South China Morning Post

China’s ESG rules ‘could spur private firms into action’

- Yujie Xue yujie.xue@scmp.com

New environmen­tal, social, and governance (ESG) rules that require China’s listed companies to disclose climate commitment­s could put pressure on privately held companies, which are lagging in declaring targets for greenhouse-gas emissions, to follow suit, according to analysts.

“With the three major stock exchanges now mandating double materialit­y and emissions informatio­n [from listed companies], private firms are obviously looking at the torch that is potentiall­y coming for themselves,” said John Lang, project lead at Net Zero Tracker (NZT), a non-profit body that examines net-zero pledges by nations, regions and companies.

In February the Beijing, Shanghai and Shenzhen stock exchanges published new disclosure guidelines which mandate the more than 400 listed companies – accounting for over half the market value in China’s exchanges – to publish sustainabi­lity reports covering their emissions and decarbonis­ation plans by 2026.

The companies must report on the impact their activities have on the environmen­t as well as the risks and impacts of environmen­tal factors on their business, the so-called double materialit­y. They are also encouraged to disclose the indirect carbon emissions in their value chains, known as scope 3 emissions.

The regulation­s could have a ripple effect on the more than 50 million privately owned firms, prompting them to set up netzero emissions targets and make decarbonis­ation plans, Lang said.

“The chances are very high that many private firms in China will be in the supply chains of those public companies, which do have to disclose on their double materialit­y and emissions,” he said. “And they will demand that private firms disclose their emissions. Otherwise, the public firms can’t have a clear view of what their scope 3 emissions are.”

As a majority of the world’s economies and listed companies were on board to address climate change via their energy-transition and decarbonis­ation targets, private firms globally were “keeping their heads in the sand”, NZT said.

Only 38 of the world’s 100 largest private firms have set targets to reach net-zero greenhouse gas emissions, compared with 70 out of 100 of their listed peers, according to an NZT report on Monday.

The widening gap between the climate targets of the world’s largest private companies and their listed equivalent­s created an uneven playing field for companies, investors and policymake­rs alike, the report said.

“If ‘sunlight is the best disinfecta­nt’ for climate inaction, most private firms are operating nocturnall­y – beyond the glare of the civil scrutiny, investor pressure and disclosure requiremen­ts faced by listed companies,” Lang said.

Of the 16 private firms in China listed in the report, four now have a net-zero target, up from only one in 2022, the report found.

“Government moves to mandate climate disclosure [are] unlikely to be the only reason behind the uptick of private firms pledging net-zero targets, but it may have contribute­d,” the report said.

Private firms are obviously looking at the torch that is potentiall­y coming for themselves JOHN LANG, NET ZERO TRACKER

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