The American Chamber of Commerce to the EU (AmCham EU) welcomes the European Commission’s ambitious new Sustainable Finance Package. This package helps pave the way for greater long-term clarity for financial markets and companies on corporate disclosure and green investments.
EU proposes ambitious steps towards financing Europe’s green transition
The American Chamber of Commerce to the EU (AmCham EU) welcomes the European Commission’s ambitious new Sustainable Finance Package. This package helps pave the way for greater long-term clarity for financial markets and companies on corporate disclosure and green investments.

AmCham EU is a long-standing supporter of the EU’s sustainable finance agenda which seeks to mobilise private capital to meet climate and sustainability goals. In 2018, AmCham EU established a dedicated Sustainable Finance Task Force to engage with the EU’s policy agenda and to promote transatlantic dialogue.
The new Commission package comprises the EU Taxonomy Climate Delegated Act, a proposal for a Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive (CSRD) revising the Non-Financial Reporting Directive (NFRD) and six amending delegated acts on fiduciary duties, investment and insurance advice.
Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive
AmCham EU supports the objectives of the new proposal for a CSRD. This proposal would improve environment, social and governance (ESG) disclosure standards in the EU to help meet the existing requirements placed on financial markets. It would also pave the way for increased transparency, comparability and reliability of ESG disclosure. For companies operating globally, the potential to leverage group-wide disclosures for sustainability reporting is welcome. The specific reference to international standards raises the prospect of increased global consistency of sustainability reporting and reduced fragmentation between jurisdictions.
EU Taxonomy Climate Delegated Act
The adoption of the EU Taxonomy Climate Delegated Act marks an important milestone in providing clarity on how the EU defines environmental sustainability. American companies in Europe will continue to underline the importance of international openness, evidence-based policymaking, regulatory certainty and economic stability, as core pillars for a successful transition towards a more sustainable future.
Channelling investment towards more sustainable activities will be key to reaching Europe’s goal of climate neutrality by 2050. To achieve the EU targets, the financial system can play an important role to channel sustainable investments and to finance the transition. The ambitious nature of the EU’s targets and the international nature of the climate challenge make international and transatlantic cooperation even more crucial.
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Highlighting our financial services priorities in Frankfurt and Strasbourg
On Monday, 25 and Wednesday, 27 November 2025, AmCham EU travelled to Frankfurt, Germany and Strasbourg, France to support an ambitious Savings and Investment Union (SIU) that will allow the EU to gain momentum towards more integrated Single Market. In Frankfurt, members met with senior officials from the European Central Bank, Deutsche Bundesbank, as well as the International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS) and the International Sustainability Standards Board (ISSB). Conversations focused on strengthening Europe’s place in the global financial markets and opportunities to streamline regulatory complexities.
The delegation then continued to the European Parliament in Strasbourg, where discussions with MEPs centred on securitsiation, the upcoming market integration package, next steps for the sustainable finance framework, the role of innovative technologies and the future of the digital euro. Throughout the visit, members emphasised the need to deepen Europe's capital markets, prevent further fragmentation, support innovation-driven regulation and foster a globally attractive investment environment that strengthens Europe’s financial resilience.
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Omnibus I: Parliament delivers critical simplification yet overlooks extraterritorial impact
The European Parliament’s adoption of its negotiating position on the Omnibus I package marks a major milestone towards a simpler, more consistent and workable sustainability reporting and due diligence framework for companies operating across the Single Market. The final text, however, fails to reflect the concerns of third-country stakeholders and international businesses over extraterritorial effects.
The framework’s implementation risks creating legal uncertainty for global businesses and conflicts of law in different jurisdictions, thereby undermining the diversification of supply chains and chilling investment in the EU. Limiting the scope of the initiatives to an EU Nexus – in other words, making them apply only to those global supply chains directly linked to the EU market – will be critical to achieving sustainability and competitiveness goals.
The Omnibus I is part of a wider agenda dedicated to improving the competitiveness of the EU’s economy. The Draghi report clearly outlined the pressing urgency of addressing Europe’s competitiveness challenges as a precondition for the EU realising its wider strategic objectives. Europe must act urgently to strengthen its economy and this can only work with ambitious simplification efforts. This imperative should transcend party political lines.
As the Omnibus I now enters into trilogue discussions, policymakers must secure a strong mandate to improve the EU’s business environment.
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Keeping simplification on track
While the European Parliament’s decision to return the first simplification package on the CSDDD and the CSRD to plenary introduces further delays for Europe’s sustainability agenda, recent progress in Omnibus I reflects meaningful steps toward a more proportionate framework. Yet major concerns remain unresolved, as set out in our reaction to the report adopted by the JURI Committee. The extraterritorial reach of both directives risks creating conflicting legal obligations for companies with international footprints. This is not only a matter for US-based companies, but for all businesses with international footprints that may be subject to overlapping or conflicting legal obligations in jurisdictions outside the EU. Read more in the recommendations we’ve set out on what remains to be done if the EU wants to make these frameworks effective and workable for all.
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