Five leading organisations in sustainability and integrated
reporting have published proposals on enterprise value reporting,
brought to life in a prototype climate-related financial disclosure standard. The development – from GRI, CDP, CDSB, IIRC and SASB – follows a joint statement of intent in September, outlining a vision for a comprehensive corporate reporting system.
The prototype illustrates how information drawn from existing
standards and frameworks can provide inspiration for for the development
of global standards for sustainability-related financial disclosure.
Such standards could enable disclosure of how sustainability matters
affect enterprise value.
GRI is a strong proponent of strengthened financial reporting that
complements sustainability reporting and takes account of the financial
risks and opportunities related to a company’s sustainability impacts –
with mandatory disclosure to ensure transparency on corporate
contributions to global challenges. The report today demonstrates how
financial reporting could be strengthened to do so.
Sustainability reporting is an organization’s practice of reporting
publicly on its most significant economic, environmental and social
impacts, and hence its contributions – positive or negative – towards
sustainable development. As such, it plays a key role in the drive
towards achieving global sustainability-related goals – to make the
impacts of organizations’ activities transparent, enabling dialogue and
informed decision-making.
Eric Hespenheide, Chairman of GRI, said:
“A new corporate reporting regime is needed in which financial and
sustainability reporting is given equal footing. Achieving this will
require strengthening the current financial standards to accurately
consider the positive and negative implications of sustainability issues
on a company’s financial health, as well as acknowledging the crucial
role of the private sector in addressing global challenges. The report
launched today illustrates how this could be done.
Furthermore, we believe that improved depth and quality of corporate
reporting can only be realized when financial and sustainability
reporting are both mandated.
GRI’s vision is of a sustainable future that is supported by global
sustainability reporting standards, which inform all stakeholders – from
investors through to civil society, policy makers, labor unions and
others.”
On 14 December, GRI published a response to
the International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS) Foundation
consultation on its potential role in sustainability reporting
standards.
The KPMG Survey of Sustainability Reporting 2020
identified that a record 80% of 5,200 leading companies across 52
countries now voluntarily undertake sustainability reporting, with 67%
using GRI. Almost all (96%) of the world’s largest 250 companies report
their sustainability performance, of which three in four adopt the GRI
Standards.