About a-team Marketing Services
The knowledge platform for the financial technology industry
The knowledge platform for the financial technology industry

A-Team Insight Blogs

UK Moves Dial on ESG Data Assurance and Regulations

Subscribe to our newsletter

The UK has moved further along the dial of sustainability and reporting regulations with a slew of developments that suggest new rules are imminent.

Announcements covering data assurance and biodiversity disclosure standards were announced a week after the Chancellor of the Exchequer signalled in his annual budget speech that ratings companies will come under the purview of regulators.

The Financial Reporting Council (FRC), an independent body tasked with setting standards for corporate governance, reporting and auditing, last week launched a market study into the sustainability assurance market. The body established the study to ensure that providers are ready to meet demand for data assurance obligations in new regulations.

The UK’s sustainability disclosure recommendations published by the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) in November envisage firms will be required to have their ESG data validated by independent assurance firms. This has been proposed to prevent greenwashing.

Sector Resilience

In its first-ever market study, the FRC will examine the state of the assurance industry, looking at the choice of services available, the ability of the sector to meet anticipated demand, the impacts assurance rules will have on audit markets and the likely impact of international regulations.

“It is vital that the market for sustainability assurance services is functioning properly – providing high quality, independent assurance without creating excessive costs and burdens on companies and their reporting,” said Mark Babington, executive director of regulatory standards at the FRC.

“By promoting transparency and high standards in this area, we can support the endeavours of UK companies to supply high quality information to financial markets that enables opportunities for growth and investment across the UK economy.”

Growing Market

FRC data indicates that the data assurance market is growing rapidly. In 2022, 84 of the 100 largest companies in the UK sought external assurance over at least some of their data, up from 68 in 2020.

Data assurance has become a feature of regulatory proposals, including the US Security and Exchange Commission’s recently announced climate disclosure rule and the EU Corporate Sustainability Reporting Disclosure, which came into effect this year. Malaysia has also included the measure in its own recommended ESG regulations.

Regulators have incorporated assurance requirements into their codes to help address concerns that poor-quality data is not only preventing investors from directing capital to climate-change mitigating companies and assets but is also enabling greenwashing. A study by not-for-profit sustainability services provider Ceres earlier this year found that investors and financial institutions believed that assurance services could solve many challenges they face in using ESG data.

Nature Definition

The FRC’s announcement came on the heels of the launch of a consultation into the first version of the British Standards Institution’s (BSI) nature investment standards. The call for input will seek to create principles covering and definitions of what is meant by nature for investors.

The consultation is intended to build on a programme to boost market confidence and investment into nature-focused assets and projects. The Nature Investment Standards Programme was established last year by the BSI and the government’s Department for Environment, Food & Rural Affairs.

The initial set of proposals, provisionally named BSI Flex 701 Nature Markets – Specification v1.0, will set the basic requirements for a nature scheme.

“The specification is designed to bring clarity and consistency to the market by establishing a standardised approach for investments that can boost confidence in the integrity of nature markets,” said BSI director general for standards Scott Steedman.

Ratings Regulations

In his budget speech earlier this month, Chancellor Jeremy Hunt confirmed that the FCA would soon oversee ESG ratings providers in the UK. The decision had been expected after the regulator drafted a Code of Conduct for service providers last year. Reports followed swiftly after that Prime Minister Rishi Sunak wanted a statutory measure with more teeth.

Sunak was said to want a binding law introduced around the same time that the EU issues its own ratings regulation, a move that’s likely this year after European leaders backed a regulatory proposal in February.

The UK code came into operation in January and Hunt said in his speech to Members of Parliament that consultations on tougher rules would be launched later in the year.

Subscribe to our newsletter

Related content

WEBINAR

Upcoming Webinar: ESG data sourcing and management to meet your ESG strategy, objectives and timeline

Date: 11 June 2024 Time: 10:00am ET / 3:00pm London / 4:00pm CET Duration: 50 minutes ESG data plays a key role in research, fund product development, fund selection, asset selection, performance tracking, and client and regulatory reporting, yet it is not always easy to source and manage in a complete, transparent and timely manner....

BLOG

Malaysia Assurance Move Highlights Growing Taste for ESG Data Audit

Malaysia has become the latest country to stress data assurance in its proposal for a broad sustainability reporting framework, highlighting the increasing importance being placed globally on ESG data audits. The government in Kuala Lumpur included assurance support in its touted National Sustainability Reporting Framework for Malaysia (NSRF), consultations on which were launched this week....

EVENT

Data Management Summit New York City

Now in its 14th year the Data Management Summit NYC brings together the North American data management community to explore how data strategy is evolving to drive business outcomes and speed to market in changing times.

GUIDE

Putting the LEI into Practice

Hundreds of thousands of pre-Legal Entity Identifiers (LEIs) have been issued by pre-Local Operating Units (LOUs) in the Global LEI System (GLEIS), and the standard entity identifier has been mandated for use by regulators in both the US and Europe. As more pre-LEIs are issued ahead of the establishment of the global systems’ Central Operating...