Mandatory Sustainability Reporting and International Alignment: ESG BROADCAST shares key takeaways.
The Korea Sustainability Standards Board (KSSB) has released the finalized versions of the Korean Sustainability Disclosure Standards (KSSDS), marking a definitive step in the nation’s ESG regulatory journey. Following extensive public consultation throughout 2024 and 2025, the KSSB has moved to align South Korea’s corporate reporting landscape with the global baseline established by the International Sustainability Standards Board (ISSB). The finalized standards, specifically KSSDS 1 and KSSDS 2, provide the structured framework necessary for South Korean companies to communicate sustainability-related financial information to global investors and capital markets.
KSSDS 1 serves as the general requirement standard, mandating that entities disclose all sustainability-related risks and opportunities that could reasonably be expected to affect their financial prospects. This standard follows the four-pillar approach of governance, strategy, risk management, and metrics and targets. By adopting this structure, the KSSB ensures that Korean firms provide a transparent view of how sustainability issues are integrated into their core business models. The standards are designed to be interoperable with major international frameworks, reducing the reporting burden for companies listed on multiple global exchanges.
The climate-specific standard, KSSDS 2, focuses on the disclosure of climate-related physical and transition risks. A significant feature of the finalized Korean standards is the inclusion of specific industry-based guidance, tailored to the unique structure of the South Korean economy, including heavy manufacturing and electronics. While the standards align with the ISSB’s Scope 1 and Scope 2 emission requirements, the KSSB has introduced a phased implementation timeline for Scope 3 value chain emissions. This grace period allows companies to build the necessary data collection infrastructure before mandatory external verification becomes a requirement.
Applicability of these standards will initially focus on large, KRX-listed companies with assets exceeding a specific threshold, with a gradual rollout to smaller listed entities by 2027. The Financial Services Commission (FSC) is expected to provide further details on the specific “effective dates” for mandatory filing, which are anticipated to begin for the 2026 reporting cycle. The KSSB has also emphasized the importance of digital tagging (XBRL) for these disclosures to ensure that data is machine-readable and easily accessible for international analysts and institutional investors.
Strategic significance lies in ESG data as a core component of financial health in South Korea. For businesses, the transition requires a fundamental shift in internal audit and data governance. For the broader market, these standards will enhance the global competitiveness of Korean stocks by providing the transparency that international capital demands. Successfully navigating this new regulatory environment is essential for companies looking to mitigate transition risks and secure long-term investment in a decarbonizing global economy.
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