Mercer Super has become the first Australian company to be sued over alleged greenwashing, as corporate watchdog ASIC makes good on its crackdown on the Australian business community regarding bogus green marketing claims.
Greenwashing is an emerging term for the practice of representing that a financial product, investment strategy or business’s operations are environmentally friendly, sustainable or ethical when in actuality such implications are a distortion to influence investment or consumer decisions.
The Australian Securities & Investments Commission (ASIC) confirmed it had launched court action against Mercer over alleged “misleading statements about the sustainable nature and characteristics of some of its superannuation investment options”.
“This is the first time ASIC has taken an Australian entity to court regarding alleged greenwashing conduct, and it reflects our continuing efforts to ensure sustainability-related claims made by financial institutions are accurate,” ASIC deputy chair Sarah Court said.
The alleged greenwashing in question
The case relates to seven “Sustainable Plus” investment options offered by the Mercer Super Trust (MST), of which Mercer is the trustee, where Sustainable Plus options were marketed to members who were “deeply committed to sustainability”.
The products were suitable for that cohort, Mercer’s website copy read, because they intentionally excluded investments in fossil fuel companies including thermal coal (as well as alcohol and gambling companies).
But ASIC alleges the products actually invested in no fewer than 15 companies involved in the extraction or sale of carbon-heavy fossil fuels including AGL Energy, BHP Group, Glencore and Whitehaven Coal.
The regulator said there were also investments in 15 booze companies, including Budweiser Brewing Company, Carlsberg, Heineken, and Treasury Wine Estates, and 19 gambling companies, including Aristocrat Leisure, Caesar’s Entertainment, Crown Resorts, and Tabcorp.
In a statement to SmartCompany, a Mercer spokesperson acknowledged the civil penalty proceeding and that it related to “certain statements on the MST website concerning the extent of investment exclusions applied in the MST’s Sustainable Plus investment options”.
“Mercer has cooperated with ASIC throughout its investigation, and will continue to carefully consider ASIC’s concerns with respect to this matter,” the spokesperson said.
“It would be inappropriate to comment further as the matter is now before the courts.”
A warning to businesses
Court said it was a warning for other companies that ASIC would take action on instances of misleading marketing and greenwashing, citing an “increased demand for sustainability-related financial products”.
“If financial products make sustainable investment claims to investors and potential investors, they need to reflect the true position. If investments in certain industries like fossil fuels are said to be excluded, this promise must be upheld,” Court said.
Since ASIC announced its greenwashing crackdown, some $140,000 in fines have been dished out to Australian companies including Tlou Energy, Vanguard Investments, Diversa Trustees and Black Mountain Energy.
Tlou Energy Limited was fined $53,280 last year for “factually incorrect” statements as part of two ASX announcements in 2021, namely that electricity produced by Tlou was carbon neutral and that Tlou had environmental approval and the capability to generate certain quantities of electricity from solar power. Both were false, ASIC said.
At the time, Court said the agency was investigating “a number of” listed entities, super funds and managed funds in relation to their green credentials claims and warned ASIC would “take enforcement action, including court action, for serious breaches”.
Mercer Super marks this as the first time the commission has done so, following legislative amendments from the financial services royal commission that emboldened ASIC’s regulatory powers in superannuation.
ASIC is seeking not only declarations and pecuniary penalties but an injunction to stop Mercer from spruiking the alleged claims, and to force Mercer to go public about any contraventions found by the court.
This article first appeared in Smart Company.
$140K in fines?! – the occasional thrashing with a limp lettuce isn’t going to stop them – chuck a few more zeros on the end of the 140,000 and show the grifters you mean business!
$140K would scarcely cover the annual cost of catering for a single corporation’s Board Room. The penalties are risible.
Australian company? Try a subsidiary of Mercer in the US. American culture not Australian.
This misleading behaviour does not happen in a vacuum. Real people hiding behind corporate anonymity make these decisions. Isn’t it time for real people to serve jail time?? Just saying what seems a no brainer to me. The Govt in Iceland jailed the bankers responsible for the GFC. Our present Labor Govt are too enthralled by the multinationals and financial industry to show any real courage. Shame, Albanese, Shame.