
Following the European Commission’s announcement of its Omnibus Simplification Package at the end of February, both the Council and the European Parliament must now reach their own positions on the proposals, before the trilogue negotiations between all three bodies commence again.
At this pivotal stage in the process, we urge Members of the European Parliament and Member States to correct certain changes and measures included in the Omnibus package in order to stay true to the ambitions laid out in the original Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive (CSRD) and Corporate Sustainability Due Diligence Directive (CSDDD).
Below, we cover the key elements in the Omnibus proposal for the CSDDD, 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 will reduce the CSDDD’s ability to effectively address human rights violations and environmental harm in companies' value chains:
As a result, we call on the European Parliament and the Council to reject these changes by:
Without these changes, the CSDDD’s impact will be significantly watered down. We therefore urge the Council and the European Parliament to take note of our recommendations to maintain an effective due diligence process.
At the end of March, we founded the Community Energy Union with the goal of creating a clean and safe future for the Czech Republic. In 2021, as Frank Bold, we held a series of online and offline workshops to identify weak spots and gain the support of a number of important stakeholders who are now members of our Union.
The Russian war in Ukraine has, in addition to the COVID-19 global pandemic, once again highlighted the need for corporate human rights and environmental due diligence (HREDD) regulation, such as the proposed EU Corporate Sustainability Due Diligence Directive (CSDDD).
The next months are key to determining what kind of sustainability data companies will disclose. For the transformation to an economy within planetary boundaries, we call on the ISSB to develop standards that go beyond climate, require reporting on key impact data and ensure climate-related disclosures are sufficiently granular to be meaningful.