Following the request of Commissioner Albuquerque, and after intense months of work from experts in the business, investor and audit community, as well national standard setters and civil society experts engaged officially in EFRAG, the revised ESRS are now publicly available and open for consultation until the end of September.
Although the number of datapoints has been drastically reduced, the standards maintain the core integrity necessary to fulfil CSRD obligations and uphold the EU’s climate neutrality objective for 2050 and other EU goals such as in the Clean Industrial Deal.
However, rollbacks of the legislation (as part of the Omnibus negotiations) or further cuts in the standards would seriously undermine the EU's credibility and risk compromising these foundational goals.
The revised ESRS retain essential disclosures on:
The simplifications are substantial but targeted:
New significant reliefs were introduced, which rely on the expectation that they will not be misused. Excessive use of these reliefs would significantly undermine comparability and relevance of sustainability disclosures.
Any further simplification or cuts to the standards risks compromising Europe’s green transition climate goals.
Some MEPs in the EPP or ECR groups, as well certain pressure groups and lobbyists are arbitrarily proposing caps on the number of data points in the ESRS, without a clear understanding of how sustainability standards are constructed. The ESRS use a highly granular method for counting data points—for example, a single disclosure requirement to describe the “content, objective, and scope of the policy” is counted as three distinct data points. These elements, however, are essential in ensuring the reported information is meaningful and complete.
Despite the politicised nature of the debate, there is broad agreement across all political groups in the European Parliament and among EU Member States on the need for alignment with global sustainability reporting frameworks—particularly the IFRS Sustainability Standards. For context, the IFRS includes over 200 data points, covering only general and climate-related information relevant to financial performance, whereas the revised ESRS have been streamlined to 350 data points, while encompassing the full range of ESG topics and addressing both impact and financial materiality.
Overall, the revised ESRS presented by EFRAG on Wednesday has succeeded in simplifying the EU sustainability reporting standards into a manageable but still effective framework for the EU’s climate goals.
The European Court of Justice has ruled that mining at Poland’s sprawling Turów coal mine must cease while the court processes a Czech government lawsuit against Poland for illegally operating the mine. The Polish mine pushes right up to the Czech and German borders and is depleting people’s water supplies and undercutting houses in nearby communities.
Local groups and NGOs including Frank Bold, that is very active in the process, welcomed the Czech government’s decision to file a lawsuit at the European Court of Justice against the Polish government for the illegal operation of the Turów lignite coal mine, which has been dug right up to the Czech and German borders, damaging local water supplies for nearby communities. This is the first such legal case for the Czech Republic and the first in EU’s history where one member state sues another for environmental reasons.
Meeting the goal of the European Green Deal to achieve no net GHG emissions by 2050 requires at least half trillion euros of additional investments in the EU every year and will involve significant market and regulatory changes targeting every sector of the economy. This will profoundly change how companies and their directors need to integrate sustainability concerns in their strategies and business decisions.