The proposal marks a significant milestone towards enhancing the availability and reliability of ESG information and introduces a range of crucial provisions.
AFME welcomes the European Commission’s publication
of the new Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive (CSRD) aiming
to revise the existing EU Non-Financial Reporting directive (NFRD)[1].
Jacqueline Mills, Head of Advocacy for AFME, says “We strongly
believe that the development of EU sustainability reporting framework,
going forward, should ensure consistency and a logical sequence between
disclosure requirements imposed on financial institutions and their
borrowers and investees. AFME stands ready to support the European
Commission and co-legislators in achieving this objective through the
revision of the NFRD”.
The proposal marks a significant milestone towards enhancing the
availability and reliability of ESG information and introduces a range
of crucial provisions. AFME fully supports the following provisions
among others:
- Developing mandatory EU sustainability reporting standards following the double-materiality principle.
- Extending the scope of mandatory sustainability reporting
requirements to include all companies listed on EU Regulated Markets,
except for micro-undertakings, as well as all large, including private,
companies[2].
- Subjecting sustainability information to mandatory third-party
assurance – the statutory auditor or audit firm should express an
opinion based on a limited assurance engagement about the compliance of
the sustainability reporting with the reporting standards.
- Establishing equivalence mechanisms for sustainability reporting
standards used by third country issuers. International regulatory
convergence in ESG reporting should be a key consideration in the
further elaboration of the European reporting framework.
However, AFME also stresses the importance of appropriately
sequencing the reporting obligations applying to financial institutions
and their clients. Jacqueline Mills said:
“We generally welcome the proportionate approach to be applied to
SMEs where listed SMEs will be expected to comply with the new standards
three years after the CSRD enters into application and where voluntary
simplified reporting standards would be developed for non-listed small
and medium entities. However, we are concerned that this could further
exacerbate the scope and timing mismatch between certain reporting
obligations that financial institutions could be required to comply with
and the reporting obligations imposed on financial institutions’ SME
borrowers and investee companies. For example, the recent advice[3]
by the European Banking Authority (EBA) to the European Commission
proposes that credit institutions and investment firms would report on a
range of KPIs, including a Green Asset Ratio (GAR), under the Taxonomy
Regulation, that would include, on a mandatory basis, SME portfolios in
the calculation. The EBA recommended that banks be allowed to use
estimated data for such portfolios until 30 June 2024, followed by the
reporting based on the “real data”. According to the new CSRD proposal,
listed SMEs will not be expected to report sustainability information
until the year of 2027 and the rest might not be sufficiently encouraged
to do so at all, considering that the standard is recommended as
voluntary.”
AFME
© AFME
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