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2024

Comprehensive Analysis of the SEC’s Landmark Climate Disclosure Rule (March 15, 2024; Updated April 8, 2024)

Heads Up | Volume 31, Issue 5
March 15, 2024 (Updated April 8, 2024)
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Comprehensive Analysis of the SEC’s Landmark Climate Disclosure Rule

This Heads Up was updated on April 8, 2024, to address the SEC’s stay of the effective date of the final rule pending judicial review. See discussion in the Implementation Considerations section.

Footnotes

1
SEC Final Rule Release No. 33-11275, The Enhancement and Standardization of Climate-Related Disclosures for Investors.
2
SEC Proposed Rule Release No. 33-11042, The Enhancement and Standardization of Climate-Related Disclosures for Investors.
3
Regulation S-X, Article 14, “Financial Statement Effects.”
4
Regulation S-X, Article 8, “Financial Statements of Smaller Reporting Companies,” which governs the financial statements required for SRCs, was amended to require the disclosures enumerated in Regulation S-X, Article 14.
5
For titles of FASB Accounting Standards Codification (ASC) references, see Deloitte’s “Titles of Topics and Subtopics in the FASB Accounting Standards Codification.”
6
Expenses related to the amortization or depreciation of assets capitalized, such as fixed assets, would not be reflected in this amount because those expenditures are not expensed as incurred.
7
Registrants are not required to include emissions from manure management systems, which are predominantly used in agriculture, when providing GHG emission disclosures in their SEC filings. The 2023 Consolidated Appropriations Act explicitly stipulates that no federal funds (including amounts approved for the SEC) may be used to implement GHG reporting for such systems.
8
SEC Final Rule Release No. 33-11216, Cybersecurity Risk Management, Strategy, Governance, and Incident Disclosure.
9
The final rule specifically identifies the need for registrants with material operations in a jurisdiction that has made a GHG emission reduction commitment to consider whether the implementation of such commitment is a material transition risk.
10
Management’s assessment under Section 404(a) of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 may still be required for EGCs.
12
As discussed in the Timing of Disclosure section, domestic registrants will not be required to provide this information before their second fiscal quarterly report for the following year would otherwise be due or, in the case of a registration statement or foreign private issuer, 225 days after the end of the fiscal year.
13
See footnote 12.
14
If registrants voluntarily obtain assurance on Scope 1 and Scope 2 GHG emission disclosures before such assurance is required, they must provide the disclosures discussed in the Voluntary GHG Emission Assurance Considerations section.
15
See footnote 14.
16
If registrants voluntarily obtain assurance on Scope 1 and Scope 2 GHG emission disclosures that they elected to disclose in an SEC filing, they must provide the disclosures discussed in the Voluntary GHG Emission Assurance Considerations section.
17
Upon releasing the 2023 status report on October 12, 2023, the TCFD was disbanded, and the Financial Stability Board asked the IFRS Foundation to assume the role of monitoring the progress of corporate climate-related disclosures.
18
The final rule states that when determining the required disclosures, a registrant should use the definition of materiality established by the U.S. Supreme Court. See the Materiality and Safe Harbor section for more information. The first mandatory compliance dates for the final rule may be impacted by ongoing juridical review. Refer to the Implementation Considerations section for further details.
19
The CSRD requires registrants to assess materiality from both an impact and a financial perspective (a concept known as “double materiality”).
20
In accordance with IFRS S1, “[a]n entity need not disclose information otherwise required by an IFRS Sustainability Disclosure Standard if the information is not material” on the basis of an assessment of materiality.
21
SB-253, the Climate Corporate Data Accountability Act, focuses on the reporting of GHG emissions while SB-261, Greenhouse Gases: Climate-Related Financial Risk, focuses on the reporting of climate-related financial risks and the measures a company has adopted to reduce and adapt to such risks.
22
IFRS S1, General Requirements for Disclosure of Sustainability-Related Financial Information, and IFRS S2, Climate-Related Disclosures.
23
For a discussion of the criteria under which non-E.U. entities would be within the scope of the CSRD, see Deloitte’s August 17, 2023 (updated February 23, 2024), Heads Up.
24
SB-253 applies to public and private U.S. businesses with total annual revenues exceeding $1 billion and that do business in California. SB-261 applies to public and private U.S. businesses, excluding those in the insurance industry, with total annual revenues exceeding $500 million and that do business in California. For further discussion of the scope of these bills, see Deloitte’s October 10, 2023 (updated December 19, 2023), Heads Up.
25
If used by the registrant and results yield material impacts, disclosure of scenario analysis is required.
26
The European Commission (EC) will perform an assessment to determine whether moving from limited to reasonable assurance is feasible for auditors and companies. After this assessment, the EC will adopt standards for reasonable assurance no later than October 1, 2028.