Italian Participation in the Multilateral Climate Change Legal Regime at Both National and EU Level
Italy participates in the multilateral climate change legal regime both individually and as a member of the European Union, which acts as a negotiating bloc.
Individually, at international level, Italy, through its competent Ministries, responds to its commitments through the conclusion of international agreements at bilateral and multilateral level.
With regard to the areas of interest for the conclusion of agreements, it should be noted that, traditionally, Italian foreign policy has oriented its co-operation and development work, including on climate issues, towards the Mediterranean and Africa. For adaptation and climate finance policies, the Italian special envoy for climate change has stated that the geopolitical priorities of the 2022 agenda should change because, as in the case of the Pacific Islands, “geopolitical priorities have become existential”. The role of the special envoy for climate change was only recently established, by Decree-Law No 80/2021, to ensure more effective Italian participation in international events and negotiations on environmental issues.
With regard, instead, to Italy’s membership of the European Union the latter often does not speak with one voice due to the ambition of some EU member states to speak only for themselves. In addition, a strategy capable of anticipating global discussions is often lacking.
Looking at the Italian position, expressed since the 2015 Paris Agreement, the government's action is geared towards ensuring active participation in the completion of the process for defining the technical rules needed to make the Paris Agreement fully operational and to pushing for these policies.
Mitigation
The report prepared by Italy's Institute for Environmental Protection and Research (ISPRA) – for further discussion of which, see 2.3 Key Policy/Regulatory Authorities – highlights that 2020 was the hottest year on record: an anomaly of +1.44°C compared to the 1961–90 climatological reference value. In Italy it was the fifth hottest year since 1961, recording an average anomaly of +1.54°C. In accordance with this data, Italy's political agenda on mitigation has been geared towards reconfirming and reinforcing its climate action plan to cut emissions and adapt to climate impacts; ie, its Nationally Determined Contribution (NDC).
Adaptation
In terms of adaptation, the government wishes to increase its adaptive capacity, strengthening the resilience of territories, especially through existing internal sectoral planning.
Climate Finance
According to Ecco (the Italian independent energy and climate change think tank), Italy has mobilised some USD2,504 billion for the period 2015–19. In the future, Italy is expected to make an ambitious commitment in line with real needs and a fair contribution to the developed countries' collective goal of mobilising USD100 billion per year by 2025. In fact, during a recent parliamentary hearing in December 2021, the Minister of Ecological Transition stated that the negotiation process to define the post-2025 financial target had been agreed upon; at the same time, he acknowledged the six-year delay on the part of developed countries to reaching this goal, which should have increased to USD100 billion per year as early as 2015.
Since 2015, Italy’s climate finance has been evenly split between mitigation and adaptation objectives. In particular, 48% of Italian climate finance, as reported in the Biennial report of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC), has been allocated to mitigation and 52% to adaptation.
Technology transfer
The issue of technology transfer seems not to be at the top of the Italian political agenda. However, Italy has joined the “Breakthrough Agenda” launched at the COP 26 Word Leaders Summit, which calls for countries to commit to working together over the next decade to accelerate the development and deployment of clean technologies and sustainable solutions to achieve the goals of the Paris Agreement.
Italy, as a member state of the European Union, participates in the drafting of European policies for combating climate change.
In fact, the Treaties, in particular Article 191 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union (TFEU), identify “combating climate change” as an important objective of EU policy. The competence in this area is shared between the member states and the European Union.
The European Green Deal
The new European Commission's political guidelines place climate action at the top of its agenda, in particular with the European Green Deal, announced on 11 December 2019.
The objective of the European Green Deal is to make Europe the world's first climate neutral continent. In order to do this, a number of regulatory proposals have been adopted to ensure that several production sectors will be able to meet the target.
