
European Parliament Wants To Reduce Cost Of Sustainability Reporting Requirements
People walk by a European Union flag (Photo by)
The European Parliament is debating legislation to reduce sustainability reporting requirements in the European Union. The original proposal of the European Commission included a drastic reduction of the scope of a pair of sustainability reporting directives. The member leading the drafting of the Parliament's has released his draft proposal, calling for even more cuts, alarming sustainability activists and emboldening business interests. That proposal was debated in the June 24 meeting of the Committee on Legal Affairs, known as JURI.
As part of the European Green Deal, a trilogy of directives were passed by the EU to force businesses to address climate change and report greenhouse gas missions. However, the cost of these proposals on businesses and the broader impact on the EU economy became a theme during the 2024 elections. The shift to the right in EU politics embolden opponents. As a result, the Commission proposed a package of new directives to 'reduce the burden' on businesses.
The Omnibus Simplification Package was officially adopted by the Commission in February. The proposal is being debated in the Council and the Parliament. In the Parliament, the debate is public and working through multiple committees, giving interest parties and MEPs the opportunity to voice their opinions.
JURI, is the primary committee that will produce the legislation that will be sent to the full Parliament for a vote. MEP Jörgen Warborn, of the European People's Party, has been designated as the rapporteur to lead the drafting of the final legislation.
Warborn's draft report was made public on June 6. The draft includes 82 proposed amendments. During the June 24 JURI meeting, the Committee addressed the proposed amendments. Warburn was given the opportunity to share his initial proposal and the shadow rapporteurs gave initial comments.
Jörgen Warborn
Warburn stated the EPP's goal in the proposal. 'We would like to go further in cutting costs, because we need to strengthen European competitiveness in order to create long-term prosperity for European citizens.'
To justify the need for cuts, he stated "sustainability rests on three pillars: the environmental pillar, the social pillar, and the economic pillar… if one breaks, the stretcher collapses."
He then outlined his 10 key priorities in the proposal:
MEP Lara Wolters, Group of the Progressive Alliance of Socialists and Democrats
Lara Wolters, of the Group of the Progressive Alliance of Socialists and Democrats (S&D), stated her group felt the 'Commission proposal was extremely rushed and deeply flawed.' She says that the proposal is not focused on removing the administrative burden, rather on removing accountability. She did not get into the specifics of the S&D proposal, but gave a vigorous counterargument to reductions.
Countering the EPP's push to lower costs on businesses, she stated that she 'is not inspired by this… It is our job to weigh public versus private interests. But if costs are all the EPP cares about at the moment, then at least let us be honest that the costs are merely being displaced. Costs reduced for companies here are costs that the world will need to shoulder anyway. Climate denial comes at a cost. So does environmental degradation, exploitation, and inequality. So does feeding populism.'
MEP Pascal Canfin, The Renew Group
Pascal Canfin, of the Renew Europe Group, stated that he agrees with the EPP on the auditing of the CSRD report. He believes there is room to negotiation on that topic and reduce cost beyond the Commission proposal.
He stated that he agrees in cost reduction, but that the EPP proposal does not deliver that. Focusing on capital market union, he said investors need data. The reduction in of the CSRD may save costs on paper, but will increase costs in the long term as investors spend more to gather the data. He will be offering amendments to address those concerns.
Renew will also present amendments to address the single market approach and what he views as conflict with the restriction on civil liability causing market fragmentation. He also took issue with the application of the 3000 employee threshold to non-EU companies, claiming that would exempt nearly all non-EU companies from the scope. Interestingly, he stated the calculation of the employee count for non-EU companies is not based on total employees in the EU, rather total employees in a member state.
MEP Kira Marie Peter-Hansen, Group of the Greens/ European Free Alliance (EFA)
Kira Peter-Hansen, of the Group of the Greens/ European Free Alliance (EFA), stated that they agree with simplification and "reporting must be both meaningful and manageable.' However, she agrees with the S&D that the Omnibus and the EPP proposals go beyond simplification into deregulation. She pointed out that the raised thresholds not only eliminate 80% of the companies, but also some member states as they do not have any companies large enough to comply.
She encouraged the use of the EFRAG data to simplify the data points in the European Sustainability Reporting Standards to simplify reporting requirements without 'weakening impact.'
She accused the EPP of 'choosing populistic, symbolic changes over actual needed changes that would benefit from a revision." Further, she stated that 'removing climate transition plans completely is not just wrong, it is irresponsible.'
She encouraged the adoption of a risk-based approach over the Commission proposal of mapping the value chain, claiming it would increase costs for companies. Finally, she objected to the removal of civil liability in the CSDDD.
MEP Arash Saeidi, The Left Group
Arash Saeidi, of The Left, opened by stated that 'there are men, women, and children whose rights are being breached and they're just being seen as cogs in the wheel of a production - modern slavery, textiles workers, forced labor to produce our electronics.. workers killed on sites. The CSDDD is designed to put an end to impunity and finally holding companies legally accountable from environmental damage and infringement of human rights.'
He stated that The Left will present a proposal to reject all the proposed changes and stay with the existing text in the CSRD and CSDDD.
Political parties and MEP had until June 27 to submit amendments. On July 15, the shadow rapporteurs will meet to discus the amendments and begin negotiations. To pass, the proposal needs majority support.
Committee opinions are being drafted by Economic and Monetary Affairs, known as ECON, Environment, Climate and Food Safety, known as ENVI, Foreign Affairs, known as AFET, International Trade, known as INTA, and Employment and Social Affairs, known as EMPL. Those will be sent to JURI for consideration.
