Companies worry U.S. SEC climate rule may require broad emissions
disclosures
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[January 19, 2022] By
Katanga Johnson
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - As the U.S.
securities regulator wraps up a draft of a landmark new climate change
rule, environmental campaigners and activist investors want it to
require companies to disclose not only their own greenhouse gas
emissions but those generated by their suppliers and other partners.
Corporate groups, meanwhile, are pushing for a narrower rule that will
make it easier and less expensive to gather and report emissions data,
and which will protect them from being sued over potential mistakes.
Last year, the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) started working
https://www.reuters.com/business/
sustainable-business/sec-considers-disclosure-mandate-range-climate-metrics-2021-06-23
on a new rule requiring U.S.-listed companies to provide investors with
detailed disclosures on how climate change could affect their business.
The rule is part of a broader effort
https://www.reuters.com/business/
cop/key-recommendations-us-treasurys-financial-climate-risk-report-2021-10-21
by Democratic President Joe Biden's administration to address climate
change challenges and cut greenhouse gas emissions 50-52% by 2030
compared to 2005 levels, an ambitious pledge https://www.whitehouse.gov/briefing-room/statements-releases/2021/11/01/fact-sheet-president-biden-renews-u-s-leadership-on-world-stage-at-u-n-climate-conference-cop26
that will require every federal agency to do its part.
Progressives and climate campaigners want the SEC to deliver a
game-changing rule that will reveal all the emissions for which a
company is responsible, while many investors
https://www.reuters.com/business/
blackrock-warns-heavy-polluters-over-emissions-data-before-shareholder-meetings-2021-02-17
say they need such data to fully assess companies' exposure to climate
change and related policy measures.
Initially, the SEC under Chair Gary Gensler said it hoped to publish a
draft by October 2021. Last month, Gensler said it was aiming to issue a
draft in early 2022.
Staff are still working on the rule, said two people familiar with the
matter, and the SEC's commissioners, who must vote to propose
regulations, have not yet seen a draft.
A spokesperson for the SEC declined to comment.
A major issue staff are struggling with is whether and how some or all
companies should disclose the broadest measure of greenhouse-gas
emissions, also known as "Scope 3" emissions, according to the sources
and company and investor advocates.
Corporate greenhouse-gas emissions fall into three buckets: Scope 1 are
emissions a company generates. Scope 2 includes emissions it creates
indirectly, for example by using electricity. Scope 3 includes emissions
generated up and down the company value chain, including by suppliers
and customers.
Companies say there is no agreed methodology for calculating Scope 3
emissions and providing that level of detail would be burdensome.
Disclosing second-hand emissions data from suppliers and partners could
also expose companies to litigation by both the third parties and
investors, if the information transpires to be misleading, they say.
"The biggest point of contention is with Scope 3 emissions. ... the
agency is asking companies about activities that are outside of the
firm’s control," said Tom Quaadman of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce which
is in discussions with the SEC on the issue. "American companies can get
sued on detailing those things."
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Plymouth Area Renewable Energy Initiative in Plymouth, New
Hampshire, U.S., June 4, 2019. REUTERS/Brian Snyder/File Photo
Some inside the SEC are sympathetic to companies' concerns and staff are
exploring whether Scope 3 disclosures could fall under an existing legal safe
harbor that protects companies' forward-looking statements, or whether a new
safe harbor could be created, the sources said.
Steven Rothstein of investor advocacy group Ceres, which is pushing for Scope 3
disclosures, said SEC staff contacted them in recent months seeking more
feedback on Scope 3 issues, including whether to provide a safe harbor.
Another option on the table to reduce companies' legal exposure would see them
publicly disclose Scope 1, 2 and some Scope 3 data, while filing sensitive Scope
3 data on suppliers and partners to the SEC privately, according the sources.
"The agency is trying to determine whether they should be part of the company's
financial filing or can be provided or furnished separately," said Tracey Lewis,
policy counsel on climate for Washington group Public Citizen who has also
discussed the matter with the SEC.
SECTOR DISCLOSURES
Mandating some Scope 3 disclosures would see the United States go further than
Europe and voluntary standards from the Task Force on Climate-Related Financial
Disclosures.
That group, created by the G20's Financial Stability Board, proposes companies
disclose Scope 3 emissions if appropriate.
It is unclear if the SEC's two Republican commissioners would support such a
move, although Democrats have enough votes to push the draft rule through
regardless. Hester Peirce, one of the two Republicans, has suggested https://www.sec.gov/news/speech/peirce-chocolate-covered-cicadas-072021
emissions data disclosures are the domain of the Environmental Protection
Agency.
One big challenge for the SEC, say experts, is identifying which Scope 3 metrics
help investors gauge a company's financial prospects, and ensuring the rule is
flexible enough to generate specific, rather than generic information.
While emissions disclosures may be important for carbon-intensive sectors like
oil, gas and automakers, they may be less relevant for others and the SEC is
considering how much detail companies should provide by sector, the people said.
Some companies in carbon-intensive sectors, including oil major ExxonMobil Corp
https://www.reuters.com/article/us-exxon-mobil-carbon/exxon-mobil-under-pressure-on-climate-aims-to-cut-emissions-
intensity-by-2025-idUSKBN28O1TL, have recently begun reporting Scope 3
emissions, amid pressure from investors and climate campaigners.
The SEC is also mulling how much data financial institutions, which finance
carbon-intensive industries, should disclose, the people said. Many banks have
pledged to reduce their emissions ultimately to zero, which could have major
implications for their operations, they noted.
Rothstein said the SEC had also asked him whether it should include Scope 3 for
large, high-revenue companies, then phase in medium and small-sized companies a
year or two later.
"Scope 3 disclosure of any kind is critical and we hope that the SEC will be
bold," he added. "The climate crisis requires no less."
(Reporting by Katanga Johnson in Washington; Editing by Michelle Price and David
Gregorio)
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