In this context, Italy has taken a position, in particular, on decarbonisation, believing that it should be pursued in an effective, but progressive manner. Alongside this, Italy has always stressed the importance of a European industrial strategy, emphasising the need to avoid underestimating the potential impact of the climate-neutrality goal on European society. To ensure the achievement of a smooth transition, it would be necessary for Italy to invest in a number of technologies, including:
The National Recovery and Resilience Plan (NRRP)
These sectors are also involved in the funding under the NRRP. This programme has set aside for Mission No 2 (green revolution and climate change mitigation/adaptation objectives), an amount of EUR59 billion. In absolute figures, Italy's NRRP is the largest national plan under the unprecedented EU response to the crisis triggered by the coronavirus pandemic.
In 2021, the government's action at European level was aimed at facilitating European negotiations on the proposed Regulation on the “European Climate Act” for the definition of ambitious, fair and equitable climate targets (including the revision of the 2030 target). The Regulation was finally adopted at first reading by the Council on 29 July 2021.
Italy’s national climate change policy is determined by the multilateral and regional EU regime. In particular, the EU regime sets out the objectives, standards and key strategies of the national legislation.
Since ratifying the Paris Agreement, the EU block has enacted an ambitious, binding, legislative framework to deliver on its initial NDC, transmitted by the EU Council on 18 December 2020. The combined effect of the EU policies currently in force, and the national implementation of EU policies, should deliver at least the reductions pledged in the EU’s initial NDC.
With the passing of the NDC, the EU and its member states committed to an economy-wide net reduction from base-year emissions, of at least 55% of greenhouse gases (GHGs) by 2030, compared to 1990 levels.
EU Climate Change Legislation
As part of the Internationally Transferred Mitigation Outcomes policy, the emissions reduction targets under current EU legislation are divided between the sectors covered by the EU Emission Trading System (the “EU ETS”), non-ETS sectors and Effort Sharing Regulation (the “ESR”). The EU adopted several legislative and policy acts in order to guarantee these ambitious emission reduction targets. The key pieces of legislation are:
In addition, the EU Commission launched its new “Fit for 55” package to revise the EU ETS, in line with its more ambitious target of achieving net emission reductions of at least 55% by 2030, compared to 1990 levels.
Transparency Framework
With regard to the transparency framework, the current EU reporting framework on climate finance is based on Regulation (EU) 525/2013 establishing a mechanism for monitoring and reporting GHG emissions and for reporting other information relating to climate change. Member states are required to submit annual reports on financial support, capacity building and technology transfer activities to developing countries, based on the best available data.
Adaptation
In the new EU Strategy on Adaptation to Climate Change of 24 February 2021, the European Commission sets out how the European Union can adapt to the unavoidable impacts of climate change and become climate resilient by 2050, showing its intention to increase support for international climate resilience in negotiations in order to ensure that climate change adaptation and loss and damage issues are adequately addressed in international negotiations.
Technology Transfers and Climate Finance
The EU Commission adopted an action plan on sustainable finance in March 2018. The action plan sets out a comprehensive strategy to further connect finance with sustainability throughout two main policies.
In Italy, this legislation has been transposed into national laws, plans and administrative decisions (see Sections 2.2 National Climate Change Legal Regime, 3. National Policy and Legal Regime (Mitigation) and 4. National Policy and Legal Regime (Adaptation)).
The environmental legal framework is mainly, but not only, set forth by Legislative Decree No 152/2006 (also known as the “Environmental Consolidated Act” – ECA).
However, the ECA does not provide a specific discipline on combating climate change. The principal legislation directly relating to climate change is the following.
Recognition of Environmental Protection in the Italian Constitution
The Constitutional Law No 1/2022 amended Articles 9 and 41 of the Italian Constitution, expressly introducing environmental protection to the constitutional values. Previously, environmental protection had already been acknowledged by the Constitutional Court by means of interpretation of the constitutional principles on the protection of landscape required by Article 9 (2) and on human health, as established by Article 32 (1) of the Italian Constitution.
Furthermore, the constitutional review resulted in a new reference to the principle of sustainable development, contained in Article 9 (3) of the Constitution. Indeed, Article 9 (3) of the Constitution states now that the Republic “protects the environment, biodiversity and ecosystems, also in the interests of future generations. State law regulates the types and forms of animal protection.”