I suspect Warborn's proposal is a negotiation tactic. By promoting a position that is more extreme than the original Commission proposal, the EPP has room to negotiate. However, the recent proposal by the Council was also to the right of the Commission. The final Parliament proposal may end up being the middle ground.
JURI is expected to adopt the final language to reduce the Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive and the Corporate Sustainability Due Diligence Directive on October 13. Following the vote of the Parliament, designated representatives from the Parliament, Council, and Commission will enter into "trilogue" negotiations. The proposals from each of the three bodies will vary. The trilogue will negotiate the differences to produce a final directive. That directive will be sent to the Council and Parliament for a final vote in December or January.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
34 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Bitvavo Secures a MiCA License From the Netherlands
Bitvavo is the latest crypto exchange to receive a Markets in Crypto Assets License from the Dutch Authority for the Financial Markets (AFM) to operate across the 30 nations in the European Economic Area. Crypto companies have been applying for the licenses since the regulatory regime came into force in December last year. MiCA, which came into force in 2023 harmonizes rules across the European Union's bloc of 27 nations plus Iceland, Norway and Liechtenstein. The Netherlands also awarded licenses to four exchanges in December last year, as the rules took effect. Other exchanges like OKX, and Bitpanda secured a MiCA license from Malta. Kraken was awarded a license on Thursday from Ireland, Coinbase was awarded a MiCA license from Luxembourg in June and Bybit was awarded an EU license from Austria in May. "This license provides clarity, confidence and enables Bitvavo to fulfil its ambition: to become the leading digital asset trading platform in Europe," said Mark Nuvelstijn, CEO and co-founder of Bitvavo, in a statement. Bitvavo, which is the largest player globally in the EUR spot market, already held registrations in France, Austria, Italy and Spain, in addition to the Netherlands, the company's release said. Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data
Yahoo
39 minutes ago
- Yahoo
TD Cowen Starts Coverage Soleno Therapeutics (SLNO) Stock, Gives Buy
Soleno Therapeutics, Inc. (NASDAQ:SLNO) is one of the 10 Unstoppable Stocks to Buy According to Hedge Funds. On June 23, TD Cowen analyst Tyler Van Buren began coverage of the company's stock with a 'Buy' rating and a price objective of $110, as reported by The Fly. The firm highlighted VYKAT XR as the first-approved treatment for hyperphagia in Prader-Willi syndrome (PWS). As per the firm, the drug bucked the trend of clinical shortcomings in PWS by securing the regulatory approval. A clinical-stage biopharmaceutical company's boardroom, emphasizing the importance of decision-making for the lead candidate development of a once-daily oral tablet. The firm demonstrated confidence in Soleno Therapeutics, Inc. (NASDAQ:SLNO)'s management team, mentioning that they seem to be prepared to execute a strong launch with a high price tag and sizable population to itself. The analysis exhibits that the company has positioned itself for commercial success. The firm remains optimistic and believes that the PWS community's urgency is expected to drive significant uptake of VYKAT XR, reflecting robust demand potential among patients and caregivers. Soleno Therapeutics, Inc. (NASDAQ:SLNO) also announced that its Marketing Authorization Application (MAA) seeking regulatory approval of Diazoxide Choline Prolonged-Release Tablets for the treatment of adults and children aged 4 years and older with PWS, who possess hyperphagia, had been validated by the EMA (European Medicines Agency). TimesSquare Capital Management, an equity investment management company, released its Q1 2025 investor letter. Here is what the fund said: 'Our preferences among Health Care stocks are those companies providing novel therapies for unmet needs that deserve premium pricing, or specialized service providers. Soleno Therapeutics, Inc. (NASDAQ:SLNO) is a clinical-stage biopharmaceutical company focused on developing novel therapeutics for rare diseases. The FDA granted approval of Vyvkat for treating Prader Willi syndrome, a rare genetic disorder that causes life-threatening obesity in children. That development served to boost the stock price by 60% and we decided to book some of the profits by cutting back on the investment.' While we acknowledge the potential of SLNO to grow, our conviction lies in the belief that some AI stocks hold greater promise for delivering higher returns and have limited downside risk. If you are looking for an AI stock that is more promising than SLNO and that has 100x upside potential, check out our report about this cheapest AI stock. READ NEXT: 13 Cheap AI Stocks to Buy According to Analysts and 11 Unstoppable Growth Stocks to Invest in Now Disclosure: None. Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data

Wall Street Journal
an hour ago
- Wall Street Journal
Why Shouldn't Europe Seize Russia's Assets?
Your editorial 'Trump Wins the Battle of NATO' (June 26) notes the good news: Our European allies are finally going to pony up more for their security. But when it comes to Russia's illegal and unprovoked invasion of Ukraine, our treaty allies shouldn't only commit additional billions to defense. They should also seize frozen Russian sovereign assets as a powerful form of deterrence. Having immobilized an estimated €210 billion of Russian funds, Europe can impose additional costs on Moscow through confiscation, diverting many of these resources to Ukraine's defense. I co-authored the REPO Act, which allows for the seizure of Russian sovereign assets in the U.S. Though President Biden signed the bill in April 2024, the White House chose not to use it for months. With President Trump at the helm, we can end the Biden-era policy of hesitation and move swiftly to implement the law—starting by transferring $5 billion in immobilized Russian funds held in the U.S. to Ukraine. If NATO countries are making the significant choice to spend more on defense, using Russia's frozen assets should be an easy decision. How can NATO members urge their taxpayers to chip in more while letting Vladimir Putin off the hook?