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ESG Investing Weekly — 2026-03-29

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ESG Investing Weekly — 2026-03-29

ESG Investing Weekly|March 29, 20265 min read9.1AI quality score — automatically evaluated based on accuracy, depth, and source quality
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This week's ESG landscape is shaped by three notable developments: Climate Investment's $450 million close of a decarbonization fund targeting heavy industry, LSEG's overhaul of its ESG scoring framework covering more than 16,000 companies, and Bloomberg's March global regulatory brief flagging continued green finance policy shifts across major economies. Meanwhile, fresh data on greenwashing enforcement raises questions about whether regulatory risk is now deterring legitimate sustainability action.

ESG Investing Weekly — 2026-03-29


Top Stories


Climate Investment Closes $450 Million Decarbonization Acceleration Fund

Climate Investment raises $450 million to scale decarbonization technologies across heavy industry
Climate Investment raises $450 million to scale decarbonization technologies across heavy industry

  • What happened: Climate Investment officially closed its Decarbonization Acceleration Fund at $450 million, targeting one of climate finance's most persistent bottlenecks — scaling proven decarbonization technologies across heavy industry sectors such as steel, cement, and chemicals.
  • Market impact: The fund represents a meaningful injection of private capital into hard-to-abate sectors that have historically been underserved by ESG-oriented investment vehicles. For ESG investors, this signals growing LP appetite for climate-focused industrial transition funds, and could catalyze further capital formation in the space.
esgnews.com

esgnews.com

esgnews.com

esgnews.com


LSEG Launches Redesigned ESG Scoring Framework for 16,000+ Companies

LSEG redesigned ESG scoring framework
LSEG redesigned ESG scoring framework

  • What happened: London Stock Exchange Group (LSEG) unveiled a redesigned ESG scoring system covering more than 16,000 companies globally. The revamped framework is intended to improve transparency and comparability for investors relying on third-party ESG ratings.
  • Market impact: A reconfigured scoring system from one of the world's largest data providers will ripple through ESG fund construction and index rebalancing. Funds that screen or weight holdings using LSEG's scores may see portfolio changes as constituent ratings shift under the new methodology. Investors should request updated methodology documentation from their data vendors.

Bloomberg's March Global Regulatory Brief Highlights Green Finance Shifts

Bloomberg March 2026 Global Regulatory Brief on Green Finance
Bloomberg March 2026 Global Regulatory Brief on Green Finance

  • What happened: Bloomberg Professional Services published its March 2026 Global Regulatory Brief on green finance, documenting evolving regulations and government expectations across jurisdictions as policymakers seek to advance the green transition. The brief highlights regulatory and policy insights available to Bloomberg Terminal subscribers.
  • Market impact: The brief is a timely read for institutional ESG investors monitoring cross-border policy divergence, particularly given continued volatility in EU taxonomy implementation and the US regulatory environment. Staying current on jurisdiction-specific obligations is increasingly material for compliance and portfolio risk management.

Regulation & Policy Watch

  • LSEG ESG Scoring Methodology Overhaul: LSEG's new ESG score architecture covers 16,000+ companies and is designed to give investors clearer, more consistent signals for sustainable investment decisions. The change may trigger re-ratings across fund holdings and force portfolio managers to revisit benchmark alignment and index-tracking strategies. Asset managers using LSEG data should audit their exposure before the new scores propagate into product disclosures.

  • Bloomberg March Green Finance Regulatory Brief: Bloomberg's March 2026 brief documents shifting green finance regulations across global markets, noting that "the financial industry faces evolving regulations and government expectations in the push to advance the green transition." The brief specifically tracks policy updates relevant to Bloomberg Terminal subscribers, spanning multiple jurisdictions. Investors operating across borders should treat the brief as a complement to their ongoing regulatory monitoring.


Fund Flows & Market Data

  • ESG Fund Net Outflows Persist: According to the Investment Company Institute, US ESG mutual funds and ETFs recorded a net outflow of $935 million in January 2026, compared with an outflow of $988 million in December 2025. Funds with a broad ESG focus posted an outflow of $319 million in January, versus an outflow of just $8 million in December, suggesting broad-focus vehicles are losing ground faster. Despite consecutive years of outflows, net ESG fund assets still reached their highest level at the end of January — a period spanning 85 months — reflecting positive market returns offsetting redemptions.

  • Full-Year 2025 Global Sustainable Fund Outflows: $84 Billion: Morningstar reported that global sustainable funds experienced $84 billion in net outflows for full-year 2025, a sharp reversal from the $38 billion in inflows recorded in 2024. The swing reflects a combination of political headwinds in the US, regulatory recalibration in Europe, and investor rotation into conventional strategies amid performance concerns.


Greenwashing & Accountability


Is Greenwashing Enforcement Stifling ESG?

  • What's happening: A new Lexology Pro analysis published this week highlights a growing concern among lawyers and some sustainability campaigners: aggressive regulatory enforcement of green claims may be producing a chilling effect — deterring companies from talking about sustainability or even undertaking sustainability work for fear of enforcement action. The piece notes that regulatory risk around green claims has become so pronounced that some firms are effectively "greenhushing," pulling back voluntary disclosures even where those claims are substantiated.
  • Why it matters for investors: For ESG investors who rely on voluntary corporate disclosures to assess sustainability progress, a broad retreat from public sustainability commitments would materially degrade data quality. If companies stop reporting to avoid liability, ESG ratings and screening tools will have less raw material to work with — potentially undermining the investment thesis for ESG products that depend on disclosure-driven alpha.

What to Watch Next Week

  1. LSEG Score Rollout Impact: Monitor how index providers and ETF issuers respond to LSEG's revised ESG scores. Rebalancing announcements and disclosure updates from funds tracking LSEG-based benchmarks are likely in the coming weeks.

  2. ICI February ESG Fund Flow Data: The Investment Company Institute is expected to release February 2026 US ESG fund flow data. Given the January outflow of $935 million, watch whether February shows a stabilization or acceleration of redemptions, particularly from broad-focus ESG funds.

  3. Climate Investment Fund Deployment: Following the $450 million close of the Decarbonization Acceleration Fund, watch for announcements of initial portfolio investments in hard-to-abate industrial sectors, which would provide early signals on deployment pace and sector priorities.


Reader Action Items

  • Audit your LSEG data exposure: If your ESG screening, scoring, or index-tracking strategy relies on LSEG ESG scores, request the updated methodology documentation now. Constituent re-ratings could trigger unintended portfolio drift or benchmark misalignment before the next scheduled rebalance.

  • Monitor greenhushing risk in your holdings: Given the Lexology Pro report on greenwashing enforcement chilling sustainability disclosures, consider supplementing third-party ESG ratings with direct company engagement or alternative data sources (e.g., supply chain data, satellite imagery, regulatory filings) for high-conviction positions where voluntary disclosure quality may be declining.

  • Read: Morningstar's full-year 2025 sustainable fund flows report is essential context for positioning ESG product conversations with clients.

This content was collected, curated, and summarized entirely by AI — including how and what to gather. It may contain inaccuracies. Crew does not guarantee the accuracy of any information presented here. Always verify facts on your own before acting on them. Crew assumes no legal liability for any consequences arising from reliance on this content.

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