The following are the key policy, administrative, governance and regulatory authorities in Italy.
Ministry For Ecological Transition (MiTE)
The governmental body in charge of environmental policies is the Ministry for the Ecological Transition (Ministro della Transizione Ecologica – MiTE). It is also responsible for issuing policy on climate change.
The MiTE is formed of different Directions, such as the General Direction on European and International Activity (Direzione Generale attività europea e internazionale – DG AEI). The third division of AEI is dedicated to “international strategies for sustainable development and the climate” and participates in all activities proposed by international authorities to combat climate change.
Institute for Environmental Protection and Research (ISPRA)
The MiTE has a policy and supervisory role over the activities of the Institute for Environmental Protection and Research (Istituto Superiore per la Protezione e la Ricerca Ambientale – ISPRA). ISPRA is part of the National Network System for the Protection of the Environment (Sistema Nazionale di Protezione dell’Ambiente – SNPA), together with the Regional Agencies for the Protection of the Environment (Agenzie Regionali per la Protezione dell’Ambiente – ARPAs). With regard to climate change, its tasks include issuing and updating climate statistics and indicators in Italy, and drawing up the emissions inventory, which is essential for verifying compliance with international climate targets.
ETS Committee
Regarding regulatory authorities, an important role is played by the competent national authority for the implementation of the ETS. The ETS Committee is an inter-ministerial body composed by the MiTE and the Ministries of Economic Development and Infrastructure, established by Legislative Decree No 216/2006.
Inter-ministerial Committee for Economic Planning and Sustainable Development (CIPESS) and Inter-ministerial Committee for Ecological Transition (CITE)
CIPESS aims at updating the National Plan for the reduction of reduction of GHG emissions. Since October of 2019, this Committee has been renamed by referring to sustainable development. Previously, it was known as the Inter-ministerial Committee for Economic Planning.
CITE is responsible for approving the Plan for the Ecological Transition and has the task of co-ordinating national policies and all related plans.
Both the CIPESS and the CITE are composed by the President of the Council Ministers and the competent Ministries.
National Policy
The aim of climate change mitigation is spread throughout national regulation. However, the main instruments specifically dealing with climate change mitigation, and guaranteeing the NDC mitigation targets, are within the ETS.
Other important instruments are set forth by the NRRP. Mission 2 provides for significant investments to promote the green revolution in the pursuit of climate change mitigation and adaptation goals.
Emission Trading System
As mentioned in 2.1 National Climate Change Policy, the overall volume of GHG is limited by a “cap” on the number of emission allowances for power plants, industry factories and the aviation sector, on the basis of the EU Emissions Trading System regulated by Directive 2003/87/EC as emended by Directive (EU) 2018/410. This cap on emissions is set for the whole of the EU. Since the beginning of phase 3 of the EU ETS (2013–20) and, in phase 4 of the EU ETS (2021–30), the cap on emissions has decreased by an increased annual linear reduction factor of 2.2%, as established by Directive (EU) 2018/410.
The Legislative Decree No 47/2020 transposes the ETS into Italian legislation. According to Article 24 of said Legislative Decree the ETS Committee (2.3 Key Policy/Regulatory Authorities) should set out the number of allowances to be allocated free of charge in that period based on the EU law; the other allowances must be paid. Indeed, within the cap, installations buy or receive emissions allowances, which they can trade with one another as needed. All revenues generated from the auctioning of allowances is paid into a dedicated government account.
Under Article 35 of said Legislative Decree the operators must file an annual report of emissions by 31 March to the ETS Committee. In the case of a breach of the ETS rules, Article 42 provides penalties according to EU ETS legislation.
Spheres of Government/Sectors Impacted
2.3 Key Policy/Regulatory Authorities includes a discussion of the spheres of government affected. The sectors that are impacted by the ETS include aviation and other activities listed in Annex I of Legislative Decree No 47/2020 (as well as those of Annex I of the Directive (EU) 2018/410). As indicated by the Ministry for Economic Development; currently, more than 1,200 entities are regulated by the Legislative Decree 47/2020, covering about 40% of national GHG emissions. Therefore, as a main consequence, those operators are also required to include in their business risk any emission-related costs for the allowances market.
