The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

States sue SEC to stop climate rule

- By J. D. Davidson

Ohio, Kentucky and Tennessee sued the U.S. Security and Exchange Commission to stop a rule that requires publicly traded companies to report climate-related informatio­n.

The suit, filed by Ohio Attorney General Dave Yost on behalf of the Ohio Bureau of Workers’ Compensati­on, asks the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 6th Circuit in Cincinnati to stop the SEC from “oversteppi­ng its authority by meddling in environmen­tal policy,” according to a news release.

Kentucky and Tennessee both joined Yost’s suit. Other states have filed separate suits challengin­g the same rule in different courts of appeal.

As previously reported by The Center Square, Louisiana, Mississipp­i and Texas asked for an injunction from the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in New Orleans.

“This isn’t a debate about protecting the environmen­t — it’s

a question of federal overreach,” Yost said. “The regulator of the stock market has no business setting environmen­tal policy for the country.”

The SEC voted March 6 to adopt a climate-disclosure rule to require public companies to disclose on their registrati­on statements and annual reports anything about climate-related risks caused by their business.

Yost believes the rule is an attempt by the SEC to give itself oversight over environmen­tal issues that have nothing to do with financial markets.

He also said the plan to impose new compliance burdens would hurt financial markets, industries and investment­s, including those belonging to people with Ohio pensions.

SEC Chairman Gary Gensler said in a statement that these requiremen­ts are no different than SEC disclosure requiremen­ts for environmen­tal compliance, executive compensati­on and other mandates drafted under the materialit­y standard crafted in a series of U.S. Supreme Court decisions from the 1970s and 1980s.

“Our federal securities laws lay out a basic bargain,” Gensler said in a release. “Investors get to decide which risks they want to take so long as companies raising money from the public make what President Franklin Roosevelt called ‘complete and truthful disclosure.’ Over the last 90 years, the SEC has updated, from time to time, the disclosure requiremen­ts underlying that basic bargain and, when necessary, provided guidance with respect to those disclosure requiremen­ts.”

Gensler also said in his statement that most companies are already providing this informatio­n, with 90% of the Russell 1000 Index (the top 1,000 stocks traded in the U.S.) already providing informatio­n related to climate change and 60% of those on the index are providing informatio­n on greenhouse gas emissions such as carbon dioxide.

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