Sustainability and climate change are global challenges, and there is now growing focus on how companies perform and report on these matters. So sustainability reporting is continuing to increase in importance for various stakeholders.
Sustainability and climate change are global challenges, and there is
now growing focus on how companies perform and report on these matters.
So sustainability reporting is continuing to increase in importance for
various stakeholders.
Notwithstanding differences in scope and motivation, most
stakeholders share a common message: there is an urgent need to improve
the consistency and comparability in sustainability reporting.
Comparable and consistent standards would allow businesses to build
public trust through greater transparency of their sustainability
initiatives, which will be helpful to investors and an even broader
audience.
Large institutional investors demand better disclosure of climate
risks and sustainability indicators. These investors use sustainability
reporting to inform their decisions and want comparable and verifiable
information. Investors are, together with companies, the driving force
behind the increasing number of calls for clear, consistent and
comparable sustainability information.
Increasing numbers of companies are committed to developing their
sustainability reporting. Such commitment is driven by regulation,
consumer behaviour, investor demand and the recognition of the impact
that managing sustainability risks can have on long-term value creation.
Many consider the current practice of sustainability disclosure is
inefficient due to a lack of commonly accepted standards and the
inability to compare the reported information. Companies also lack
clarity about how they should report on the impact of climate-change and
the transition to a green economy.
As important drivers of their financial stability work, central banks
are increasingly focused on climate-related risks and sustainability
more broadly. Prudential regulators are starting to incorporate climate
analyses into stress tests, and regulatory stress testing of banks and
insurers increasingly includes estimates of climate-change impacts.
Regulators’ involvement in sustainability reporting is influenced by
their governments’ public policy positions. Consequently, regulators’
views of sustainability reporting are more prominent in some regions,
such as Europe or China, where securities and banking regulators are key
leaders of policy initiatives. However, the International Organization
of Security Commissions (IOSCO) is also currently considering how its
members could be involved in sustainability reporting.
In response to public policy initiatives to tackle climate change,
companies will need to adapt their business models to become compatible
with net zero carbon-emission targets that major jurisdictions have set
in line with financial markets that are evolving to a net-zero world.
Policy makers also expect that, in their reporting, companies may have
to consider global public policy initiatives relating to climate change.
Auditing firms and other service providers develop and assess
reporting frameworks. Auditing firms could play a major role in
providing assurance if sustainability reporting were to be standardised
and the information provided.
Many important sustainability reporting initiatives already exist,
including those at a regional level. When the challenges are global, the
most optimal would be global solutions working in harmony with regional
initiatives.
There is an increasing number of calls for standardisation and
comparability of reporting on these matters. Some have argued that the
IFRS Foundation should play a role in this area. One reason is that IFRS
Standards, developed by the Foundation’s standard-setting body, the
International Accounting Standards Board, are required for use in more
than 140 countries.
At the IFRS Foundation, the Trustees review the strategy every five
years. We are preparing for such a review now. It is an opportunity and a
duty for us to consider key strategic issues in this context.
We have decided to look at sustainability as a separate topic. And
that is why we have prepared a Consultation Paper, which was published
at the end of September and is open for comment until the end of the
year.
The first question is: is there demand for sustainability standards at a global level?
If replies lead to a positive consensus, another question follows:
should the IFRS Foundation play a role in this area? Our Consultation
Paper sets out possible ways forward, if the IFRS Foundation is asked to
play a role.
One option is to establish a new, separate sustainability standards
board. This board would sit alongside the International Accounting
Standards Board within the IFRS Foundation. This approach has merit for
both boards, given the increasing impact of sustainability and
climate-related matters in companies’ financial statements. Many
jurisdictions are beginning to require that companies provide
climate-related disclosures in addition to the disclosures required by
IFRS Standards.
But for this option to be successful, several conditions should be met.
Support is needed from public authorities, global regulators and
other market stakeholders. A new board should work with regional
authorities to achieve global consistency and reduce complexity in
reporting. One important pre-condition is an appropriate level of
resources, including separate funding and appropriate technical
expertise. You also need an adequate governance structure.
The process could build gradually, starting with a focus on
climate-related reporting standards. Naturally, the work would take into
consideration existing developments and various initiatives in the
field. The big five ESG international standard-setters in this area
respond positively to the publication of our document and commit to
working jointly with us to deliver the optimum solution.
I still want to reiterate: this is a demand-driven process. If demand
exists, then we will look to examine how to move forward. If you have
views on this topic, whatever they are, please let us know. If there is
no demand, then there is nothing more for us to do. It’s down to you.
IFRS
© IFRS Foundation
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