Insights | | Best of July 2025: Sustainable Finance Reads

Best of July 2025: Sustainable Finance Reads

15 August 2025

A curated roundup of July 2025’s best articles on sustainability, climate, and market trends from leading industry voices.

Each month, we gather standout articles from our favorite writers—insightful, thought-provoking, and worth your time. This curated selection brings together the most engaging ideas, timely analyses, and fresh perspectives published over the past month, so you can catch up on what mattered most.

Photo by Michael Olsen on Unsplash

Top 10 Sustainability Markers – July 2025 by Terence Jeyaretnam


After a six-month hiatus, Terence Jeyaretnam returns with his signature “Sustainability Markers” column, scanning the most consequential ESG and climate developments from February to July 2025. This edition covers everything from 2024’s record-breaking global heat and ocean acidification breaching planetary boundaries, to the shift in global investor language from “ESG” to “resilience.” It highlights major legal milestones—including the International Court of Justice’s climate ruling, a NSW court’s rejection of a major coal expansion, and Australia’s ASIC enforcing mandatory climate disclosures. The piece also tracks Australia’s post-election climate mandate, the launch of a AU$1 billion Green Iron Fund for industrial decarbonisation, and the EU’s push for biodiversity “nature credits.” Jeyaretnam doesn’t shy away from the more challenging signals—corporate retreats on DEI, U.S. rollbacks under Trump, and landmark greenwashing litigation—while noting areas of hope in regenerative business models and global net-zero commitments. The result is a panoramic snapshot of a turbulent but defining half-year for sustainability.

Everything on the Table: A Few Thoughts on Sustainability by Simon Rebbechi


Simon Rebbechi’s wide-ranging July update blends sharp market analysis with sustainability insights, anchored by the UN PRI’s new Sustainability Value Creation in Private Markets report. He explores the persistent challenge of deal team buy-in, the mounting strain of U.S. electricity price inflation driven by sluggish transmission buildout, and the climate-linked pressures on global food costs. Alongside critiques of “willful blindness” among high-carbon high-wealth groups, he highlights controversial opportunities in GMO crop innovation, behavioral nudges for plant-based diets, and breakthrough geothermal drilling technology. Rebbechi closes on a note of optimism with Ember’s data showing unprecedented potential for electrification across transport and heating, a reminder that while challenges are mounting, so too are the tools to address them.

Relevant library resources

ESG in the Trump era: What’s next?

This article examines the likely impact of a second Trump administration on responsible investing in the US, and explores where opportunities lie as the transition to a net zero economy accelerates.
Article
12 March 2025

Is the Earth losing resilience, and does it matter?

This article explores where science stands on Earth system risk, action to avert climate change and the path forward.
Article
9 May 2025

3 degrees more: The impending hot season and how nature can help us prevent it

This three-part journal explores the severe impacts of a 3°C temperature rise on climate, biodiversity, agriculture, human survival, and the economy, emphasising the need for urgent climate action and nature-based solutions.
Research
7 June 2024

A director’s guide to mandatory climate reporting

MinterEllison
This guide covers Australia’s mandatory climate reporting, requiring large entities to disclose climate risks and opportunities from January 2025. It provides directors with practical steps for compliance, focusing on governance, strategy, and risk management, and encourages proactive engagement to build long-term organisational resilience.
Research
26 September 2024

Green metal statecraft: Forging Australia’s green iron industry

Climate Energy Finance (CEF)
Australia’s "Green Metal Statecraft" outlines a transformative agenda for advancing its green iron industry. The report advocates leveraging renewables-powered iron ore processing, supported by $10-30 billion in strategic public investment. Emphasising economic, environmental, and energy security, the plan aligns national policy with decarbonisation to secure Australia’s leadership in sustainable steelmaking and green exports.
Research
15 November 2024

Australian sustainable finance taxonomy (Version 1 - 2025)

Australian Sustainable Finance Institute (ASFI)
The Australian Sustainable Finance Taxonomy (2025) provides a framework classifying economic activities aligned with environmental sustainability goals, particularly climate mitigation. It includes performance-based criteria for key sectors such as agriculture, mining, energy, construction, and transport, facilitating sustainable capital allocation, consistent reporting, and transition planning, thus supporting Australia’s transition to a net-zero emissions economy.
Research
16 June 2025
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