Massive Shift In ESG Landscape Coming With Mandatory Disclosure Regulations

 | Sep 30, 2021 04:04

For decades, the voluntary nature of corporate environmental, social, and governance (ESG) reporting has been a primary challenge in the ESG data industry. Carbon reporting by companies—and the lack thereof—is a bellwether for ESG reporting in general. Years of work by sustainable investment organizations have laid the groundwork for clear, standardized requirements and yielded patchy reporting.

But the sustainable reporting landscape will change dramatically in the next 12 months as U.S. and European Union (EU) regulators are poised to lend new regulatory heft to reporting guidelines.

Carbon reporting offers a window into the larger challenge. It's been a long-time project of standards organizations: prodding companies to reveal their carbon footprint in comparable numbers. The leading Greenhouse Gas Protocol for corporations was established in 2001. Since then, the Sustainability Accounting Standards Board (SASB), the Climate Disclosure Project (CDP), the Global Reporting Initiative (GRI), and the Task Force on Climate-Related Financial Disclosures (TCFD) have pushed standards outlining how companies should report on carbon emissions, with most of them using harmonized metrics and methodologies.

Still, while more than 9,500 companies reported emissions to the non-profit CDP in 2020, most companies did not. According to an article by Columbia professor Shivaram Rajgopal writing in Forbes, as of June 2021, “only 20% of publicly listed U.S. companies voluntarily disclose emissions data.” As a result, data providers are forced to either fill in values, penalize non-reporters, or leave certain data points blank if companies don't provide them. This leads to ESG data products that are inaccurate when it comes to carbon emissions as well as other ESG factors.

This situation mirrors the larger corporate sustainability challenge beyond just carbon. The Conference Board reports that climate-risk disclosures are increasing globally and for the Russell 3000, with a small step backward for S&P 500 firms.