The tides are turning for businesses worldwide, with mounting pressure to prioritise sustainability, transparency, and accountability. If you're a business leader, you can't afford to wait any longer to start climate reporting. You'll be better positioned to navigate the rapidly shifting landscape if you embrace these changes now. Read on to find out why and how to begin effectively reporting your carbon, led by the TCFD.
The Task Force on Climate-related Financial Disclosures (TCFD) is an industry-led initiative established by the Financial Stability Board (FSB) in 2015. The primary goal of the TCFD is to develop a set of voluntary, consistent, and globally applicable climate-related financial risk disclosure recommendations.
These recommendations enable businesses to communicate vital information to lenders, insurers, investors, and other stakeholders, helping them assess material risks and opportunities associated with climate change.
The TCFD focuses on four key areas:
The recommendations released by the TCFD have already had significant impact worldwide:
Furthermore, while the TCFD was designed as a voluntary framework, it has become the basis for non-voluntary climate reporting measures as well, including here in New Zealand.
In New Zealand, the TCFD recommendations formed the basis of the Financial Sector (Climate-related Disclosures and Other Matters) Amendment Act passed by the government in 2021. This legislation instructed the External Reporting Board’s to develop what has become the Mandatory Climate-Related Financial Disclosures framework.
This new regulation mandates that the 200 largest financial companies (banks, lenders, insurers, and so on) must fully report their emissions across all scopes. These reports must be complete, and are held to an audit standard analogous to financial audits.
However, the smaller businesses and non-financial businesses have not escaped unaffected. Finances emissions reporting means that banks and lenders will be required to report the impact of their lending behaviour as part of their carbon reporting, and as such will likely demand businesses receiving funding to provide emissions reporting in turn.
Find out more about the impact of the TCFD and related legislation in New Zealand in our dedicated guide: How New Climate Legislation Affects Every New Zealand Business.
Climate reporting is not just a fad—it's part of a worldwide movement towards sustainability and accountability. All the following countries/territories either have mandatory carbon reporting already in play or are in the process of developing proposals around climate related financial disclosures.
Notably, Australia is also working on new climate related disclosures legislation that is similar to New Zealand’s. As the world moves in this direction, companies that don't adapt risk being left behind.
Businesses that begin the carbon reporting process now, even if they are not yet directly required to do so, put themselves at a significant advantage to those enterprises that wait and see what happens.
It takes significant time and resource to create audit-ready carbon reporting processes, built on accurate data and resulting in meaningful, ambitious, and achievable carbon reduction goals. You’ll need to create roles, assign responsibilities, invest in technology, hire for necessary talent and create a cross-business Green Team. For many businesses, it takes up to a year or longer to be able to confidently create a first carbon report.
Read more about the considerations you’ll need to have in our dedicated guide: How to prepare your business for carbon reporting now.
Carbon reporting is more than just compliance. Climate action offers real benefits to businesses that are willing to invest in accurate insights and meaningful climate action.
To prepare your business for effective carbon reporting and a future where it’s not just the norm, but mandatory, the first step is a carbon footprint or baseline. This offers a foundation from which to build your carbon roadmap, of which carbon reporting is just one part.
To find out more about building a carbon strategy and developing an effective carbon reporting process, download our guide to building a Carbon Roadmap.