U.S. regulator launches review of companies' climate risk disclosures

Reuters

Published Feb 24, 2021 02:54PM ET

Updated Feb 24, 2021 03:40PM ET

By Chris Prentice and Doina Chiacu

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The acting chair of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) on Wednesday said the market regulator will review public companies' climate risk disclosures and begin to modernize climate guidance that is now more than a decade old.

The agency's staff will review the extent to which public companies address topics related to climate change matters and assess companies' compliance with their disclosure requirements, Acting Chair Allison Herren Lee said in a statement.

The SEC will use the review to update guidance on climate change matters from 2010, taking into account developments of the last decade, Lee said.

Scientists' warnings about risks from climate change have grown over the last ten years, but companies' methodologies for calculating those risks are inadequate and inconsistent, advocates for more disclosure like the Center for American Progress have said.

The board of the International Organization of Securities Commissions separately on Wednesday said it sees an urgent need for globally consistent and reliable sustainability disclosures.