, it's clear voluntary measures have failed, said Simon Braaksma, senior director for sustainability at Royal Philips NV.
"The people who are crying, maybe they should roll up their sleeves and contribute more to addressing those societal issues," he said.