Mapping the new European Sustainability Reporting Standards with the GRI Standards
Following the publication of the exposure drafts of the European
Sustainability Reporting Standards (ESRS) in April – hailed by GRI as a
necessary step to achieving the EU Green Deal – an analysis of the ESRS
against the widely used GRI Standards is now available.
The technical mapping
is GRI’s formal contribution to the public consultation on the first
set of ESRS drafts, conducted by the European Financial Reporting
Advisory Group (EFRAG). Providing high-level observations as well as
detailed advice on each draft standard, it builds on feedback provided
to EFRAG as part of GRI’s engagement in the development process. The
mapping is also a welcome resource for stakeholders and companies
seeking to understand how the ESRS can achieve the global convergence of
disclosure requirements.
GRI is encouraged that many disclosures in the draft ESRS are closely
aligned with the GRI Standards, and is strongly supportive of the
‘double materiality’ principle applied. Suggested improvements, to
deepen integration with established reporting practices, enhance quality
and usability and reduce reporting burden, have now been put forward.
Eelco van der Enden, CEO of GRI, said:
“GRI remains a strong supporter of moves
to strengthen reporting on sustainability impacts by companies in the
EU, as set out in the Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive. We
congratulate EFRAG on reaching this important stage in the development
of the ESRS.
Over the past year, we have participated
in the technical workstream to develop these new standards, recognizing
our enabling role in the global convergence of sustainability
reporting. While good progress has been made, the ESRS will benefit from
deeper alignment with the GRI Standards, to ease the transition for the
thousands of EU companies that report with GRI.
Looking forward, we make the offer to
EFRAG and their technical expert group to continue our collaboration, in
order to ensure the final ESRS are as effective as possible. Alongside
GRI’s ongoing cooperation with the International Sustainability
Standards Board, I am confident we can achieve the progressive and
aligned reporting needed to advance corporate accountability, both in
the EU and at the global level.”
On 29 April, EFRAG published the first exposure drafts of the ESRS. Since June 2020, EFRAG has been mandated by the European Commission to prepare for new EU sustainability reporting standards.
Under the EFRAG-GRI cooperation agreement,
signed in July 2021, the two organizations joined each other’s
technical expert groups and committed to share information and for
standard setting activities and timelines to be aligned as much as
possible.
The EU Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive is
introducing legislation on sustainability disclosure that will expand
and replace the current Non-Financial Reporting Directive.
Research by the Alliance for Corporate Transparency (2020)
indicated that 54% of EU companies use the GRI Standards (the most
commonly cited framework) to meet their non-financial reporting
requirements.
GRI
© GRI - Global Reporting Initiative
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