Whilst the European Parliament and the Council are in the midst of analysing and debating the Omnibus Simplification Package, we suggest our key changes for the co-legislators to implement to ensure that the CSRD is respected.
Continuing on from our recommendations on the CSDDD, below we cover the key Omnibus proposals on the CSRD, their practical implications, and the necessary changes that must be made to prevent a complete backpedaling of the commitments to the EU Green Deal.
The Omnibus has proposed to:
These proposals pose a serious threat for both preparers and users of ESG data, by radically scaling back the legislation’s remit and capacity:
As a result, we call on the European Parliament and the Council to amend these changes by:
This can be easily done through the revision of Set 1 sector-agnostic standards planned for this 2025.
Overcompliance and excessive requests by auditors of sustainability reports need to be tackled with specific guidelines and standards for limited assurance. The value chain cap cannot fulfil this purpose. The solution is not to make it more complicated for businesses to access information with regards to their suppliers in case they really need it.
Without these changes, the CSRD will merely sustain the status quo, dealing a major blow to EU green finance efforts, as banks and investors will lack the data needed for informed decision-making.
Prague Municipal Court ruled today in favour better protection of human health from air pollution in the capital of the Czech Republic. The Court revoked most of Prague's Air Quality Management Plan, issued in 2016 by the Czech Ministry of Environment.
Czech Supreme Administrative Court ruled yesterday in favour of air quality and protection of human health. In the case local citizens and an NGO from Ostrava agglomeration, the most polluted region in the Czech Republic, succeeded with their claim for better air quality.
Yesterday, on 5 November 2018, a lawsuit against the Ministry of the Environment (MoE) on liability for health damages and death of her husband from lung cancer was filed with the District Court in Prague 10. The plaintiff seeks damages for lung cancer, which she has managed to cure, but her husband has succumbed to the illness in October. The cause of the disease is seen in the long-term excessive concentration of air pollutants at their place of residence in Ostrava-Radvanice and in the fact that the MoE failed to provide effective measures to decrease the pollution to legal limit values.