To
help meet net-zero carbon emission targets, companies face
mandatory rules on telling investors how climate change will
affect their bottom line.
The International Sustainability Standards Board (ISSB) is
working on a set of global "baseline" norms it plans to finalise
by early 2023 for use in countries like Britain.
The European Union is aiming finalising its own, more
comprehensive set of disclosures for 50,000 companies by next
month. They go further than the ISSB by including detailed
coverage of a company's impact on the environment, and also
covering social and governance issues with bespoke norms.
The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission has also proposed
climate-related disclosures.
Klaas Knot, the Dutch central bank president who chairs the FSB,
said developing the disclosures provides a unique opportunity to
avoid "harmful fragmentation" in markets so that users can
compare companies from across the world.
"Interoperability between the common global baseline and
national and regional jurisdiction-specific requirements will be
essential," Knot said in a letter to G20 finance ministers
meeting in Washington this week.
"This needs to be built in early on, and certainly before
frameworks are finalised and become hard to adjust."
The FSB echoed calls from the European Central Bank and the
International Monetary Fund.
The new disclosure rules will replace a patchwork of practices
which have made it hard for investors to compare companies, but
business groups say terminology needs aligning.
The FSB said further work will be needed to achieve
interoperability given that differences in approaches and pace
of progress across jurisdictions remain, the FSB said.
(Reporting by Huw Jones; editing by David Evans)
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