Sustainability and ESG News

Rory O'Sullivan Rory O'Sullivan

China Aims for Unified Corporate Sustainability Disclosure Standard by 2030

China’s Ministry of Finance is taking significant steps toward unifying corporate sustainability disclosures. They’ve released a draft guideline with the vision of establishing a nationwide standard by 2030. This move responds to the global focus on Environmental, Social, and Governance (ESG) issues, making enhanced corporate sustainability reporting essential. The guidelines aim to improve companies’ engagement in global trade, enhance international competitiveness, and support China’s institutional opening-up.

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Organizations Release Guide with more Standardized Sustainability Reporting

The IFRS Foundation and EFRAG have released guidance to simplify sustainability reporting alignment between ISSB and ESRS standards, easing the burden on EU companies. The document focuses on climate-related disclosures, providing practical support for applying ISSB's standards alongside ESRSs. Despite differing approaches, the guidance aims to ensure consistency in reporting requirements and reduce duplication in sustainability disclosures.

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Singapore has Introduced Mandatory Climate Reporting

Singapore has officially introduced mandatory climate-related reporting requirements for listed and large non-listed companies, aligning with IFRS ISSB standards by 2025. The phased approach, recommended by the Sustainability Reporting Advisory Committee, begins with listed companies in 2025 and extends to large non-listed firms by 2027. The reporting framework includes disclosing Scope 1 and 2 emissions initially, with the government aiming to enhance sustainability capabilities and provide companies with improved access to markets, customers, and financing opportunities.

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Vincent de la Mar Vincent de la Mar

The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission Rules on Climate Disclosure are official!

The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has officially approved long-awaited climate-related disclosure rules for U.S. public companies. These rules mandate that companies disclose critical information in their annual reports and registration statements. Specifically, they must address climate risks, outline mitigation plans, assess the financial impact of severe weather events, and, in certain cases, report greenhouse gas emissions stemming from their operations. This marks a significant step toward greater transparency and accountability in corporate climate reporting.

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California Mandates Corporate Environmental & Financial Transparency

On October 7, 2023, California Governor Gavin Newsom made a significant move in the fight against climate change by signing into law two landmark bills - SB-253, the "Climate Corporate Data Accountability Act," and SB-261, "Greenhouse Gases: Climate-Related Financial Risk." These laws represent the first industry-agnostic climate regulations in the United States, and mandate the disclosure of greenhouse gas emissions and climate-related financial risks by large public and private companies operating in California.

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Singapore Proposes Mandatory Climate Reporting: A Step Towards Sustainability and ESG Transparency

This week, Singapore has proposed mandatory climate reporting for both private and public companies. This new regulation represents a significant move towards Sustainability and ESG in the Asia Pacific Region and aims to drive greater transparency, accountability, and responsible corporate behavior. Aligned with the International Sustainability Standards Board (ISSB) this new regulation is lining Singapore up to rapidly become a sustainability leader in the region.

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Sustaira Summarizes: Net Zero Stocktate 2023

Since June 2019, the concept of achieving net zero emissions has gained significant traction across the globe. In 2021 following the UN Climate Summit in Glasgow (CO26) 90% of the global economy was on board with net zero plans. As the urgency to combat climate change grows, governments, subnational entities, and corporations are setting net zero targets to align with the goal of limiting global warming. As defined by the Net Zero Stocktate 2023 report there are three phases of net zero; accepting the principles of net zero, pledging to get there, and delivering on those pledges. Today we will provide a brief summary of the Net Zero Stocktake 2023 report, which analyzes the status and trends of net zero target setting.

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Sustaira Summarizes: Net Zero Stocktate 2023

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IPSASB Develops Climate Disclosure Standards for the Public Sector.

With Sustainability and ESG disclosures becoming more and more prevalent across the world, the public sector is now seeing its first climate-related disclosure standard for governments and other private sector entities. The International Public Sector Accounting Standards Board (IPSASB) has taken a proactive step towards developing a climate-related reporting standard specifically tailored for the public sector.

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Less than 1% of companies have credible climate transition plans according to CDP.

Of the 18,600 companies which provided information to CDP, less than one in 200 companies disclosed information against 21 key indicators that CDP includes in a questionnaire which represents a credible climate transition plan. This means of 18,600 only 81 companies - a mere 0.4% - were able to disclosure against key indicators and prove that their climate transition plans are credible. While the number of organizations reporting to CDP has been rising rapidly, increasing by more than 40% in 2022, this 81 organizations is actually a decrease from the 153 companies that provided a credible climate plan the year before.

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Biden-Harris Administration announces the first Federal Building Performance Standard.

This week, the Biden-Harris Administration announced the first federal building standards designed to reduce energy use while electrifying equipment and appliances in 30% of the building space owned by the Federal government by 2030. This announcement was partnered by the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) announcing a proposal to electrify new Federal buildings and Federal buildings undergoing major renovations. Last and certainly not least, to further drive home the cause, the State of California announced that it will be joining President Biden’s National Building Performance Standard Coalition that has committed to reducing the emissions of existing buildings. These three changes represent massive progress for the U.S. and will certainly have a ripple effect across the US.

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GRI launches new Disclosure Standard for agriculture, aquaculture and fishing sectors.

The Global Reporting Initiative (GRI) announced the launch of a new disclosure standard for the agriculture, aquaculture and fishing sectors this week. These sectors have become the main area of focus based on their immense impacts across economic, environmental, and social dimensions. This includes impacts on climate change and biodiversity, food security, farming and fishing practices, and community engagement. According to GRI, the standard will increase the completeness and comparability of sustainability information for all organizations around the world involved in crop cultivation, animal production, aquaculture or fishing.

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EU announces new rules requiring all recyclable packaging by 2030.

The European Commission proposed new rules on Wednesday that will require the EU market to have all packaging be fully recyclable by 2030. These new rules are a way to reduce packaging waste through increased recycled content in plastic drink bottles and these rules set targets for reuse of single-use materials used for things such as online deliveries.

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EU gives final approval of Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive (CSRD).

Last month it was announced that the EU was set to become a front-runner in global sustainability reporting standards by formally adopting the Corporate Sustainable Reporting Directive (CSRD). On Monday, the EU Council announced that CSRD was officially adopted and approved. This new directive will expand on the already existing Non-Financial Reporting Directive (NFRD). The hope is that CSRD will introduce more detailed reporting requirements on companies’ impact on the environment, human rights and social standards.

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EU Companies now required to Disclose their Societal and Environmental Impact.

The EU has become a front-runner in global sustainability reporting standards by formally adopting the Corporate Sustainable Reporting Directive (CSRD). With CSRD officially adopted, this new directive will expand on the already existing Non-Financial Reporting Directive (NFRD). The goal is that CSRD will introduce more detailed reporting requirements on companies’ impact on the environment, human rights and social standards.

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Biden proposes new law Requiring Emissions Disclosures from Federal Suppliers.

Big news in the world of ESG and Sustainability! The Biden administration announced a new proposal that will require federal contractors to disclose environmental data through CDP and set science-based decarbonization targets.

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CDP to incorporate ISSB climate-related disclosure standards into global platform.

The week, CDP and the IFRS Foundation announced that CDP will incorporate the International Sustainability Standard Board’s (ISSB) climate-related disclosure standard into its environmental disclosure program. With 18,700 companies, worth half of global market capitalization, disclosing environmental information through CDP in 2022, this integration means there will be a rapid acceleration of early adoption of ISSB climate data disclosure across the global economy.

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