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:
key issues to address in creating an EU reporting framework and standards include:
The Frank Bold expert group continues its long-term support for Ukraine in 2026. As the fourth year of Russian aggression draws to a close, Frank Bold is sending another financial contribution to support the country’s defenders through the Ukrainian foundation Come Back Alive.
The European Union is sending a clear signal: climate policy is no longer just an environmental vision. It is becoming a core pillar of economic strategy. The latest State of the Energy Union 2025 and Climate Action Progress Report 2025 confirm that competitiveness is now Brussels’ top priority. In this framework, decarbonisation is positioned as a tool to strengthen Europe’s technological sovereignty, stability, and energy affordability.
With the final revision of the CSRD landing only in mid-December, many companies spent 2025 navigating a moving goal post. Yet despite the uncertainty, some clear lessons have emerged from those already reporting under the new rules. So what did companies actually struggle with, and what did they take away from the experience?