The global ESG and sustainability reporting focus is shifting from being largely voluntary to a mandatory disclosure landscape. Underpinning this shift is a patchwork of global regulations with various environmental, social and governance (ESG) disclosure requirements. The jurisdiction, scope, and timeline for these regulations are incredibly dynamic challenging U.S. companies to determine the applicability and requirements.
This article discusses the most impactful mandatory ESG and sustainability reporting regulations, which redefines the need for organizations to formalize their ESG reporting capabilities. This includes:
While Europe has led the way in ESG and sustainability regulation with its comprehensive sustainability regulations, the U.S. is a close follower with the recent finalized SEC climate-related disclosures, the introduction of the California Climate Accountability Package, along with the state of Illinois and New York’s proposed climate-related disclosure rules and the Federal Supplier Climate Risks and Resilience Proposed Rule.
Organizations should determine which ESG and sustainability regulations apply to them and prepare now to protect against risks associated with inaction. Download the easy-to-follow checklist of regulatory applicability to understand if your organization is impacted.
With the web of regulations regarding sustainability reporting that are either proposed or final, almost all U.S.-based companies will be impacted in one regard or another. At a minimum level, you may be required to provide climate data to larger suppliers and, for certain companies, you may need to align reporting across several regulatory jurisdictions. By taking action now and understanding the full breadth of impacts, companies can develop appropriate systems and controls that are feasible to implement, cost effective to deploy, and yield dividends for competitive advantage ahead of regulations.
Get ahead of the changing regulatory landscape by acting today to understand how your organization could be impacted in the future. Lean on our specialists to guide the way and act now to protect and enhance your organization’s value.
The California Climate Accountability Package was released in October 2023, including two pieces of regulations (SB 253 and SB 261) impacting both public and private organizations that do business in California. The Act requires companies to publicly report on their full greenhouse gas (GHG) inventories, which include scope 1, 2 and 3. Limited assurance requirements (ESG data audit) for the GHG data reported will begin in 2026 and will increase to reasonable assurance requirements beginning in 2030.
Companies with over $1 billion in revenue that do business in California
Single (financial materiality)
Scope 1 and 2 GHG reporting requirements will begin in 2026 for 2025 data, while scope 3 GHG reporting requirements will begin in 2027 for 2026 data. *Note that reporting timelines are based on the final ruling but is subject to change given regulatory review or agency adoption.
Companies will be required annually to publicly report scope 1, 2 and 3 GHG emissions data.
The California Climate Accountability Package was released in October 2023, including two pieces of regulations (SB 253 and SB 261) impacting both public and private organizations that do business in California. The Act requires companies to prepare a climate-related financial risk report, in line with the TCFD framework, publicly disclosing climate-related financial risk and measures adopted to reduce and adapt to those risks on a biannual basis.
Companies with over $500 million in revenue that do business in California
Single (financial materiality)
The first reports are due Jan. 1, 2026. *Note that reporting timelines are based on the final ruling but is subject to change given regulatory review or agency adoption.
Publish a climate-related financial risk report, in line with the TCFD framework publicly on the company’s website.
Released alongside the California Climate Accountability Package in October 2023, the California Voluntary Carbon Market Disclosure Rule, also known as Assembly Bill 1305 (AB-1305), seeks to bring transparency to the voluntary carbon market by requiring specific annual disclosures for organizations who make carbon reduction claims, market or sell carbon credits, or purchase carbon credits.
The concept of materiality is not incorporated into this bill. Companies are required to disclose if they make carbon reduction claims, market or sell carbon credits, or purchase carbon credits.
The bill went into effect January 1, 2024, however, there is uncertainty regarding disclosure reporting effective dates.
The Climate Corporate Accountability Act, introduced in February 2023, is a proposed amendment to the environmental conservation law which would require New York companies to report on and obtain assurance (ESG data audit) over their full GHG inventories, which include scope 1, 2 and 3. The act would require annual GHG emissions reporting to the state’s GHG emissions registry. GHG inventory reports would be due to the registry no later than July 31 for the previous calendar year’s scope 1 and 2 data, while scope 3 data would be due no later than Dec. 31.
Companies with $1B+ in revenue who do business in the state of New York. The following activities constitute doing business in the state of New York:
Single (financial materiality)
The timing has yet to be determined, but the act will take effect two years after becoming law. GHG inventories for the previous year would be due by the end of July for scope 1 and 2 GHG emissions, while scope 3 GHG emissions would be due by the end of December.
Companies will be required to annually and publicly report scope 1, 2 and 3 GHG emissions data.
The Illinois Climate Corporate Accountability Act (HB4268) is a recently enacted law in Illinois that mandates entities with over $1 billion in annual revenue that do business in Illinois to publicly report on their full greenhouse gas (GHG) inventories, which include scope 1, 2 and 3.
Entities with $1B+ in revenue who do business in the state of Illinois. Generally, “doing business” is defined as regularly engaging in transactions for financial gain, having employees or property located within the state of Illinois. Partnerships, corporations, limited liability companies and other business entities formed in the United States that do business in Illinois with total annual revenues in excess of$1 billion would have reporting requirements under the Illinois Climate Corporate Accountability Act.
Single (financial materiality)
Disclosure requirements will be begin on January 1, 2025 and annually thereafter.
