Detalles
| With an ongoing shift towards mandatory sustainability reporting, GRI is supporting global policymakers with an initial set of three new guidance documents. It addresses the Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive (CSRD): The benefits for policymakers in harmonising their sustainability disclosure regulations with the EU. The GRI Standards are closely aligned with the new European Sustainability Reporting Standards (ESRS), and collaboration continues to ensure that they remain so in the future. In force since January 2023, the ESRS introduces sustainability reporting obligations for around 50,000 European companies, while from 2024, non-EU companies listed on regulated EU markets will also be required to report. These developments highlight the importance of achieving alignment between sustainability and sustainability. |
Recursos relacionados
Sustainability-Linked Bond Principles: Voluntary Process Guidelines
Las guías publicadas por el International Capital Market Association (ICMA) recogen los principios generales que se han de seguir para…
Tesco TNFD case study: Palm oil traceability and determining priority sourcing locations in Indonesia
Multinational food company Tesco participated in Global Canopy's Nature-Related Financial Disclosures (TNFD) Task Force pilot programme ahead of the launch…
Bonds to finance the sustainable blue economy. A practicioner’s guide
The International Finance Corporation (IFC), a member of the World Bank Group, together with the International Capital Markets Association (ICMA),…