|
GRI has congratulated the new members of the European Financial Reporting Advisory Group (EFRAG) Sustainability Reporting Board, which reflect multi-stakeholder representation.
The announcement from EFRAG confirms appointments that cover European stakeholders, national organizations and civil society. The governance structure is an important step towards creating a framework for holding companies in the European market accountable for their impacts.
Since July 2021, GRI and EFRAG has been working together to co-construct the European Sustainability Reporting Standards (ESRS), which will set mandatory disclosure requirements under the EU Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive.
Peter Paul van de Wijs, GRI Chief External Affairs Officer, said:
Under the EFRAG-GRI cooperation agreement, the two organizations have joined each other’s technical expert groups and share information, with standard setting activities and timelines aligned as much as possible. This includes joint working on new standards for biodiversity, which is already underway.
In June 2020, EFRAG was mandated by the European Commission to prepare for new EU sustainability reporting standards. The Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive will introduce legislation on sustainability disclosure that applies to over 50,000 EU companies from the 2023 reporting year.