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A public comment period is underway to seek global feedback on a proposed new GRI Topic Standard for Climate Change, as well as an updated GRI Energy Standard. Responding to emerging disclosure expectations on climate change, the key focus in the exposure drafts is on how organizations can cut their greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions and reduce energy consumption, in ways that support the principles of a just transition.
As confirmed in the UNFCCC global stock-take, the world is not on track to meet the Paris Agreement goals, with calls for action to be rapidly accelerated. Given that the credibility of climate change targets and pledges made by organizations is increasingly scrutinized, the exposure drafts explicitly asks them to explain how their actions relate to the Paris Agreement’s central aim to limit global temperature rises to 1.5 degrees Celsius.
The drafted Climate Change Standard will enable organizations to:
Importantly, it has a new disclosure on the social aspect of climate change, emphasizing accountability for impacts on workers, communities and vulnerable groups. It also draws strong parallels between the inter-connected topics of climate change and biodiversity.
Meanwhile, the exposure draft for a revised Energy Standard has a sharp focus on the ways in which organizations are reducing energy consumption, achieving energy efficiency and sourcing renewable energy – all of which are essential to combat climate change and ensure companies tangibly demonstrate how they are decreasing their carbon footprint.
Carol Adams, Chair of the Global Sustainability Standards Board (GSSB) – the independent body that sets the GRI Standards – said: