Moved by Lord Callanan That the Grand Committee do consider the
Companies (Strategic Report) (Climate-related Financial Disclosure)
Regulations 2021. Relevant document: 19th Report from the Secondary
Legislation Scrutiny Committee The Parliamentary Under-Secretary of
State, Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy
(Lord Callanan) (Con) My Lords, I beg to move that these draft
regulations, which were laid before the House on 28 October 2021,
be...Request free trial
Moved by
That the Grand Committee do consider the Companies (Strategic
Report) (Climate-related Financial Disclosure) Regulations
2021.
Relevant document: 19th Report from the Secondary Legislation
Scrutiny Committee
The Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State, Department for
Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy () (Con)
My Lords, I beg to move that these draft regulations, which were
laid before the House on 28 October 2021, be approved. These
regulations will amend the Companies Act 2006 to require certain
publicly quoted and large private companies to include
disclosures in their annual reports of climate change-related
risks and opportunities material to them, aligned with the
international framework of the Task Force on Climate-related
Financial Disclosures; I shall refer to it as the TCFD in future.
This TCFD SI will help to
deliver on the Government’s commitment to make climate-related
financial disclosures mandatory across the economy by 2025, with
a significant portion of those mandatory requirements in place by
2023. This commitment was set out in the Government’s paper, A
Roadmap towards Mandatory Climate-Related Disclosures, published
in November last year. The Government have made it clear that we
view action to address climate change as a priority.
Internationally, we are taking a leading role to promote action
through our presidency of the Conference of the Parties to the UN
Framework Convention on Climate Change— or COP.
Domestically, we are working to ensure that the UK achieves
net-zero greenhouse gas emissions by 2050. The Government have
published our net-zero strategy, setting out the measures to
transition to a green and sustainable future. Transparency from
businesses about climate risks and opportunities is key to
delivering our net-zero ambition. Without an accurate assessment
of climate risk by companies, it will be impossible for them to
assess what action is needed to address this. That is why this
instrument will require the UK’s largest companies to assess,
disclose and take actions to manage climate-related risks and
opportunities. This information should be a key part of all
investment decisions and be taken into account in the strategy of
every business.
Some large UK companies are, of course, already reporting on
climate risks. However, to date, these disclosures have been
variable in quality and quantity. This inconsistency makes it
incredibly difficult for investors to compare investment
opportunities and risks across companies, let alone across
different markets. Many organisations are also not making the
fuller disclosures needed to inform business risk and investment
decisions.
The Government have already introduced regulations to require
climate disclosures from occupational pension schemes through the
Occupational Pension Schemes (Climate Change Governance and
Reporting) Regulations 2021, which were approved by both Houses
and entered into force on 1 October this year. The Financial
Conduct Authority has introduced TCFD-aligned disclosures for
premium listed companies and recently conducted a consultation on
extending this to standard listed companies.
Let me take a moment to talk through what these regulations
actually do. The instrument will require companies in scope to
assess and make specific climate-related disclosures in respect
of governance, strategy, risk management, and metrics and
targets. These headings broadly reflect the TCFD’s four-pillar
approach to reporting. These requirements will apply to all
PIEs—public interest entities—and companies traded on the
Alternative Investment Market of the London Stock Exchange with
over 500 employees. They will also apply to private companies
with over 500 employees and over £500 million of turnover. The
disclosure requirements will commence for accounting periods
starting on or after 6 April 2022. My department will prepare
non-binding guidance to help companies that fall into scope. This
will provide additional information to help companies understand
the requirements and improve disclosures.
The Government consulted on the policy in these regulations
between March and May this year. The consultation generated 137
responses from a range of companies, financial institutions,
civil society organisations, trade associations and accountancy
firms. Officials also participated in three online events to try
to engage wider audiences. Overall, the policy proposals received
wide support.
The consultation led to two policy changes in response to the
feedback that was received. First, to simplify reporting for
those companies that are also subject to FCA rules, the
regulations’ wording is now more closely aligned to that of the
climate-related financial disclosures within the TCFD’s
framework. Secondly, respondents to the consultation called for
companies to be required to analyse their risks against specific
climate-change scenarios. As such, these regulations include the
requirement for companies to assess their climate risks against
different scenarios and report this on a qualitative basis.
The draft regulations will require climate disclosures in the
annual reports from just over 1,300 of the largest companies in
the United Kingdom. Companies are of course at different stages
of their journey towards net zero and producing robust
climate-related disclosures. Our guidance will help companies in
that journey and signpost some further sources of information,
which can be drawn on according to their particular needs. In
parallel, we also encourage the market-led evolution of good
practices on disclosures.
The Government want to ensure that companies and investors can
make the most of the opportunities created as we transition the
economy to net zero and sustainability. To do this, we need
companies to understand the risks and opportunities and to report
transparently on them. I therefore commend these regulations to
the House.
17:45:00
(CB)
My Lords, I understand and welcome the principle of the
regulations—to ensure that large companies state what they are
doing about climate risks and opportunities—but I have one
concern. Companies’ financial statements are becoming ever fuller
of environmental, social and governance information. There is a
danger that, in doing this, we render the accounts more difficult
to follow. It becomes hard to see the wood from the trees.
We have only to look at US listed company financial statements to
see how that can go. You have to wade through hundreds of pages
of risk and other ESG analysis. Most of it consists of
standard-form, boilerplate statements that do not change year to
year and, in reality, add little or nothing to the understanding
of the reader. Indeed, it can make the accounts almost unreadable
and very hard to make an informed decision about the position of
the company.
I fear there is a danger that we may be starting to follow that
trend, so I am very pleased that Part 3 of the regulations
requires a review to be carried out, but that is not until 6
April 2027. I suspect that it will become clear much more quickly
than that whether they are having the desired effect or are just
adding more meaningless boilerplate to the accounts. I urge the
Minister to keep that under constant review, rather than waiting
until 2027, and to take action much more quickly if it becomes
clear that the regulations are really not doing what is
intended.
(Lab)
We shall see, my Lords. We debate these regulations on the back
of the most important summit the UK has ever held—a summit which
future generations will look back on as when we either met the
moment or missed the opportunity. It is increasingly clear that
progress at COP 26 was modest and, too often, action will come
too late. The Climate Action Tracker has stated that Glasgow
commitments mean that, rather than limiting warming to the target
1.5 degrees, we are on track for a devastating 2.4-degree
rise.
This is the backdrop to which we debate these regulations, which
I hope have not come too late, as they will play an essential
part in reaching net zero by 2050, as well as ensuring businesses
both mitigate the risks of climate change and seize
opportunities.
Today’s instrument introduces new reporting obligations for
certain UK registered companies, as the Minister explained,
including certain listed companies and companies with more than
500 employees and a turnover of more than £500 million, which
require them to report climate-related financial information as
part of their strategic report. This is in line with the
recommendations of the task force on climate-related financial
disclosures—a framework which includes 11 recommendations
forming, as we have heard, four pillars: governance, strategy,
risk management, and metrics and targets.
Support has been coalescing around these recommendations. The
TCFD’s latest annual status report states that the number of
organisations endorsing the task force’s recommendations has
increased to more than 2,600—an annual increase of 70%.
We should remember that, regardless of the serious impact on
migration, security and hunger, climate chaos is also costly. The
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change estimates $69 trillion
in global financial losses by 2100 from a 2-degree warming
scenario.
Getting to this point has taken a while, and climate delay has
been a repeated issue with this Government. The task force on
climate-related financial disclosures published its
recommendations back in 2017. Then the UK Government’s green
finance strategy set out an expectation that all listed companies
and large asset owners should disclose in line with the TCFD’s
recommendations back in 2019, but did not hold a consultation on
the proposals until earlier this year. As we have heard, these
new requirements are to come into force next April, 2022—five
years after the task force on climate-related financial
disclosures published its recommendations.
