They will power the EU’s under-revision
 
Non-Financial Reporting Directive,
 and improve the relevance, completeness, and decision-usefulness of the
 data companies report by law. The first disclosures using the standards
 shall be filed in 2023. 
Better data can drive and track progress against the European Green Deal
    Better corporate data is urgently needed to transition the European economy from its current 2.7 °C path onto a Paris-aligned pathway, and to achieve the European Green Deal. 
    CDP Europe’s latest report,
 for example, found just 35% of the most impactful European companies 
report their most important Scope 3 emissions, like use of products. 
More accurate emissions data - and information on companies’ 
trajectories – is needed to hit the EU’s 2030 and 2050 goals. 
    But
 without better standards, this data will not be available quickly 
enough for the urgent transformation we need to take place. 
    The much-anticipated publication of the EFRAG  task force’s final report
 – a roadmap of recommendations for the standards’ ‘scope and 
structure’– is therefore crucial and shows a promising direction of 
travel. 
    Importantly, with the International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS) having announced
 its own approach – covering climate-related financial disclosures – the
 EU’s progress will be instrumental not only for corporates with EU 
operations, but for raising the bar on global moves to converge 
sustainability standards, too. A co-construction approach to align EU 
and global standards will help deliver a level playing field for 
companies and financial institutions. 
A welcome approach 
    Some
 report recommendations, though by no means exclusive, are particularly 
welcome and worth highlighting from our perspective. 
    We strongly welcome the report’s emphasis on forward-looking data. In particular, that the standard-setter should ensure what companies report can produce clear transition trajectories. 
    This
 can be done through guidelines on targets and action plans that are 
science-based. 50% of European market value is now engaged with the 
Science Based Targets initiative (SBTi), and work for other earth 
systems such as fresh water, oceans, land and biodiversity is being 
developed by the Science Based Targets network. This approach therefore has significant market momentum and is proven to over-deliver emissions reductions in line with 1.5 °C.
    Likewise, we strongly agree with the overarching double materiality approach
 suggested for the standards. This means that non-financial reporting 
should produce data about the material impacts a company has on its 
stakeholders – including the environment – as well as the risks and 
opportunities the company sees to its value resulting from 
sustainability issues. The 9,600 companies already disclosing 
environmental data to CDP are already familiar with disclosing data in 
line with this perspective and such an approach is vital for any global 
standard. 
  Another key recommendation is for the standards to treat sustainability information equally to financial data,
 as per the Task Force on Climate-related Financial Disclosures (TCFD). 
Putting financial and non-financial data on equal footing helps 
companies embed sustainability into strategy, makes boards accountable, 
and crystallizes the fact that long-term, sustainable business success 
relies on environmental sustainability.  
    We also agree 
that, for small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs), a proportionate 
approach is needed. SMEs are a major part of our economy, and EU 
environmental goals will not be achieved without them moving in sync 
with financial institutions and listed companies. That is why CDP offers
 the thousands of SMEs reporting each year the ability to report to 
their customers through a simplified questionnaire. 
    Writing 
the new standards with such an approach for SMEs will both help these 
companies see the tangible business benefits from reporting, and provide
 their stakeholders with the critical data they need to make decisions. 
A new era in data 
    The
 EFRAG  task force report also suggests that the standard-setter should 
promote the structured digitization of sustainability data. We agree. 
The European Commission’s vision is for a single European data space – a
 single market for data – where live sustainability data sits alongside 
financial data and can be more easily employed to achieve EU objectives.
 This will help financial institutions of all sizes access vital data 
and use it to make decisions that can shift the trillions. The European 
Single Access Point, in particular, offers a pathway to achieve this. 
    CDP’s
 disclosure system has and will continue to be a driving force for 
scaling such progress. Now with the world’s most comprehensive single 
comparable source of environmental data, including nearly 80% of 
Europe’s real economy value, CDP can drive structured data disclosure in
 line with the standards. 
    We have long contributed to the EU 
sustainable finance agenda, and will continue to support the work of the
 European Commission and EFRAG, including in task forces like that on 
non-financial risks and opportunities reporting, on which I sit as a member.
    By
 recognizing that the new standards should both learn from existing best
 practices and coordinate with global developments to harmonize 
standards, the EU is shifting global ambition and action upwards. It is 
welcome that, as the pace quickens, the task force recognizes that a 
globally coordinated approach must be pursued.   
    As the next 
stage of this exciting process gets underway, we look forward to 
continuing to provide our insights and expertise to the Commission and 
the new standard-setter on other key elements in the standards, like 
sector- specificity, and with our disclosure system, data, and insights.