home
news

New analysis of the non-financial disclosures presented on international webinars

share this article

Frank Bold organised two online events to present the results of the research on the disclosures made by 300 companies on climate and environmental matters providing targeted presentation and insights for companies in Southern Europe and Central and Eastern Europe.

New data from the research shows some, yet insufficient progress at a turning point for sustainability reporting in Europe as the legislation for sustainability disclosures in Europe will be reformed in 2021 (see details of the research and context here).

The events featured key experts, regulatory representatives, financial and business actors (e.g.Piraeus Bank, BBVA, ENEL, Raiffeisenbank or Tauron Polska Energia). About 300 participants interested in non-financial reporting and sustainable finance agenda attended the event.

1) Are companies in Southern Europe ready for the European Green Deal

See also the slides and summary of the discussion below.

2) Companies' climate and environmental disclosure in the CEE: progress, gaps and opportunities

See also the slides.

The key takeaways from the webinar discussion include:

  • There is an urgent need to focus companies’ sustainability reporting on relevant and decision-useful information. This is critical to effective management of companies in the context of the transformation of the EU economy.
  • Banks have an important role in facilitating the climate transition. However, in order to properly assess and disclose risks, they too need the right data. Current problems include granularity, reliability and comparability of information. Providing such information is particularly challenging for SMEs.
  • The reform of the EU Non-Financial Reporting Directive and development of EU standards are set to address this. This reform is also at the center of the EU Green Deal, the EU sustainable finance agenda, and is key to achieve the EU objectives set in the Paris Agreement and the EU climate law
  • Standardised data is the backbone of sustainability reporting.

key issues to address in creating an EU reporting framework and standards include:

  • Double and dynamic materiality: standards should focus on issues that significantly affect both the companies or the environment/society; and guide companies in determination of what is material from either perspective
  • Sector-specific approach: standards need to be relevant for the company and the segment it represents; there is a small layer of sector-agnostic data that are relevant for all companies, while there is need to specify further details on sectoral level.
  • Methodology and indicators: clarification and standardisation of the measurement and reporting system for key issues (i.e GHG scope 3, supply chain related matters)
  • The role of SMEs: it is essential to include SMEs (through simplified or gradual approaches) in the sustainability reporting realm in order to ensure they gather critical data and enable banks to provide finance to their transformation
  • Ensure connectivity of information:there is a strong need to focus on how the  sustainability information, in particular hard data and analysis of risks, is used in corporate strategy and planning.
Webinar: Are companies in Southern Europe ready for the European Green Deal?
    (
117 kB
)

You may also like these news

Sustainable value chains: EU institutions reach political agreement on the Corporate Sustainability Due Diligence Directive

After 18 hours of negotiations, the European Parliament, Council of the EU and European Commission reached a political agreement this morning on the Corporate Sustainability Due Diligence Directive (CSDDD). The decision was preceded by a four-year long legislative process at European level and builds on national laws in France and Germany.

Sustainable value chains: a joint call from business, trade unions and civil society organisations for an EU-wide standard on responsible business

In the context of the last phase of the negotiations on the Corporate Sustainability Due Diligence Directive (CSDDD), Frank Bold initiated a multistakeholder statement together with the Responsible Business Alliance (RBA) and Shift.

European Parliament enhances corporate transparency

Today, the European Parliament successfully fended off efforts to reject the European Sustainability Reporting Standards (ESRS), a key legislative piece to ensure the effective application of the Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive (CSRD) and the transitioning efforts in the context of the Green Deal. A majority of 359 Members of the Parliament voted against a motion to reject the ESRS and its replacement with an emptied and diluted piece of legislation.