Follow Us

Follow us on Twitter  Follow us on LinkedIn
 

07 February 2024

Council and Parliament agree to delay sustainability reporting for certain sectors and third-country companies by two years


Today’s agreement will give more time for companies to prepare for the sectorial European Sustainability Reporting Standards (ESRS) and for specific standards for large non-EU companies, which will be adopted in June 2026, two years later than the originally scheduled date.

The Council and the European Parliament today reached a provisional deal on a directive on the time limits for the adoption of sustainability reporting standards for certain sectors and for certain third-country undertakings amending the Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive (CSRD). 


Boosting European competitiveness is a core pillar of the Belgian Presidency, and one way to achieve this objective is to reduce the administrative burden on companies. Today’s agreement limits reporting requirements to the minimum and gives companies time to implement the ESRS and prepare for the sectorial European Sustainability Reporting Standards.

Vincent Van Peteghem, Belgian Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Finance

Commission proposal

EU law requires that listed companies should disclose information about the risks and opportunities arising from social and environmental issues to help investors, civil society, consumers and other stakeholders to evaluate the green and social sustainability of their activities. On 31 July 2023, the Commission adopted the first cross-cutting standards and standards for all sustainability topics to facilitate this reporting. These must be followed by sector-specific standards, standards for SMEs and standards for third country companies with a €150 million turnover in the EU and which have at least one subsidiary or branch in the EU. All these new standards were scheduled for 30 June 2024.

The directive agreed today by the co-legislators postpones the adoption of the new standards to 30 June 2026. This will allow companies to focus on the implementation of the first set of ESRS. It will also allow more time to develop sector-specific sustainability standards as well as standards for specific third-country companies. The date of application for third country companies will remain the financial year 2028, as set out in the CSRD.

Main elements of the agreement

The provisional agreement supports the objectives of the Commission’s proposal but modifies the legal nature of the text (from a Commission decision to a directive) to respect the legal basis of the proposal. It also suggests that the Commission publishes eight sector-specific reporting standards as soon as they are ready before the new deadline on 30 June 2026. Member states will not need to transpose this directive, since the targeted amendments concern the empowerment to adopt delegated acts granted to the Commission.

Council



© Council of the European Union


< Next Previous >
Key
 Hover over the blue highlighted text to view the acronym meaning
Hover over these icons for more information



Add new comment