Setting the stage
For years, U.S. sustainability reports have consisted of collecting data as a voluntary exercise. Companies have used Excel and other similar programs to pull together basic reports that didn’t divulge much information or add significant value. Now, the CSRD requires companies to understand up to 1,200 indicators while compiling a report that aligns critical information in a systematic, methodical manner. Moreover, this report must be reviewed and approved by a third-party assurance provider.
This shift in reporting results in more stringent requirements, increased scrutiny in the review process and higher expectations from every angle. In short, everything U.S. companies know about sustainability reporting is about to change.
To start, U.S. companies should take note of how European companies approach CSRD reporting. In particular, American companies need to observe how companies in the EU have approached the day-to-day management and reporting of sustainability matters. When it comes to CSRD reporting, European companies have a head start, thanks to their longer history of ESG reporting and their stronger attention to detail regarding controls over sustainability and nonfinancial disclosures.
However, the reporting burden is not entirely on the European subsidiaries of U.S. companies. (Although some business leaders in the U.S. incorrectly believe that’s the case.) The reality is that the EU subsidiaries often don’t have the necessary view of the entire organization to prepare sustainability-related disclosures. They also typically do not have dedicated sustainability reporting functions. Ironically, the European business leaders often assume the opposite – that their U.S.-based teammates possess the necessary oversight and that everything is under control in the United States. Quite often, neither one is the case.
The CSRD process requires collaboration across the continents. Leaders in both the U.S. and EU must work together over the next several months and years to ensure the process moves in the right direction. Because when it comes to the CSRD, if companies wait, it might be too late.