Maurer said Switzerland was well placed because there is plenty of expertise and financial resources in the country.
“There are people with plenty of money, particularly institutional investors such as pension funds and foundations,” he told SRF public television on Tuesday.
“They want to invest in sustainable projects which are beneficial for the environment.”
Maurer was speaking ahead of his trip to Glasgow to attend the United Nations Climate Change conference (COP26).
He said Switzerland “probably has one of the most environmentally-friendly financial sectors in the world” although international standards to gauge this are yet to be clearly defined.
It is too early to legislate on sustainable investment as the financial sector was changing fast, he added.
Maurer also said there is always a risk of greenwashing – providing misleading information about environmentally-friendly products for investors.
However, “Switzerland is keen to offer quality and to avoid such risks. Our banks and financial service sector are serious about this,” he said.
Pro-Palestine uni protests to be debated in Swiss parliament
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Swiss Interior Minister left the Cannes Film Festival on Saturday after three days of intensive dialogue, meetings and film screenings.
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Making the Swiss financial sector deliver on climate promises
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While world leaders are discussing the climate at COP26, citizens in Swiss cities are trying to find pragmatic climate solutions at the local level.
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