Companies will be required to annually and publicly report scope 1, 2 and 3 GHG emissions data.
In March 2024, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) voted to approve final rules for the enhancement and standardization of climate-related disclosures which requires publicly traded companies to disclose climate-related information in annual reports and registration statements. Reporting requirements include financial and non-financial disclosures and vary depending on the registrant type. Many of the disclosures are in line with the recommendations of the Task Force on Climate-Related Financial Disclosure (TCFD) with a goal to provide consistent, comparable and reliable disclosure of climate-related risks.
U.S. listed companies
Single (financial materiality)
Reporting requirements are phased-in based on the registrant type.
Please see the SEC factsheet for further details on the final rule.
Non-financial disclosures will include disclosure of climate-related risks, strategy and processes, governance, and GHG emissions. GHG emission scope 1 and 2 reporting will require assurance for both Large Accelerated and Accelerated filer types. Financial statement disclosures will include capitalized costs, expenses, charges and losses incurred as a result of severe weather events and other natural conditions, The aggregate amount of carbon offsets and renewable energy credits (RECs) recognized, and the aggregate amount of losses incurred on the capitalized carbon offsets and RECs, and lastly, whether the estimates and assumptions used to produce the financial statements were materially impacted by severe weather events and natural conditions, or any climate-related targets or transition plans.
The CSRD went into effect in the European Union (EU) in January 2023 requiring companies to report on the impact of corporate activities on the environment and society, while requiring disclosures on various governance topics. To ensure accuracy of the data reported, the CSRD requires assurance (ESG data audit) of reported information. The CSRD amends and builds on the Non-Financial Reporting Directive (NFRD) which required disclosure regarding ESG topics. The enhanced regulation will require disclosures according to the European Sustainability Reporting Standards (ESRS). The first set of ESRS were finalized in July 2023 with sector-specific standards expected in June 2024. The disclosure requirements of the CSRD are comprehensive and may differ depending on applicability. Contact an expert to ensure your compliance.
Double (financial and impact materiality)
The CSRD is currently in effect. Large companies who are currently subject to the NFRD are required to provide disclosures starting in 2025 for fiscal year 2024. Large EU companies not currently subject to the NFRD will report in 2026 for fiscal year 2025. Non-EU companies that meet criteria will be required to publish a 2028 report in 2029.
Disclosure of five main dimensions from NFRD [1] (precursor), and disclosure of general, environmental, social and governance topics [2]. Additionally, the report must be in a standardized, electronic and searchable reporting format.
In November 2022, the Department of Defense (DoD), General Services Administration (GSA), and National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) announced the Federal Supplier Climate Risks and Resilience Proposed Rule which would increase the transparency of climate-related information related to government contracting. This proposed rule directly engages the federal contractor supply base, specifically impacting two categories of contractors, significant contractors and major contractors, registered in the System for Award Management (SAM). Significant contractors are those that received between $7.5 million and $50 million in federal contract obligations in the prior federal fiscal year. Major contractors received more than $50 million in federal contract obligations in the prior federal fiscal year.
U.S. government contractors that received $7.5 million or more in federal contracts
Single (financial materiality)
The rule is currently proposed and had a comment period, which concluded in February 2023. The implementation of the final rule is unknown. However, beginning one year after publication of the final rule, contractors must have completed their GHG inventory and disclosed total scope 1 and 2 GHG emissions in the SAM. The remaining requirements, applicable only to major contractors, would need to be satisfied beginning two years after publication of the final rule.
If considered a significant contractor [3], the requirements include GHG emissions (scope 1 and 2) disclosures. If considered a major contractor [4], the requirements include GHG emissions (scope 1, 2 and 3), a report on the entity’s climate risk assessment process and any risks identified, completion of the CDP Climate Change Questionnaire sections that align with TCFD and development of science-based targets that are validated by the SBTi.
Learn more about the proposed Federal Supplier Climate Risks and Resilience Proposed Rule
[1] The five main dimensions from the NFRD, a precursor to the CSRD include disclosures regarding environmental protection, social responsibility and workforce treatment, respect for human rights, anti-corruption and bribery, and diversity of boards. The CSRD goes further than the NFRD and expands on the sustainability reporting standards of the NFRD.
[2] General disclosures include double materiality, business model and strategy, climate transition plans, time-bounded targets, sustainability due diligence, information on own operations, value chain, business relationships and supply chain. Specific to the supply chain, documentation of adverse impacts and actions to prevent/mitigate risk is required. Environmental disclosures include disclosures covering each of the EU Taxonomy environmental objectives which are climate change mitigation (incudes scope 1, 2 and 3 GHG emissions), climate change adaptation, water and marine resources, biodiversity, and eco system, resource use and circular economy. Social disclosures include disclosures regarding diversity and inclusion, human rights, working conditions, health and safety, employee relations, pay gaps, related rights, workers in the value chain, affected communities, consumers and end-users. Governance disclosures include disclosures regarding policies, risk management and internal controls, ownership and structural transparency, independence and oversight, responsible business practices, ethics, anti-corruption and executive pay fairness.
[3] Significant contractors are those that received between $7.5 million and $50 million in federal contract obligations in the prior federal fiscal year.
[4] Major contractors are those contractors that received more than $50 million in federal contract obligations in the prior federal fiscal year.