Climate Change Mitigation in the Granting of Environmental Permits/Authorisations
At EU level, in 2013, the EU Commission presented the “Guidance on Integrating Climate Change and Biodiversity into Environmental Impact Assessment” and the “Guidance on Integrating Climate Change and Biodiversity into Strategic Environmental Assessment” to help member states improve the way in which climate change is integrated in environmental impact assessments (EIAs) and in strategic environmental assessments (SEAs), carried out across the EU.
The subsequent Directive (EU) 2014/52, amending the Directive (EU) 2011/92, strengthened the provisions related to climate change in the EIA legislation.
In accordance with EU Directives, the Italian EIA legislation, as transposed by Part II and relevant Annexes of the ECA, considers both mitigation and adaptation to climate change. Pursuant to Article 5 and Annex VII of ECA, the developer should also include the “impact of the project on climate (for example the nature and magnitude of greenhouse gas emissions) and the vulnerability of the project to climate change in the environmental impact assessment report”.
The SNPA has elaborated the Guidelines on technical standards for the preparation of the environmental impact report (Linee Guida SNPA No 28/2020, ISBN 978-88-448-0995-9, Rome, May 2020). Annex 2 of the Guidelines contains an in-depth focus on mitigation and adaptation to climate change.
However, SEA legislation (see the Part II and relevant Annexes of the ECA) does not contain express reference to climate change and its mitigation, but only considers generic “climatic factors”.
Looking at the environmental authorisations issued by administrations, climate mitigation is considered among the general objectives and sometimes for the provision of measures, including compensatory measures.
All measures included in the NRRP must respect the “do no significant harm” (DNSH) principle. According to this, the measures should not cause significant harm to the environmental objectives set out in Article 17 of Regulation (EU) 2020/852 "Taxonomy for Sustainable Finance”. The objectives include climate change mitigation, also impacting on authorisations and permits.
National Policy
In Italy, the national climate change policy is based on the following key strategies and plans.
Another important instrument is set forth by the NRRP. Mission 2 of the NRRP provides for significant investments to promote the green revolution and climate change mitigation and adaptation goals.
Spheres of Government/Sectors Impacted
2.3 Key Policy/Regulatory Authorities includes a discussion of the spheres of government affected. Regarding the sectors impacted by the regulatory framework, in August 2021, Italy launched the first experimental programme of interventions for adaptation to climate change in urban areas, aimed at increasing the resilience of urban centres to risks generated by climate change, with reference to heat waves, extreme rainfall, and drought. This experimental programme has allocated about EUR80 million euros for the implementation of green and blue infrastructures in urban areas as well as grey adaptation measures. Furthermore, the investments based on the NRRP aim at having an impact on several sectors, such as sustainable mobility, renewable energy, energy efficiency (of private and public buildings), the circular economy, management of water and waste as well as hydrogeological risks.
Climate Change Mitigation in the Granting of Environmental Permits/Authorisations
As explained in 3.1 Policy/Regulatory Instruments and Spheres of Government/Sectors, the IEA and the SEA also take into account adaptation to climate change in environmental authorisations. Regarding the SEA the “Guidelines for the analysis and characterisation of environmental components to support the assessment and drafting of SEA documents” (ISPRA, No 148/2017, ISBN 978-88-448-0813-6) suggest considering the national climate adaptation strategy in the planning activity related to SEA.
The Italian jurisdiction intends to participate in the carbon market evolving under the Article 6 of the Paris Agreement. It was a central discussion point at COP26 in Glasgow, in which Italy and the European Union participated in order to facilitate agreement on the Article 6 Rulebook.
As to future developments, it is possible to assume that the most relevant developments will concern, on the one hand, the EU ETS, which will be extended to other sectors such as the maritime, construction and road transport ones, and, on the other hand, the implementation of the Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM), for further discission of which please see 5.2 European Union Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM).
