Regulatory Compliance and Corporate Transparency: ESG BROADCAST shares key takeaways.
On February 4, 2026, the Financial Reporting Council (FRC) released an updated edition of its Companies Act 2006 Scoping Tables, alongside revised Guidance on the Strategic Report. This update marks a significant shift in the UK’s approach to corporate transparency, aiming to reduce the reporting “burden” while simultaneously “raising the bar” for the quality of non-financial disclosures. The 2026 Scoping Tables serve as a definitive compliance checklist for UK entities, helping them navigate a complex web of requirements for the Strategic Report, Directors’ Report, and Energy and Carbon Report.
A primary driver for this update is the integration of The Companies (Directors’ Report) (Payment Reporting) Regulations 2025. Effective for financial years beginning on or after January 1, 2026, large companies must now include detailed disclosures on their payment practices and performance toward suppliers directly within the Directors’ Report. This move is designed to expose aggressive working capital management and late payment trends, which the FRC identifies as a leading indicator of financial stress and a critical factor in supply chain resilience.
The revised Scoping Tables also align with the UK Corporate Governance Code 2024. Companies are now expected to provide more meaningful, outcome-oriented reporting on how their desired culture has been “embedded” and how the board monitors internal controls. The FRC has restructured the guidance to be thematic rather than entity-based, encouraging directors to move away from “boilerplate” disclosures toward a cohesive narrative that explains the company’s long-term strategy, principal risks, and future prospects.
Furthermore, the document reflects evolving standards in Energy and Carbon Reporting. While the core Streamlined Energy and Carbon Reporting (SECR) framework remains, the 2026 tables incorporate updated cross-references to sustainability-related developments, including the UK’s transition toward the UK Sustainability Reporting Standards (UK SRS). The FRC emphasizes that “high-quality” reports must enable shareholders to understand not just where a business stands today, but its exposure to climate-related risks and its roadmap for decarbonization.
Strategic significance lies in the FRC’s use of these Scoping Tables as a “diagnostic tool” for governance quality. By consolidating diverse requirements into a single accessible framework, the regulator is signaling a move toward more integrated, decision-useful reporting. For investors, this means clearer data on how companies manage their social (payment practices) and environmental (carbon) impacts. For directors, the tables represent a warning that disclosures on strategy and resilience will be under increased scrutiny if future performance fails to align with stated outlooks.
Image Credit: International Accounting Bulletin




