The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) should require companies to disclose direct and indirect greenhouse gas emissions data and demographic information about their workforces, says the Investment Company Institute (ICI) in a letter filed with the SEC.
The letter is in response to the SEC’s call for input on climate change–related corporate disclosure. ICI explains that consistent, comparable, and reliable data about climate change and workforce diversity make it easier for fund managers to make investment decisions on behalf of the millions of retail investors who invest in their funds.
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“Mandating disclosure of greenhouse gas emissions and workforce diversity will give fund managers the consistent, comparable, and reliable data they need to better assess current and future sustainability-related risks,” said ICI President and CEO Eric J. Pan. “While we believe certain disclosures should be mandatory, it’s essential that the SEC develops a regulatory framework that is flexible enough to allow disclosure practices to develop organically over time. Having a dynamic framework will enhance the quality and volume of disclosures about how sustainability-related risks could affect companies’ long-term value which drives investment decisions. In the past, the SEC has successfully applied the materiality standard to principles-based regulation, and we believe that standard is an appropriate foundation for any climate change–related corporate disclosure framework.”
In addition to calling on the SEC to mandate specific climate change and workforce information (pages 7–10), ICI’s letter calls upon the Commission to:
Source: ICI