IFRS Foundation Trustees (Trustees) announce three significant developments to provide the global financial markets with high-quality disclosures on climate and other sustainability issues:
As world leaders meet in Glasgow for COP26, the UN global summit to
address the critical and urgent issue of climate change, the IFRS
Foundation Trustees (Trustees) announce three significant developments
to provide the global financial markets with high-quality disclosures on
climate and other sustainability issues:
- The formation of a new International Sustainability Standards Board (ISSB)
to develop—in the public interest—a comprehensive global baseline of
high-quality sustainability disclosure standards to meet investors’
information needs;
- A commitment by leading investor-focused sustainability disclosure
organisations to consolidate into the new board. The IFRS Foundation
will complete consolidation of the Climate Disclosure Standards Board (CDSB—an initiative of CDP) and the Value Reporting Foundation (VRF—which houses the Integrated Reporting Framework and the SASB Standards) by June 2022;
- The publication of prototype climate and general disclosure requirements developed by the Technical Readiness Working Group (TRWG),
a group formed by the IFRS Foundation Trustees to undertake preparatory
work for the ISSB. These prototypes are the result of six months of
joint work by representatives of the CDSB, the International Accounting
Standards Board (IASB), the Financial Stability Board’s Task Force on
Climate-related Financial Disclosures (TCFD), the VRF and the World
Economic Forum (Forum), supported by the International Organization of
Securities Commissions (IOSCO) and its Technical Expert Group of
securities regulators. The TRWG has consolidated key aspects of these
organisations’ content into an enhanced, unified set of recommendations
for consideration by the ISSB.
Together, these developments create the necessary institutional arrangements, set out in the Foundation’s revised Constitution,
and lay the technical groundwork for a global sustainability disclosure
standard-setter for the financial markets. They fulfil the growing and
urgent demand for streamlining and formalising corporate sustainability
disclosures.
The ISSB will sit alongside and work in close cooperation with the
IASB, ensuring connectivity and compatibility between IFRS Accounting
Standards and the ISSB’s standards—IFRS Sustainability Disclosure
Standards. To ensure public interest legitimacy, both boards will be
overseen by the Trustees, who are in turn accountable to a Monitoring
Board of capital market authorities responsible for corporate reporting
in their jurisdictions. The ISSB and the IASB will be independent, and
their standards will complement each other to provide comprehensive
information to investors and other providers of capital.
Proven demand
Financial markets need to assess the risks and opportunities facing
individual companies which arise from environmental, social and
governance (ESG) issues, as these affect enterprise value. This is
driving significant demand for high-quality information. Investors and
other providers of capital want global sustainability disclosure
standards that meet their information needs. Voluntary reporting
frameworks and guidance have prompted innovation and action, although
fragmentation has also increased cost and complexity for investors,
companies and regulators.
Many investors and regulators have called for the IFRS Foundation to
build upon market-led initiatives and to use its experience in creating
accounting standards used in more than 140 jurisdictions to bring
globally comparable reporting on sustainability matters to the financial
markets.
The Trustees’ decision to create the ISSB is informed by the feedback
received in their two public consultations, discussions with advisory
groups, frequent dialogue with the IFRS Foundation Monitoring Board and
with support from IOSCO and others.
Comprehensive global baseline
The ISSB will develop IFRS Sustainability Disclosure Standards,
including disclosure requirements that address companies’ impacts on
sustainability matters relevant to assessing enterprise value and making
investment decisions. The ISSB’s standards will enable companies to
provide comprehensive sustainability information for the global
financial markets. The standards will be developed to facilitate
compatibility with requirements that are jurisdiction specific or aimed
at a wider group of stakeholders (for example, the European Union’s
planned Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive as well as
initiatives in the Americas and Asia-Oceania).
The G20 Leaders and the Financial Stability Board have both welcomed the IFRS Foundation’s work programme to develop global baseline standards for sustainability disclosures....
more at IFRS
© IFRS Foundation
Key
Hover over the blue highlighted
text to view the acronym meaning
Hover
over these icons for more information
Comments:
No Comments for this Article