The investment management industry is keen to actively engage in its governance and technical work, as it develops.
      
    
    
      We wholeheartedly support the formation of the International Sustainability Standards Board (ISSB)
 as announced today by the IFRS  Foundation. 
Asset 
managers can still not fully integrate climate change considerations in 
their investment decisions, due to the global fragmentation of 
climate-related disclosures, the modest comparability of disclosed information and the absence of a single, global mandatory reporting framework.
It is essential that the ISSB focuses on converging the numerous 
existing standards into a common basis for a mandatory global 
sustainability reporting framework. Given that certain jurisdictions, 
such as the EU with its standard-setting body EFRAG, may adopt more 
ambitious frameworks, we commend the ISSB for announcing a formal 
coordination mechanism with such jurisdictions.
In this context, we would welcome a commitment by the ISSB to widen 
the IFRS’ approach to materiality in sustainability reporting 
by including companies’ positive and negative climate impacts, on top of
 how environmental risks impact companies (i.e. ‘double materiality’).
 
 
[1]  Details about ‘materiality’ on page 13 of the IFRS  Consultation Paper on Sustainability Reporting
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