New SEC Climate Disclosure Rule Brings Required Transparency to Sustainability Data
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Workiva survey reveals
“The climate disclosure rule elevates the significance of climate data in public filings to reflect its importance to investors in assessing company performance and evaluating risk,” said Julie Iskow, president and chief executive officer of Workiva. “Organizations will need to begin thinking about following a consistent disclosure process for financial and sustainability information, including assurance, on both numbers and narrative. This is what Workiva does. This is what assured integrated reporting is all about.”
Earlier this week, Workiva published insights from the 2024 Executive Benchmark on Integrated Reporting survey, which included perspectives from more than 800 executives and 100 institutional investors in
The survey highlights a significant advantage for executives whose companies integrate financial and ESG reporting: they are nearly twice as confident in complying with the SEC climate disclosure rules as those who do not (
These findings underscore the crucial role of accurate business reporting and emphasize the need for companies to prioritize non-financial reporting to promote confidence and transparency for organizations and their stakeholders, regardless of regulatory mandates. Read the full report here.
The SEC released a fact sheet outlining the new requirements, accessible here. Below are the essential points to note from the SEC's recent climate-related disclosure mandates:
- Scope 1 and 2 emissions, if material, with reasonable assurance for large accelerated filers and limited assurance for accelerated filers (with a phase-in period)
- An additional financial statement footnote disclosing the impact of climate-related events, mitigation efforts, and transition activities (subject to existing financial statement audit requirements)
- Disclosure of climate-related risks and their material impact on strategy and financial performance
- Quantitative and qualitative disclosures on activities undertaken to mitigate or adapt to climate-related risks (if these activities are undertaken)
- Inline XBRL™ tagging requirements
The new rule will pose challenges for sustainability and financial reporting teams. Consistency between reports will be heavily scrutinized, and many organizations have different reporting timelines for financial and sustainability reports. Addressing these requirements will require companies to adopt technology that can streamline processes, connect data and teams, and ensure data consistency, accuracy, and integrity.
To learn more about how companies can act on these new requirements from the SEC and to get additional insights from the survey, join:
Workiva & Deloitte for a webinar on March 13, 2024 at 11:00 am EDT. Click here to register
Workiva & PwC US for a webinar on March 14, 2024 at 11:00 am EDT. Click here to register.
About Workiva
Workiva Inc. (NYSE:WK) is on a mission to power transparent reporting for a better world. We build and deliver the world’s leading cloud platform for assured, integrated reporting to meet stakeholder demands for action, transparency, and disclosure of financial and non-financial data. Workiva offers the only unified SaaS platform that brings customers’ financial reporting, Environmental, Social, and Governance (ESG), and Governance, Risk, and Compliance (GRC) together in a controlled, secure, audit-ready platform. Our platform simplifies the most complex reporting and disclosure challenges by streamlining processes, connecting data and teams, and ensuring consistency. Learn more at workiva.com.
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Media Inquiries:
Rotha Brauntz
Lauren Covello
press@workiva.com
Source: Workiva Inc.
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