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IFRS Foundation and EFRAG Publish Interoperability Guidance

WriteCanvas News


The IFRS Foundation and EFRAG have released Interoperability Guidance.

The document is designed to reduce complexity, fragmentation, and duplication for companies applying both the ISSB Standards and the ESRS.

It describes the alignment of general requirements including key concepts such as materiality, presentation, and disclosures for sustainability topics other than climate; and provides information about the alignment of climate disclosures and what a company starting with either set of standards needs to know to enable compliance with both sets of standards.

The interoperability guidance material demonstrates high alignment between IFRS Sustainability Disclosure Standards and ESRS. It offers practical support for companies for efficient compliance.

The International Accounting Standards Board (ISSB) aids in climate-related information, identifying risks, opportunities, value chain scope, financial effects, transition risks, physical risks, and measurement approaches.

The ISSB Standards permit entities to provide qualitative information about current and anticipated financial effects but do not mandate an equivalent disclosure requirement for Scope 3 emissions.

The ESRS offers reasonable reliefs for reporting value chain information, including Scope 3 emissions and estimating information using all reasonable and supportable data.

ESRS 1 mandates entities to use reasonable, supportable information for estimates, but not require quantification if it doesn’t meet qualitative usefulness criteria.

Commissioner for Financial Services, Financial Stability and Capital Markets Union Mairead McGuinness said:“The Commission’s guidance on sustainability reporting aligns with EU and international standards, reducing the reporting burden for EU companies by ensuring interoperable frameworks across different jurisdictions.”

EFRAG Sustainability Reporting Board Chair Patrick de Cambourg said: “We have issued practical guidance on interoperability, demonstrating a commitment to international convergence of sustainability-related disclosures on climate and other critical matters, demonstrating its full support for global momentum in this crucial space.”

EFRAG Sustainability Reporting Technical Expert Group Chair Chiara Del Prete said: “The guidance outlines the ability of ESRS preparers to report on climate in compliance with ISSB Standards, reducing duplication of reporting and supporting stakeholders in implementation challenges. It also outlines the potential for ESRS to report on other matters.”

ISSB Vice-Chair Sue Lloyd said: “The interoperability guidance aims to provide practical help to companies applying ISSB Standards and ESRS, as jurisdictions worldwide adopt or use these standards.”

 


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EU Postpones ESRS Deadline by Two Years

WriteCanvas News


EU member states have approved a directive delaying the adoption of sector-specific sustainability disclosure standards and sustainability reporting from non-EU companies under the Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive (CSRD).

The EU Council and Parliament have agreed to delay the deadline for sector ESRS by two years, urging the Commission to publish and adopt sector reporting standards soon.

The new directive will postpone the adoption of the ESRS for non-EU companies to June 2026, and delay 2028 reporting obligations by two years to 2030.

The Council has officially approved a directive, extending the deadline for the adoption of sector-specific sustainability reporting standards for EU companies and general sustainability reporting standards for non-EU companies.

This modifies the Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive (CSRD) for specific industries and third-country undertakings, allowing the affected companies additional time to implement the European Sustainability Reporting Standards (ESRS), the Council said in a press release.

The European Union’s CSRD, which began in 2024, requires companies to report on sustainability-related impacts, opportunities, and risks.


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Microsoft adds ESG Reporting, Scope 3 emissions to Sustainability Platform

Sonal Desai


Microsoft is adding new features to its sustainability platform-Microsoft Cloud for Sustainability.

Key capabilities include helping companies meet emerging ESG reporting requirements and regulations, calculating Scope 3 emissions, and collecting and managing ESG data across categories and data sources.

Additional features:
The additional features include an expansion of Microsoft Cloud for Sustainability’s emissions calculation capabilities to include all 15 categories of Scope 3, or value chain, emissions.

How do these features support global mandates?
Microsoft is adding capabilities to track progress against Science Based Targets initiative (SBTi) designations. A new CSRD template to help organizations collect data needed for the European Sustainability Reporting Standards (ESRS) underlying the EU’s Corporate Sustainable Reporting Directive (CSRD) will begin applying in 2024. Microsoft will also introduce prebuilt reporting templates for other ESG regulations and standards as they are defined and implemented.

Spokesperson speak:
Satish Thomas, Corporate Vice President, Microsoft Industry Clouds, said, “Our initial release of the Microsoft Cloud for Sustainability data model focused on the pressing need to address carbon emissions. We have since expanded the data model to include water and waste. These data models centralize data to help streamline data ingestion, sharing, calculations, and reporting. This includes data from across the enterprise—enterprise resource planning (ERP), the Internet of Things (IoT) sensor, plant data, telemetry at the edge—and external sources including suppliers, utility companies, transportation, and more.”


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