Regarding participation in the voluntary carbon market (VCM), at present there are two mechanisms set up under the Kyoto Protocol, the Clean Development Mechanism and the Joint Implementation, in which Italy has taken part. In any event, since phase 3 of the EU ETS (2013–20), the international credits generated by those mechanism are no longer compliance units within the EU ETS. One of the consequences of this EU policy was registered by the “State of the Voluntary Carbon Markets 2021”. This report, produced by the non-profit initiative “Ecosystem Marketplace”, stated that since Europe stopped accepting offsets in its EU ETS compliance scheme, prices of European origin credits sold in the VCM have fallen to almost USD3 per tonne, although prices increased significantly in 2020 to almost USD9.50 per tonne in the general market.
The governing regulations have been set at EU level. On 14 July 2022, the EU Commission presented a proposal for a new Regulation (COM(2021)564).
The Italian jurisdiction will be highly impacted by the new CBAM legislation. It can be assumed that the CBAM will progressively become an alternative to the ETS. The CBAM regulation will extend carbon pricing to products made in countries that do not have carbon pricing mechanisms, exactly as if that product had been made in Europe and within the ETS. At the beginning, the CBAM will only apply to a selected number of goods at high risk of carbon leakage: iron and steel, cement, fertiliser, aluminium and electricity generation, to be gradually extended to other goods.
According to Dossier No 61 of 18 February 2022, prepared by the Italian Chamber of Deputies, Italy is one of the member states with the highest percentage of imports in the CBAM sectors, with 26.6% for steel, 3.7% for cement, 7.3% for fertilisers and 19% for aluminium. Considering that, it is possible to assume that this may cause an increase of the prices of imported goods belonging to the categories subject to the CBAM EU regulation.
As regards national policy, the TCFD has scarcely influenced the Italian legal system. Instead, this has occurred mainly via EU law. In 2017 the TCFD issued its first Recommendations which were implemented by the European Commission via the “Guidelines on non-financial reporting” (Communication 2017/C 215/01). Regulation (EU) 2019/2088 (Sustainable Financial Disclosure Regulation – SFDR) and Regulation (EU) 2020/852 (the “Taxonomy Regulation”) may be considered as an (indirect) implementation of such non-binding tools. It is noteworthy that EU Institutions have implemented TCFD Recommendation through regulation; ie, self-executing acts.
Prior to such recommendations and regulations, EU co-legislators issued the Non-financial Reporting Directive (EU) 2014/95 (NFRD), amending Directive (EU) 2013/34 (Accounting Directive), which has been transposed into Italian legislation by Legislative Decree No 254/2016. Recently, Commission Delegated Regulation (EU) 2021/2178 (Disclosure Delegated Act), supplementing the Taxonomy Regulation, specified the content and presentation of the information to be disclosed pursuant to Accounting Directive Articles 19a and 29a, both introduced by Article 1 of the NFRD.
At the regulatory level, Italian institutions appear more prompt to embrace TCFD guidelines autonomously.
For instance, the National Institute for the Supervision of Insurance (IVASS) issued Regulation No 38/2018 on the system of governance of insurance undertakings and groups. Regulation No 38/2018, among other provisions, aims at rationalising the existing regulatory framework; it also introduced new provisions relating to social and environmental factors in the definition of the strategic plan and the activities of insurance undertakings. In particular, Article 4(2) establishes that the controls relating to the corporate governance system shall cover each type of corporate risk, including those of an environmental and social nature, “generated or borne”. Article 47(2)(b) also sets forth that those undertakings may introduce remuneration systems, for the variable component, based on non-financial indicators such as criteria based on social and/or environmental performance or the management of customer service.
Regarding the influence of civil society on investment and industrial operational decision, it is difficult to assess its impact. However, according to the Bank of Italy’s Occasional Paper No 545/2020, so far there has been little growth in awareness of the risks linked to climate change and the opportunities linked to the transition towards a low carbon economy.
Broad Climate Change Liability
Italian legislation does not provide for a specific form of liability related to the impact of climate change. National legislation only includes some provisions, relating either to civil/administrative or criminal liability in cases of significant adverse impact on certain natural resources (respectively, liability for environmental damage and for environmental criminal offences).
The Environmental Liability Directive 2004/35/EC (ELD) has been transposed into national legislation by the ECA (see Articles 298-bis–318). “Environmental damage” means a measurable adverse effect on (i) protected species and natural habitats; (ii) water, including marine waters; and (iii) land (Article 300 ECA). On the other hand, pursuant to Criminal Code Articles 452-bis and ff, the scope of environmental criminal liability is broader since the criminal offences provided therein also encompass harm to air and ecosystems.
Environmental liability for damages as well as for criminal offences are thus not specifically referred to in climate change legislation. That said, both may be deemed as protecting some of the natural resources encompassed by climate change legislation.
Civil Liability
As regards directors’ liability for the impact on climate change of their companies, the ordinary provisions of the Italian Civil Code shall apply. Pursuant to Civil Code Articles 2392 and 2476, companies’ directors may be held liable for negligence in complying with their (occupational) duties. Therefore, directors may only be convicted for the negative impact their companies have on climate change where such impact results from negligence.
Pursuant to ECA Article 311(2), operators may be held liable for environmental damage. ECA Article 302(4) provides for a broad definition of “operator”. It encompasses “any natural or legal, private or public person who operates or controls the occupational activity having environmental significance or to whom decisive economic power over the technical functioning of such an activity has been delegated, including the holder of a permit or authorisation for such an activity or the person registering or notifying such an activity”. Directors, often jointly with the company, may thus be held liable pursuant to ECA (Articles 298-bis and ff), where the above-mentioned requirements provided for by Civil Code Articles 2392 and 2476 are met.
Criminal Liability
As to criminal environmental liability, the latter is strictly personal. Traditionally, legal entities shall not be held liable for criminal offences (societas delinquere non potest); only directors, or the other natural person who took the relevant decision(s), shall be held liable for criminal offences committed by the company. However, under Legislative Decree No 231/2001, even legal entities, where they are not able to demonstrate that specific organisational measures have been adopted, may be held liable for a number of criminal offences, including environmental ones, committed in their interest or to their advantage by their directors or by another natural person exercising, even de facto, management and control over them.
Infrastructure investments and/or financing arrangements, capable of producing negative climate change impacts, may become relevant under corporate social responsibility (CSR) law. Legislative Decree No 231/2001 embodies a CSR instrument, as it pushes companies to adopt organisational measures to prevent the committing of certain criminal offences, including environmental offences (even though these are not criminal offences specifically related to climate change).
However, at national as well as supranational level, climate change CSR trend seems to have an enabling , rather than punitive, approach. Regulatory authorities are thus focused on promoting positive (or non-negative) impacts, rather than sanctioning negative climate change impacts. An example of this approach is the non-financial reporting obligation (see 6.1 Task Force on Climate-Related Financial Disclosures (TCFD) and 6.4 ESG Reporting and Climate Change). Furthermore, ISO standards on CSR have been available since 2010. The International Organization for Standardization (ISO) has published a technical standard (26000) on CSR which deals with climate mitigation and adaptation.
As to environmental civil liability (ECA Articles 298-bis and ff), shareholders and parent companies may be held liable where (i) they fall within the definition of “operator” provided for by ECA Article 311(2) and (b), and (ii) their conduct causes environmental damage pursuant to ECA Article 300.
Under the Civil Code, shareholders may only be held liable for damages caused by the company pursuant to ECA Articles 298-bis and ff where they are unlimitedly liable for the acts of the company (ie, when that company is a partnership). With regard to criminal environmental offences, shareholders may be held liable where their personal conduct constitutes a criminal offence, in accordance with the principle of personal criminal liability.
