CFOs and executives across the country are on the clock. With the Securities and Exchange Commission's impending climate change regulations likely to be implemented, environmental, social and governance-related reporting requirements are an inevitability.
Now, it's just a matter of waiting to see what form they take.
Last March, the SEC revealed proposals to standardize climate-related disclosures for investors. These would require "a registrant to disclose information about its direct greenhouse gas emissions (Scope 1) and indirect emissions from purchased electricity or other forms of energy (Scope 2). In addition, a registrant (company) would be required to disclose GHG emissions from upstream and downstream activities in its value chain (Scope 3)."
The requirements will affect nearly all SEC registrants as well as the private companies they have relationships with, including subsidiaries, customers, supply chain partners and equity method investments.
Further, the requirements will impact both Regulation S-K (which governs the form and content of disclosures outside the financial statements and includes for example, management discussion and analysis, or MD&A, various qualitative disclosures, etc.) and Regulation S-X disclosures (which governs the form and content of financial statement disclosures and related notes). Therefore, CFOs will need to provide insights on a broad range of operations and performance, from the governance, oversight and management of climate-related risks and GHG emissions, to specific financial metrics, estimates and assumptions.
These new responsibilities will place additional strain on finance organizations already stretched thin by a continuing shortage of talent. Also, since the SEC proposal only represents the first step in what is sure to be additional ESG-related regulations and requirements in coming years, CFOs are facing a new paradigm for the reporting function, without much time to prepare and ramp up.