The text introduces obligations for 
companies to publicly disclose information on their sustainability 
impacts, risks and opportunities in their management report based on 
mandatory sustainability reporting standards. The reported 
sustainability information will have to be independently audited.
Accountancy Europe  welcomes the final text agreed by the co-legislators. As Commissioner McGuinness noted “This
 agreement is a big step as for the first-time sustainability reporting 
is being put at the same level as financial reporting”. This is 
fundamental to support the Green Deal’s ambitions and transform Europe 
into the first climate neutral economy by 2025.
Scope 
The CSRD expands the scope to all large and listed companies with 
250+ employees but also to non-EU companies with substantial activities 
in the EU. We support that this includes companies that significantly 
impact the environment and society. Listed SMEs will be subject to 
proportionate requirements that will help reduce reporting burden while 
still addressing the demand of financial institutions for reliable 
sustainability-related data.
Sustainability reporting standards
The CSRD mandates disclosures based on -to be developed- 
sustainability reporting standards. This is essential to provide users 
with relevant, comparable and reliable information that enables 
sustainable decision-making. We strongly encourage the EU to seize the 
current window of opportunity for international cooperation (as stated 
in article 29 b) 3).  A global baseline with interconnected European and
 international standards will allow more efficient sustainability 
reporting. European standards’ credibility, adoption and effectiveness 
will heavily depend on properly supervised due process followed by 
EFRAG.
The CSRD also requires proportionality of sustainability reporting 
standards and phasing-in of their disclosure requirements. We urge EFRAG
 to adopt a smart phasing-in approach which starts with the most 
important standards for largest companies in all sectors to transition 
their business model and disclose company data. Gradually, disclosure 
requirements within each individual standard can be added and then 
sector-specific standards for relevant sectors. Only after that, value 
chain disclosures should be required.
Reporting timeline
The CSRD introduces a gradual approach to reporting starting with 
companies that are in the scope of the Non-Financial Reporting 
Directive. These companies are expected to disclose sustainability 
information as from 1 January 2024. Other large listed and non-listed 
companies will be expected to report a year later.
While we stand behind the urgency to implement the CSRD, this will 
allow companies new to sustainability reporting to get systems and 
processes in place needed for quality reporting. All involved parties 
will have to advance quickly to meet the ambitious timeline while taking
 up the challenge to report credible and quality sustainability 
information.
Assurance
The CSRD introduces an EU-wide requirement for limited assurance on 
sustainability information with moving to reasonable assurance as an end
 goal. The statutory auditor, another auditor or an independent 
assurance service provider can conduct an assurance engagement.
Accountancy Europe  supports
 opening the market to assurance providers applying equivalent 
requirements in line with the Audit Directive (2006/43/EU), i.e., 
professional assurance standards, ethical requirements including 
independence, quality framework and public oversight. It is important 
that stakeholders can rely on consistent quality of assurance whoever 
provides it. The accountancy profession has been providing assurance 
services on sustainability information for over two decades. They have 
built up expertise in this area supported by the professional framework 
and standards they follow.
It is essential to ensure connectivity between financial and 
sustainability reporting. This will enable all stakeholders to be fully 
informed and effectively support a true transition. Statutory auditors 
are well placed to perform assurance engagements on sustainability 
reporting. Their involvement in financial and sustainability aspects 
would support information connectivity.
Next steps
We have reached a key milestone, but the CSRD now needs to be 
implemented. Effectiveness should be the green transition’s leading 
principle. Reporting is only an element of the puzzle and policymakers 
need to do urgently more to reach the EU Green Deal goals to enable a 
true and just transition toward a sustainable economy.