Interoperability between ESRS and GRI Standards good news for reporters
24 November 2022
GRI has hailed the European Sustainability Reporting Standards (ESRS) as an important step towards implementing the Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive (CSRD) and holding companies operating in the EU market accountable for their impacts.
GRI reporting companies well prepared for new European Standards
The first set of draft ESRS was submitted
to the European Commission by the Sustainability Reporting Board (SRB)
of EFRAG (formerly known as the European Financial Reporting Advisory
Group), on 22 November.
GRI has actively engaged in the development of the ESRS, from the
initial phase lead by the Project Task Force through to the
collaboration with EFRAG, the SRB and Technical Expert Group. The work
concentrated on ensuring optimal interoperability between the global GRI
Standards, focused on impact materiality, and the European ESRS focused
on double materiality. The GRI Standards are already the impact
reporting standards used by most large companies, in the EU and around
the world.
Judy Kuszewski, Chair of GRI’s Global Sustainability Standards Board, said:
“Through a
well-established and rigorous due process, the GRI Standards codify the
consensus view of global stakeholders on what companies need to disclose
about their impacts on the world - allowing stakeholders to make
decisions based on facts not perceptions. It has been a pleasure working
with EFRAG on the development of the ESRS and sharing our 25 years of
experience and knowledge.
The collaboration worked on the basic
principle that wherever possible and across all the standards,
definitions, concepts, and disclosures would leverage the GRI Standards.
This resulted, as EFRAG stated, in a situation where the ESRS are fully
aligned or, when full alignment was not possible due to the content of
the CSRD mandate, closely aligned with GRI.
Of course, there will be differences
between our global impact-focused standards and the EU double
materiality focused standards as prescribed by the CSRD. We are
committed to work with EFRAG to provide technical guidance on how to use
current GRI based reporting practices and processes to also meet the
ESRS needs in addition to jointly working on future standards. This
guidance will be published at the time the EU Commission releases the
final standards.”
Eelco van der Enden, GRI CEO, said:
“From the outset the European Commission
has been very vocal about its objective to not reinvent the wheel and
build on existing standards. This approach ensures global comparability
and limits additional reporting burden for companies. This first set of
standards proves that through collaboration global interoperability to
the highest extent possible is attainable. Moreover, it sends a clear
signal to those companies which have been using the GRI Standards for
many years that they are well prepared and can leverage their existing
reporting processes.
We look forward to continuing our work
in the next months with EFRAG, and the European Commission’s DG FISMA,
on the next set of standards to drive interoperability as much as
possible. After all, GRI is committed to the creation of a global
comprehensive reporting system. We appreciate that such a system will at
times need to be combined with jurisdictional reporting requirements
reflecting the ambitions, existing legal frameworks, and specific
context. The ESRS are a good example of how this can be done very
effectively.”
The CSRD, which mandates the use of the ESRS for some 50,000
companies, was adopted on 10 November 2022 by the European Parliament.
According to the European Parliament's communication,
the Council of the European Union is expected to adopt the proposal on
28 November and it is expected that the directive will enter into force
at the beginning of next year at the latest.
GRI
© GRI - Global Reporting Initiative