Sunday, December 22, 2024
14.4 C
Los Angeles

FATF Monitoring: Countries Addressing Strategic Deficiencies

Jurisdictions under Increased Monitoring by the FATF Countries...

Former Peruvian President Alejandro Toledo Sentenced to 20+ Years in Odebrecht Bribery Scandal

Former Peruvian President Alejandro Toledo has been...

Ex-Mexican Security Chief Sentenced for Bribery and Aiding Sinaloa Cartel’s Drug Trafficking

Genaro Garcia Luna, Mexico's former Secretary of...

United States: A closer look – Key components of the SEC’s long-awaited final rules on climate disclosure and where to go from here

ESGUnited States: A closer look - Key components of the SEC's long-awaited final rules on climate disclosure and where to go from here

The Final Rules adopted by the US Securities and Exchange Commission enhancing and standardizing climate-related disclosures and their impact.

In brief

On March 6, 2024, the US Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC” or “Commission“) adopted final rules (“Final Rules“) that enhance and standardize the disclosure of climate-related information in registration statements and Exchange Act reports. The Final Rules were scaled back after years of significant feedback from registrants and other stakeholders, with the Commission receiving more than 24,000 comment letters in response to the initial rule proposal (“Proposed Rules“) in March 2022 (see our firm’s key takeaways regarding the Proposed Rules and their impact here and here).

Below we discuss, among others: (i) the key takeaways and requirements for climate disclosures under the Final Rules, (ii) the key differences between the Proposed Rules and Final Rules, (iii) the expected compliance dates for disclosures under the Final Rules, and (iv) some practical considerations for companies that are subject to multiple climate disclosure regimes and regulations such as the new California and European Union climate reporting requirements.

Click here to access the full alert.

Author
David P. Hackett

David Hackett advises senior management, legal departments and boards of major corporations and nonprofits on compliance, risk, environmental and sustainability matters. He has exceptional experience managing US and international compliance and environmental projects, including the evaluation and development of effective compliance and sustainability programs. He also has extensive experience litigating major civil and criminal environmental matters. David sits on multiple nonprofit boards and additionally advises many civic and nonprofit organizations across the globe.

Following his tenure with the Environmental Enforcement Division of the US Department of Justice, David joined the Firm where he has played a formative role in the establishment of the Firm’s compliance, environmental, climate and ESG practices. At Baker McKenzie, David has served as the managing partner of North America, a member of the Global Executive Committee, and Chicago office managing partner. He has also been the North America Chair of both the Compliance Practice Group and the Banking, Finance and Major Projects Practice Group.

Story from globalcompliancenews.com

Disclaimer: The views expressed in this article are independent views solely of the author(s) expressed in their private capacity.

Check out our other content

Ad


Check out other tags:

Most Popular Articles