2025-12-09
The Commission mandates that all licensed entities must avoid greenwashing as part of their ongoing duty to operate with integrity and skill. Licensees are required to ensure that any communications regarding environmental sustainability characteristics are consistent, fair, clear, and not misleading. While third-party prepared documents may not be directly verifiable by the licensee, they must not be distributed if the licensee knows or should reasonably expect that the information is incorrect or misleading.
Guidance Note on Anti-Greenwashing for entities licensed under the Commission’s Supervisory Laws All persons licensed by the Commission under its supervisory laws have an ongoing duty to meet the Minimum Criteria for Licensing, as set out in such laws. Such criteria include requirements to operate with “Integrity and Skill”, which embrace, amongst others, acting with integrity, professional skill and in a manner which will not tend to bring the Bailiwick into disrepute. The Commission considers that this encompasses an implicit duty not to engage in, or otherwise knowingly facilitate, greenwashing. As such, the Commission would expect that where a licensee issues, or approves the issue of, a communication in relation to a product or service it should ensure that any reference to the environmental sustainability characteristics of the product or service are: – (a) consistent with the environmental sustainability characteristics of the product or service; and (b) fair, clear and not misleading. Where a communication issued, or approved for issue, by a licensee includes a prospectus or other offering document (regarding a product or service) which is prepared by an unrelated third party, it is accepted that the licensee cannot be directly responsible for ensuring the veracity of any claimed environmental sustainability characteristics described in that third party prospectus or offering document. Nonetheless, a licensee should not communicate a prospectus or offering document where it knows, or should reasonably be expected to know, that it contains incorrect or misleading information. The Commission treats material breaches of any aspect of its Minimum Criteria for Licensing very seriously. Date: 1 February 2026