Executive Vice President Valdis Dombrovskis already announced in January that following the publication of the Green Deal and the initiation of the revision of the EU Non-Financial Reporting Directive (NFRD), he would invite EFRAG to “undertake preparatory work for the elaboration of possible EU non-financial reporting standards”.
This week, EFRAG -an accountancy advisory body set up by the EU Commission- has received the official request to establish a multi-stakeholder Project Task Force to produce a report by October 2020 and deliver its final recommendations in early 2021. The role of these standards would still need to be proposed and approved by the EU Commission, the Council and the EU Parliament during the reform process of the EU NFRD. However, Dombrovskis wishes to start this work to enable a swift implementation of the standards as soon as co-regulators reach an agreement.
Filip Gregor, Head of Responsible Companies at Frank Bold and member of the EFRAG European Reporting Lab, is leading the Alliance for Corporate Transparency. Earlier this year, this initiative presented the results of the largest research on companies’ sustainability disclosures, which clearly put in evidence the need to specify and develop the reporting requirements in the Directive and develop mandatory sector-specific standards.
In response to this recent announcement, Mr Gregor said:
“The creation of EU standards on corporate sustainability reporting is an indispensable step to ensure that companies disclose comparable and decision-useful information. The reform of the NFR Directive and the development of standards hold the key to achieve the objectives marked in the European Green Deal. We can’t create a sustainable economy and financial system without getting the first layer right: information on companies’ sustainability risks and impacts.
You can find further details about this announcement here. More information about the research carried out by the Alliance for Corporate Transparency on 1000 European companies here and a joint NGO statement supporting the EU Commission plans here.
Contact us:
0032 485 73 41 07
We have analysed hundreds of pages of technical documents and prepared a comprehensive overview of the sustainability reporting requirements under the forthcoming EU legislation. We summarise what ESG data will be critical for companies, banks, and investors in sustainability strategy and management and in the areas of climate change, environment, sustainable activities, employees and supply chains, due diligence, and anti-corruption measures.
Would you like to influence key EU developments on business, sustainability and climate change? Do you wish to combine environmental and economic perspectives? Do you want to help set European standards for transparency of corporate sustainability performance and help investors finance the transformation of our economy? Become a member of Frank Bold’s international team implementing this strategy.
Leading NGOs working on corporate sustainability and sustainable finance have published a briefing with key recommendations to help clarify directors’ responsibilities to oversee sustainability that fully fit with existing company law and corporate governance frameworks across Europe.