... it is precisely the growing focus on sustainability that has thrust sustainability reporting into the spotlight, with several game-changing developments in 2021 – which carry on into 2022.
      
    
    
      Corporate reporting is the 
sometimes-arcane cousin of other high-profile governance issues that 
concern investors, such as company leadership and strategy, board 
independence and effectiveness, executive remuneration and, 
increasingly, the governance of sustainability matters. 
At the International Corporate Governance Network’s March 2022 webinar on Global Sustainability Standards, Convergence and the Future,
 it was observed on several occasions that we are witnessing a 
once-in-a-generation – if not a once-in-a-lifetime – opportunity to 
achieve a consolidation of sustainability reporting standards, with the 
goal of placing sustainability reporting on a par with financial 
reporting in terms of quality, consistency, comparability and 
decision-usefulness for both companies and investors. Perhaps the key 
development in 2021 was the formation of the International 
Sustainability Standards Board (ISSB) by the International Financial 
Reporting Standards (IFRS)
 Foundation, to stand alongside the International Accounting Standards 
Board (IASB). At the same time, we saw the merger of key standard 
setters such as the Sustainable Accounting Standards Board (SASB) and 
the International Integrated Reporting Council (IIRC) into the new Value
 Reporting Foundation (VRF). And both the VRF and the Carbon Disclosure 
Standards Board (CDSB) have also been consolidated into the new ISSB.
Apart from this welcome reduction of 
acronyms, these 2021 developments also suggest a positive step forward 
in terms of consolidating global sustainability standards, something 
that increasingly has become a priority for institutional investors who 
integrate sustainability and environmental, social and governance (ESG) 
data and reporting into their investment strategies and decision-making.
 While progress is clear, and is promising, there was also a clear 
sentiment expressed at the ICGN  webinar that we are not yet where we 
want to be and that obstacles/challenges remain.
Standard setter convergence, but regulatory fragmentation?
While the tectonic plates of some of the 
leading reporting frameworks and standards are melding together through 
the ISSB and VRF, it remains unclear if, at another level, the tectonic 
plates of different regulatory jurisdictions have the risk of shifting 
further apart and settling into different ‘camps’, possibly reflecting 
differing world views of the role of the company vis-à-vis shareholders 
and stakeholders. Most eyes are on the European Union (EU) in this 
context and the extent to which its sustainability regulation will – or 
will not – harmonise with the development of the ISSB (and vice versa). 
In terms of sustainability standards themselves, the question is how 
potential conflicts between the two globally dominant standards – the 
SASB standards within ISSB and European-based Global Reporting 
Initiative (GRI) – may be resolved.
To its credit, the EU has a good head start
 and has been an active protagonist, setting the pace with a string of 
recent regulatory initiatives relating to sustainable finance, including
 the Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive, the Sustainable 
Finance Disclosure Regulation, the EU Sustainability Taxonomy and a 
proposed Directive on Corporate Sustainability Due Diligence. The EU and
 its private advisory body, the European Financial Reporting Advisory 
Group (EFRAG) share the ISSB’s vision of an agreed global baseline for 
sustainability reporting and they are engaging closely with one another.
 But it is not clear if there is agreement on exactly what that baseline
 might be.
Potential obstacles or complications include:
Architecture: should sustainability reporting be 
focussed on industrial sector (ISSB/SASB approach) or standardised 
across sectors (GRI approach)?
Materiality: The EU’s focus on double materiality differs from the ISSB’s initial focus on single materiality (as discussed below).
Timing: The EU’s agenda already has momentum, and it
 is progressing at a faster rate than the ISSB. The development of a new
 conceptual framework in the financial accounting world can take years, 
and the ISSB may be under pressure to come together more quickly to keep
 up, particularly if the EU is to present a possibly conflicting agenda.
As it now stands, the ISSB standards and 
the GRI standards are emerging as ‘twin pillars’ – and as also potential
 rivals if this is pitted as one philosophy versus another. However, it 
is encouraging that the ISSB is engaging with the EU and EFRAG  in the 
spirit of establishing a coherent global baseline for sustainability 
reporting that is compatible with these protagonists’ own agendas.
But concerns not only relate to potential 
rivalry between the ISSB/VRF and EFRAG/GRI, but also to the possibility 
of a new entrant into this debate: the United States. The Biden 
administration is bringing renewed focus in the US on sustainability 
reporting, and the US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) is now 
consulting on climate reporting standards for US-listed companies – the 
world’s largest stock market.“
Investors
 are understandably keen to avoid a regional fragmentation or 
balkanisation of sustainability standards that would make elusive the 
aspiration of achieving global standards”
While it is positive to see the US more 
engaged in the sustainability reporting debate, it is currently unclear 
how the SEC’s initiative will progress: will it go its own way? At 
present, there are some concerns that this could, at worst, evolve into 
three incompatible ‘systems’: the ISSB, EU and the US. Such a scenario 
would be a setback for investors and sustainability reporting generally.
 Investors are, therefore, understandably keen to avoid a regional 
fragmentation or balkanisation of sustainability standards that would 
make elusive the aspiration of achieving global standards.
Materiality: single, double, dynamic – is the definition of materiality an obstacle to convergence?...
 more at ICGN
      
      
      
      
        © ICGN - International Corporate Governance Network
     
      
      
      
      
      
      Key
      
 Hover over the blue highlighted
        text to view the acronym meaning
      

Hover
        over these icons for more information
      
      
 
     
    
    
      
      Comments:
      
      No Comments for this Article