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Clearer rules on reporting companies' climate risks could soon put us on a path to decarbonising corporate Australia

Clearer rules on reporting companies' climate risks could soon put us on a path to decarbonising corporate Australia
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Australian company directors have long had legal obligations to identify, disclose and manage material financial risks to the company. Where risks result from climate change, or from measures to mitigate climate change, they have an obligation .

But until now there have been no clear rules on how to report.

A new proposal from Treasurer on which the government wants comment by will require a standardized internationally‑aligned form of disclosure of ‑related risks and opportunities, phased in from 2024-25.

It follows on the heels of the government's and proposals to require big emitters to reduce emissions year by year under the previously-leglislated "".

Voluntary best-practice, international standards for climate reporting have been available for some time, developed by the .

Commitments have been hard to compare

Around of large Australian companies are already using these standards.

An increasing number have also set long-term .

But much of the reporting focuses on the easier aspects of the TCFD standards, which deal with governance and identifying risks, rather than setting out robust transition strategies with clear and measurable decarbonisation pathways aligned to the international Paris accord.

The companies that have adopted climate targets have been using a variety of definitions. Some refer to absolute emissions, some to reducing emissions intensity, and some only to certain business lines.

Very few submit their targets for external verification by bodies such as the , an international accreditation platform for Paris-aligned targets.

Greenwashing concerns

There are also valid concerns about greenwashing, particularly in relation to net-zero pledges and claims of Paris alignment.

Corporate regulators are and some companies are facing litigation over the veracity of their claims.

An ongoing case in the Federal Court against oil and gas alleges it has been misleading and deceptive in disclosing a net-zero target, while continuing to pursue new high-emitting projects and relying on contentious offset strategies and immature carbon capture and storage technologies.

Completing the jigsaw

The proposed reforms offer a real chance to address these problems.

They would support companies to set out transition strategies, including decarbonisation targets, and to report on their progress using standardized metrics. They would also require clearer reporting of corporate emissions, including, where relevant, the emissions that companies are associated with.

The consultation paper also proposes options to strengthen and streamline the standard-setting, monitoring, and oversight functions of Australian regulators.

Sitting alongside the government's legislated and the strengthened safeguard mechanism, the new reporting standards will help line up the puzzle pieces to drive corporate decarbonisation in Australia.

Provided by The Conversation

This article is republished from under a Creative Commons license. Read the .The Conversation

Citation: Clearer rules on reporting companies' climate risks could soon put us on a path to decarbonising corporate Australia (2022, December 19) retrieved 16 May 2025 from /news/2022-12-clearer-companies-climate-path-decarbonising.html
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