GRI: Promoting clarity and compatibility in the sustainability landscape
        
            13 July 2020
        
        GRI and SASB understand that the sustainability disclosure landscape can appear complicated so they will collaborate to demonstrate how some companies have used both sets of standards together. 
        
        
        
GRI and SASB announce collaboration
		
Amid
 rising global demand for clarity in the sustainability reporting 
ecosystem, the Sustainability Accounting Standards Board (SASB) and the 
Global Reporting Initiative (GRI) are pleased to announce a 
collaborative workplan.
GRI and SASB understand that the sustainability disclosure landscape can
 appear complicated. For companies that use both standards, the 
reporting effort can be high. To help address this, the two 
organizations will collaborate to demonstrate how some companies have 
used both sets of standards together and the lessons that can be shared.
 SASB and GRI also aim to help the consumers of sustainability data 
understand the similarities and differences in the information created 
from these standards. 
“GRI and SASB share the guiding principle that transparency is the best 
currency for creating trust among organizations and their stakeholders,”
 says Tim Mohin, Chief Executive of GRI. “Investors, policy makers, 
civil society and other stakeholders are demanding improved disclosure 
of information on sustainability impacts, including those likely to 
drive risk and opportunity in both the short and long term.” 
“In a post-COVID world, companies will increasingly be expected to 
disclose their performance on a range of ESG topics,” says Janine 
Guillot, CEO of SASB. “The pandemic has demonstrated that so-called 
‘non-financial’ information can indeed highlight material financial 
implications. This makes the collaboration between SASB and GRI, and the
 increased clarity it will bring for all stakeholders, all the more 
timely.” 
Initially the collaboration will focus on delivering communication 
materials to help stakeholders better understand how the standards may 
be used concurrently. GRI and SASB will also develop examples based on 
real-world reports that demonstrate how the standards can be used 
together. These resources are planned to be delivered before the end of 
2020. It is expected that this can lead to the identification of further
 collaboration opportunities.
Independence is important to both GRI and SASB standards setting 
processes. This collaborative work plan may identify opportunities to 
consider how the SASB and GRI standards may be developed in the future. 
Decisions about standard setting, content of standards, and their 
interpretation are the sole responsibility of the independent 
standards-setting functions, which rest with the Global Sustainability 
Standards Board on behalf of GRI, and of the SASB Standards Board. 
GRI and SASB provide compatible standards for sustainability reporting, 
which are designed to fulfill different purposes and are based on 
different approaches to materiality: 
SASB’s industry-specific standards identify the subset of 
sustainability-related risks and opportunities most likely to affect a 
company’s financial condition (e.g., its balance sheet), operating 
performance (e.g., its income statement) or risk profile (e.g., its 
market valuation and cost of capital). 
The GRI Standards focus on the economic, environmental and social 
impacts of a company, and hence its contributions – positive or negative
 – towards sustainable development. Users of the GRI Standards identify 
issues that are of primary importance to their stakeholders. If not 
already financially material at the time of reporting, these impacts may
 become financially material over time. They provide both the framework 
and supporting standards on a wide range of sustainability topics and 
are aligned with international instruments for responsible business 
behavior. 
Both GRI and SASB believe that providing clarity on the application of 
their reporting standards, and helping others understand how to use the 
sustainability performance data they provide, is critical to meeting the
 needs of all stakeholders.
        
        
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