According to BEIS, regulatory action is necessary because the
current voluntary approach
“is unlikely to be effective … current levels of disclosure
across the economy are low and reporting quality varies
significantly.”
If we look in detail at the impact assessment, this is clear.
Looking at the central scenario for additional groups having to
comply with reporting requirements, it reveals that only 34% of
the 1,350 companies in scope have already aligned with
governance, 24% with risk management and only 14% with scenario
analysis. The impact assessment estimates that 1,350 companies
are in scope of the regulations. Can the Minister tell us what
percentage of the UK economy this covers?
The impact assessment states that
“When a UK group is in scope, all the subsidiaries (UK and
overseas) belonging to the same UK group, would be expected to
hold some degree of reporting burden.”
What does “some degree” mean? These regulations also focus on
companies producing mandatory qualitative scenario analysis. The
impact assessment states that the Government
“understand that while some companies might decide to go beyond
these requirements … there will be some companies that lack the
expertise, resources and capabilities to undertake quantitative
scenario analysis by the time these regulations come into
force.”
How many companies are predicted to produce quantitative analysis
as well? What will be done to encourage both qualitative and
quantitative analysis to be produced? When does the Minister
expect quantification to be phased in?
It is regrettable that, first, we are unable to study the
non-binding guidance alongside these regulations and, secondly,
that the LLPs regulations have not been laid at the same time as
this SI, due to their interlinking nature. The Secondary
Legislation Scrutiny Committee flagged this SI as an instrument
of interest:
“We note that the Department will produce guidance on the new
reporting requirements which, according to the Impact Assessment,
will be around 125 pages long. This suggests a considerable
degree of complexity. In the absence of the actual guidance, it
is difficult to form a view of the nature and extent of the new
reporting requirements, and how robust the Department’s
assessment of the impact on businesses is.”
Does the Minister agree that there will be a “considerable degree
of complexity”? Why is the guidance not ready for today’s debate?
In the consultation stage impact assessment, the Government had
assumed that guidance would be about 75 pages long. Why has this
increased by 50 pages according to the Secondary Legislation
Scrutiny Committee’s report?
The Government state that the combined impact on business of
these regulations and those which apply to LLPs is £145.3
million. The impact assessment states that costs result from
companies needing
“to get familiar with BEIS Guidance, TCFD Guidance and other
companies’ disclosures before producing their own report”,
as well as ongoing costs which include collecting and processing
information, strategy and risk management. How are the Government
communicating to and supporting businesses with this additional
cost?
I would like some clarification from the Minister on enforcement.
The impact assessment states that:
“We also expect there to be an additional ongoing cost of
monitoring, supervision and enforcement to the Financial
Reporting Council (FRC) as the appropriate regulating body for
disclosures”,
but is the FRC properly resourced to take on this additional
burden? Can the Minister explain how the Government will work
closely with the Financial Conduct Authority and the Financial
Reporting Council to ensure monitoring and enforcement frameworks
operate in a coherent and complementary way? What happens if
these companies fail to follow these obligations or publish
substandard information? Will there be fines? The impact
assessment states that “reporting quality varies significantly”,
as the Minister said, so can these regulations ensure that this
does not continue to be the case? A review before 6 April 2027 is
welcome, but the impact assessment states that there will be “a
light touch review” in 2023. What will this consist of?
I end by speaking about small and medium-sized enterprises. As
the impact assessment states,
“Climate change poses significant risks to businesses,”
and we have to include SMEs within that statement. The cost
implication of these risks means that SMEs can be even more
exposed to the risks and to being squeezed out of the
opportunities of climate change. Does the Minister see these
obligations being extended to SMEs soon? The impact assessment
states,
“disclosure can have cascade effects through the supply
chain”.
Can the Minister confirm they are not just relying on
trickle-down climate economics to see a change in reporting
behaviour for SMEs? The cost implications for SMEs make it
essential that the Government have a strategy to support
them.
To conclude, these regulations are welcome, but they represent
only a small part of the picture of how the Government need to
help businesses respond to the risks and opportunities of climate
change.
