From 6 April 2022, for the first time certain large public and private companies and limited liability partnerships (LLPs) incorporated in the UK will be required to make annual climate-related financial disclosures aligned with the recommendations of the Task Force on Climate-related Financial Disclosures (TCFD). As we described last year, the Government committed to setting out regulations during the course of 2022 to create a framework for more companies and LLPs to report in line with the TCFD.
Following the publication in October 2021 of the long-awaited response to the consultation paper (Mandatory climate-related financial disclosures by publicly quoted companies, large private companies and LLPs), this framework is being implemented for accounting periods commencing on or after 6 April.
The new mandatory regime will exist in addition to the Listing Rule provisions, which already require companies admitted to the Premium segment of the Main Market of the London Stock Exchange to report in line with TCFD or explain why they have not.
What were the outcomes of the consultation?
There was wholesale support from stakeholders responding to the consultation for the introduction of these climate-related disclosures. Whilst the Government is sticking to many of its original proposals, it has taken on-board some of the consultation feedback. In particular, it will now include scenario analysis reporting and an exemption for non-material information in the disclosures, and is addressing the interplay between these new regulations and the Streamlined Energy and Carbon Reporting (SECR) regime.
Which companies and LLPs are in scope?
Despite calls to widen the scope of the regulations in the consultation responses, the Government has adhered to the original proposal for the regulations to apply to:
What are the disclosures?
The consultation responses called for closer alignment of the regulations to the TCFD recommendations to allow for more consistency and clarity around sustainability disclosures. Whilst this has been taken on board to a degree in the regulations, disappointingly they are not exactly the same. Therefore, companies and LLPs in scope who already report under TCFD should check both frameworks to ensure appropriate disclosures are made.
The proposed disclosures under the regulations are to follow the themes of the TCFD disclosures, mainly:
As part of assisting companies and LLPs in managing and applying this new legal requirement to disclose, the Government will prepare non-binding Q&A guidance.
Where do you have to disclose?
Companies and LLPs will be required to report the climate-related financial disclosures in the non-financial information statement in the Strategic Report. If the relevant LLP is not required to produce a Strategic Report, then the disclosures will be reported in the Energy and Carbon Report (which forms part of the Annual Report).
What are the next steps to implementation?
The Government published draft regulations for climate-related financial disclosures for companies and LLPs, which directly amend the Companies Act and enshrine the disclosures into law. The draft regulations for companies were signed into law on 17 January 2022. The draft regulations for LLPs are currently being approved in Parliament. They are both due to come into force as law on 6 April 2022 and be applicable for accounting periods starting on or after that date.
Comment
The UK will be the first G20 country to make TCFD-aligned disclosures mandatory across the economy. Whilst the scope of the mandatory reporting will cover a small number of companies and LLPs, the Government has stated that it hopes more companies and LLPs will disclose voluntarily. In any event, the scope of these disclosures will likely widen in due course as the Government has committed to reviewing these regulations every 5 years, with the first review due to be published before 6 April 2027.
This was one of the important milestones set out in the Government's Sustainable Investing Roadmap published in October 2021 ahead of the UK-hosted COP26. Whilst there is much more to do to reach the Government's commitment to having an economy with net-zero greenhouse gas emissions by 2050, requiring certain companies and LLPs to make climate disclosures is progress.