As to parent companies, pursuant to Civil Code Article 2497-ter, every decision taken by the subsidiary company in accordance with the parent company’s directives shall be analytically motivated and contain precise indications of the reasons and interests whose evaluation affected the decision. As a consequence, insofar as it is ascertained that the environmental damage caused by the subsidiary company was due to a directive from the parent company, the latter may be held liable. Similarly, in the case of an environmental criminal offence caused by a subsidiary company due to a directive from a parent company, even this latter may be held criminally liable pursuant to Legislative Decree No 231/2001.
The Non-financial Reporting Decree
Legislative Decree No 254/2016 (the “Non-financial Reporting Decree” or “NFR Decree”) has transposed into Italian legislation the Accounting Directive (EU) 2013/34, as amended by the NFRD. In particular, Articles 2, 3 and 4 of the NFR Decree enact Articles 19a and 29a of the Accounting Directive, both introduced by Article 1(1) and (3) of the NFRD.
Pursuant to NFR Decree Article 2, public-interest entities that average over 500 employees during the financial year and a balance sheet total of EUR20 million and/or a net turnover of EUR40 million, shall include a non-financial statement in the management report.
In order to determine whether ESG reporting falls within such a regulatory requirement and whether it includes a climate change component, a number of normative acts should be examined.
NFR Decree Article 3(1) provides that the statement should cover environmental, social and governance (ESG) issues describing, at least:
Article 3(2) specifies the information related to ESG matters. As to the environmental ones, the non-financial statement shall include information on:
NFR Decree Article 4 provides a similar provision for public-interest entities’ parent companies as referred to in NFR Decree Article 1(1)(b).
The Taxonomy Regulation
Even though the provision includes just some of the components related to climate change, NFR Decree Articles 2, 3 and 4, as enacting Accounting Directive Articles 19a and 29a, should be read in the light of Regulation (EU) 2020/852 (the “Taxonomy Regulation”) and the pertinent delegated acts progressively issued by the European Commission pursuant to it.
Taxonomy Regulation Article 8(1) provides that any undertaking subject to an obligation to publish non-financial information pursuant to Accounting Directive Articles 19a or 29a “shall include in its non-financial statement or consolidated non-financial statement information on how and to what extent the undertaking’s activities are associated with economic activities that qualify as environmentally sustainable under Articles 3 and 9 of this Regulation”. In accordance with Taxonomy Regulation Article 8(4), the Commission issued the Disclosure Delegated Act 2021/2178, aimed at specifying the content and presentation of the information to be disclosed pursuant to Article 8(1).
Taxonomy Regulation Article 9 lists six environmental objectives, including climate change mitigation and climate change adaptation. Articles 10 and 11 provide the general conditions under which an economic activity shall qualify as contributing substantially to climate change mitigation and adaptation, respectively. Such conditions have been specified, by establishing pertinent technical screening criteria, within the Delegated Regulation (EU) 2021/2139 (the “EU Taxonomy Climate Delegated Act”) adopted by the European Commission pursuant to Articles 10(3) and 11(3).
Definition of Public-Interest Entities
Moving on to the subjective scope of application of these requirements, ESG reporting is a requirement for stock-exchange listing. NFR Decree Article 1(a), in fact, identifies public-interest entities as those legal persons referred to by Legislative Decree No 39/2010 Article 16(1):
Unlike France or Germany, Italy has not implemented any specific legislation on environmental due diligence.
The Bank of Italy’s Occasional Paper No 545/2020 has highlighted that, so far, there has not been adequate growth in the awareness of the risks linked to climate change and the opportunities linked to the transition towards a low carbon economy. This means that, even at transaction level, climate-related financial risk (CRFR) disclosure is still unsatisfactory.
However, such phenomena is not limited to Italy, as demonstrated by the recent European Commission Communication COM(2022) 71 final, “Proposal for a Directive of the European Parliament and of the Council on Corporate Sustainability Due Diligence and amending Directive (EU) 2019/1937”. The Commission declared that voluntary action does not appear to have resulted in large-scale improvement across multiple sectors, and has therefore elaborated a compulsory instrument. The proposal regards adverse effects on human rights and environmental impacts, including in the relevant undertaking’s value chains. As to environmental concerns, adverse impacts include, in particular, GHG emissions, pollution, biodiversity loss and ecosystem degradation. The proposal aims to introduce proper climate change due diligence.
