Business Council of Australia Requests 1-Year Extension for Climate Reporting Implementation

Corporations in Australia should be given an additional year to formulate to comply with a new proposed law demanding mandatory climate-related reporting, rendering to a statement declared by the Business Council of Australia (BCA), which also drives for a prolonged period and expanded the scope of resistance from liability associated to the new disclosure requirements.
The Business Council of Australia supports a “training wheels” tactic to the application of the innovative climate-related disclosure rules, permitting time for corporations to develop the essential skills and capabilities required to ensure the appropriate implementation of the reporting requirements.

The innovative proposed legislation would put on to all public corporations and large proprietary corporations mandatory to deliver audited annual financial reports to the Australian Securities and Investments Commission (ASIC) that encounter specific size thresholds, starting with corporations with over 500 personnel, incomes over $500 million, or assets over $1 billion, as well as asset proprietors with more than $5 billion in assets, which would report for financial years starting from July 1, 2024. Medium-sized corporations (250+ personnel, $200 million+ revenue, $500 million assets) would be mandatory to begin reporting for years beginning from July 2026, while smaller corporations (100+ personnel, $50 million+ revenue, $25 million+ assets) would begin the subsequent year.

While the Business Council of Australia submission expresses its support for “the continuous development in the quality of climate-related financial disclosures,” it also calls for “enough time for investment in systems and reviewing capabilities to develop,” in addition to “suitable liability safe harbors and transition eras.”

The Business Council of Australia declaration also supports a close arrangement between the AASB’s forthcoming standards and the IFRS’ International Sustainability Standards Board’s (ISSB) newly declared standards, to enable assessments across jurisdictions and lessen compliance costs for reporting corporations. While the AASB’s suggestions are grounded on the ISSB standards, they comprise a series of amendments in parts such as Scope 3, indirect value chain releases reporting, and reporting necessities for businesses that do not have substantial climate-related financial risks or opportunities.

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