(Con)
I thank both noble Lords. I know that they had some questions,
which I will come on to shortly, but both their contributions
emphasised how much support there is for these regulations.
Although people have concerns about the detail, I think that we
are at one in terms of general principles. That reflects the
fairly broad support we have for introducing them.
The Government appreciate that these regulations will entail some
additional costs to the UK’s largest companies, but we think that
the legal targets we have make it essential for us to act if we
are to achieve net-zero greenhouse gas emissions by 2050. The
process of preparing the disclosures required by these
regulations will help businesses to understand their
climate-related risks and opportunities, and will bring a greater
focus on how to manage them. The increased transparency will
enable investors to make better-informed decisions about where to
allocate capital in a consistent and climate-positive manner.
The proposals take account of business capabilities and business
readiness. For instance, the introduction of qualitative scenario
analysis allows companies to use this important tool to manage
climate risks in a way that encourages capabilities to grow over
time.
The noble Lord, Lord Vaux, raised the concern that annual reports
and accounts are becoming more and more full of ESG information,
such that it is sometimes hard to see the wood from the trees. He
asked whether my department could commit to keeping the
regulations under review in the interim. I can tell him that the
Government will indeed review the effectiveness of these
provisions. If we see that they are not working, we will
certainly look at taking further measures. We will conduct a
statutory review of the regulations after five years, as is
normal.
In response to the noble Lord, , I can tell him that we are
publishing non-binding Q&A style guidance targeted to help
companies making the disclosures. It provides clarification on
the disclosures against each of these specific requirements.
There is, in fact, already significant background material on how
to disclose according to TCFD which itself has
recommendations and guidance available online. There is also, by
way of background material, the existing guidance from the
Financial Conduct Authority on the climate-disclosure provisions
in the UK listing rules, and indeed from the Department for Work
and Pensions on the disclosure requirements that exist for
pension funds.
The department assumed to model costs that companies might read
125 pages for familiarisation before making the appropriate
climate disclosures. We hope and anticipate that BEIS’s Q&A
guidance on the regulations, which explains their legal
requirements and desirable outcomes, will be well short of that
page total. However, companies might want to consult wider
background material and information to familiarise themselves
with the disclosures. Accordingly, we made that assumption in our
cost modelling to ensure that our impact assessment did not
underestimate the true cost of these regulations to business. As
I said, we appreciate that there will be a cost to implementing
them.
On the point the noble Lord raised about monitoring and
enforcement, the FRC will take on the monitoring of the
climate-related disclosures alongside the other contents of the
strategic report. The Government consulted earlier this year on
reforms to the FRC. We will publish a response to that White
Paper and our plans to create ARGA very shortly.
The responses to the consultation showed that many respondents
considered that scenario analysis is important for meaningful
climate disclosures. However, they also recognised that it is one
of the most challenging and costly aspects of the TCFD to implement. We
believe that requiring qualitative disclosures strikes an
appropriate balance between, on the one hand, requiring companies
to consider this important element in business planning, and, on
the other, recognising that this is an emerging area of
competence and one that will be new to many businesses and
companies. So, although some companies are already doing
quantitative scenario analysis to produce excellent disclosures,
we did not believe that all companies within scope would be able
to produce such analysis at this time; therefore, the regulations
take a proportionate approach to enable businesses to grow their
capabilities.
18:00:00
On extending the regime to SMEs, we will of course keep this
matter under review once the largest companies in the UK have
become familiar with the disclosure and capabilities in this area
have increased. However, in my view, we need to be extremely
careful before we impose undue burdens on SMEs in this country.
We have a very good, vibrant and active SME sector that employs
many hundreds of thousands of people; we do not want to
overburden it with regulations.
The Government are intent on delivering a UK economy that is
greener, more sustainable and more resilient. In my view, the
implementation of the TCFD aligned to
disclosures across our economy, will support those aims. I
therefore commend this draft instrument to the Committee.
Motion agreed.
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