At national level, where companies conduct environmental due diligence, this currently deals with general environmental legislation. To this extent, not every component is to be considered as strictly related to climate change. Typically, climate change-related issue may be:
Renewable Energy Policy
At policy level, the government, in accordance with the Italian Integrated National Energy and Climate Plan (PNIEC), is committed to a new approach in resource and environmental management with a focus on aspects of energy security, self-production and consequent resilience. Consistent with its commitment to reduce GHG emissions by 2030, Italy is committed to a transition towards renewable energy sources (including biofuels and hydrogen), to the energy efficiency of its infrastructure and to the adoption of smart technologies aimed at energy efficiency and resilience in a cybersecurity framework.
PNIEC is structured into five lines of action, which will be developed in an integrated manner: from decarbonisation to energy efficiency and security, through the development of the internal energy market, research, innovation and competitiveness. The goal is to create a new energy policy that ensures the full environmental, social and economic sustainability of the national territory.
Renewable Energy Legislation
The main piece of legislation for renewable energy is currently Legislative Decree No 199/2021 (hereinafter “Renewable Energy Decree II”). It transposes into the national legal order the Renewable Energy Directive (EU) 2018/2001 (RED II). The Renewable Energy Decree II has amended Legislative Decree No 387/2003, previously amended by Legislative Decree No 28/2011 (hereinafter “Renewable Energy Decree I”).
Renewable Energy Regulation
Regulation for the renewable energy sector is structured into three types of instruments.
A set of provisions deals with territorial planning. To this end, Renewable Energy Decree II delegates the MiTE to issue one or more statutory instruments (Ministerial Decrees) to set up the criteria for identifying suitable and unsuitable areas for the installation of renewable energy production plants. On the basis of the ministerial criteria, regional statutes identify the suitable areas.
Secondly, the Renewable Energy Decree II provides for the permitting procedures. The related competence is assigned to regional authorities. Such procedures were already regulated within Legislative Decree No 387/2003 and Renewable Energy Decree I, both amended by Renewable Energy Decree II. The administrative procedures for granting renewable energy plant permits aim at ensuring proportionality, transparency and simplification. Pursuant to Article 22 of the Renewable Energy Decree II, procedures for the installation of plants in suitable areas are provided with further simplification tools. Moreover, specific provisions are devoted to the procedure for the installation of biofuel production plants.
Thirdly, a regulatory framework is provided for the financial incentivisation of the production of renewable energy.
On one hand, one of the most important features of the new regulatory framework is the introduction and strengthening of organisational tools, such as the renewable energy communities. On the other, Renewable Energy Decree II rationalises pre-existing incentive instruments. The most important incentive instruments are the following:
The Italian jurisdiction provides other regulatory instruments and support for the uptake of other forms of climate-friendly investment. In particular, national policy makers are paying attention to mobility issues.
At policy level, the Italian mobility strategy hinges, in line with the European Green Deal, on the development and enhancement of sustainable forms of transport, both private and public, as well as sustainable freight logistics, in order to reduce pollutant and CO₂ emissions.
At regulatory level, the “Ecobonus” for mobility has been set up by Budget Law for 2019 (Law No 145/2018) – Article 1(145). It provides for the allocation of tax credits in order to incentivise the purchase of low-carbon vehicles. Mobility issues are also encompassed by the Italian NRRP and by the Plan for Ecological Transition.
The “Ecobonus” for building provides for tax deductions related to expenses incurred for energy-efficiency work, building renovation, and the purchase of furniture and large household appliances. The deduction is also available for interventions to automate buildings’ systems, as well as in the event of replacement of such systems, for expenses relating to the disposal and reclamation of the materials and the systems replaced.
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