Australia Launches Its First Sustainable Finance Taxonomy

June 18, 2025 – In a landmark move to channel private capital into climate action, Australia has officially launched its Sustainable Finance Taxonomy, a classification framework designed to identify and promote investments that support the country’s transition to net‑zero emissions.

Developed collaboratively by the Australian Sustainable Finance Institute (ASFI) and Treasury, in consultation with industry leaders, regulators, and Indigenous communities, the taxonomy was handed over to the government in February and publicly released in mid‑June 2025.


⚙️ What Does the Taxonomy Cover?

The taxonomy sets clear criteria for distinguishing between “green” and “transition” activities in six priority sectors:

  • Electricity generation & supply
  • Minerals, mining & metals
  • Construction & built environment
  • Manufacturing & industry
  • Transport
  • Agriculture & land use

Designed with ‘Do No Significant Harm’ rules and minimum social safeguards, it aims to curb greenwashing and help investors confidently finance projects aligned with Australia’s climate and social goals.


📈 Why It Matters

  1. Attracting Capital – By aligning with global models like the EU taxonomy, the framework promotes international investment into Australian green and transition projects.
  2. Driving Transition – It’s the world’s first taxonomy to formally include mining—targeting critical minerals such as lithium, copper, nickel, and iron—under both green and transition criteria.
  3. Reducing Risk & Cost – A common taxonomy cuts due‑diligence costs and provides transparency that supports consistent sustainability disclosures.

🏛 Governance & Industry Support

The taxonomy was steered by the Council of Financial Regulators’ Climate Working Group, with a 25‑member Taxonomy Technical Expert Group guiding its development.

Throughout 2023–2025, the process featured two public consultation rounds, feedback from 56–71 submissions, and endorsement from key stakeholders including industry, civil society, Indigenous groups, and financial institutions.


🤝 First Nations and Social Safeguards

Australia’s approach places significant emphasis on First Nations inclusion, integrating Indigenous perspectives into taxonomy design and social safeguard criteria. It also works to promote equitable partnerships in sustainable projects.


🔜 What’s Ahead?

  • Webinar Debut – ASFI hosted a live webinar on June 18 to introduce the taxonomy and answer stakeholder questions.
  • Next Phases – While use is initially voluntary, policymakers aim to embed the taxonomy in reporting standards and possibly in regulatory frameworks later in 2025.
  • Future Expansion – Future updates may incorporate biodiversity, adaptation, and additional “transition” criteria to ensure adaptability and relevance over time.

🧩 Final Take

Australia’s sustainable finance taxonomy is more than a standard—it’s a strategic lever mobilizing private finance toward climate‑aligned activities. By offering crystal‑clear criteria, promoting social inclusion, and aligning with global standards, it positions Australia as a credible player in the fast‑growing sustainable finance ecosystem.

For businesses and investors, this means greater clarity, more comparable reporting, and access to funding for projects that truly deliver environmental and social impact.

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