For US multinationals, nonfinancial reporting has been a constantly morphing topic with global implications, forcing professionals in functional areas such as finance, sustainability, internal audit, IT and legal to confront gaps in data, reimagine processes and assign new responsibilities.
The European Union’s Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive (CSRD) has emerged over the business landscape. The scope is so broad that many companies are quickly moving forward to understand its implications while monitoring other global regulators and standard setters, including the US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), to avoid duplicating efforts under multiple environmental, social and governance (ESG) reporting directives.
Against this backdrop, over 200 participants joined the inaugural EY CSRD roundtable, representing a broad cross section (of sizes, industries and functional roles) of companies to discuss strategies, pressing questions and lessons learned. Most participants have made strides to address the CSRD, but because of the broad scope of the directive, they were looking forward to discussing and understanding the perspectives of their peers.
This recap document summarizes what roundtable participants say they are doing to prepare across three phases: scoping, design and assessment and implementation. Each discussion began with a poll of roundtable participants to understand their position on the CSRD journey.
Scoping