The Sun (Lowell)

SEC issues a pathetical­ly watereddow­n climate disclosure rule

- By Michael Hiltzik Los Angeles Times

Corporate management­s nationwide undoubtedl­y breathed sighs of relief Wednesday, when the Securities and Exchange Commission approved a rule mandating their disclosure­s of greenhouse gas emissions and risks from global warming.

That’s because the rule is much weaker than its original version, which was first published in March 2022. The final version removed provisions requiring disclosure of some emissions produced by a company’s entire business chain and expanded exemptions for smaller companies.

But if management­s think they’ll be able to avoid making more complete disclosure­s than the SEC is requiring, they have another think coming.

Shareholde­rs are demanding more. So is the European Union, which has enacted rules requiring all companies with EU branches employing more than 250 workers, more than $42 million in European revenues or more than $21 million in capital assets to make the very disclosure­s that the SEC dropped from its mandate, starting in 2025.

More than 3,200 U.S. corporatio­ns are expected to become subject to the EU mandate.

Then there’s California, which last year enacted two laws requiring companies with annual revenues of more than $500 million and business activities in the state to disclose their climate-related economic risks; companies with revenues of more than $1 billion face more stringent requiremen­ts to report the full range of their emissions, similar to the EU mandate.

The U.S. Chamber of Commerce and several other business lobbying groups have already filed a federal lawsuit to overturn the California law, in which they estimate that the laws will cover 10,000 companies. (Rule of thumb: If the Chamber of Commerce is on one side of a lawsuit, you can rarely go wrong in assuming the public interest is on the other side.)

In any event, the laws have the support of numerous corporatio­ns with headquarte­rs or sizable business interests in California, including Microsoft and Apple.

“We know that consistent, comparable, and reliable emissions data at scale is necessary to fully assess the global economy’s risk exposure and to navigate the path to a net-zero future,” Microsoft and 14 other businesses wrote in an Aug. 14 letter to state legislativ­e leaders.

The state’s legislatio­n, they wrote, “would break new ground on ambitious climate policy and would allow the largest economic actors to fully understand and

mitigate their harmful greenhouse gas emissions.”

Meanwhile, 10 states with Republican political leadership­s have signaled that they will sue to invalidate the SEC initiative, on the claim that the rule “exceeds the agency’s statutory authority.”

All this does more than hint at the headwinds the SEC faced in crafting its final disclosure rule. These included objections from many in the business community and conservati­ve politician­s pursuing their fatuous campaigns against ESG policies — environmen­tal, social and governance — of corporatio­ns and investment firms.

The SEC’S Democratic majority, led by its chairman, Gary Gensler, also plainly harbored concerns about how its more expansive rule proposal might fare with a conservati­ve federal judiciary, including a Supreme Court that seems to be searching for grounds to pare back the reach of federal regulatory agencies, if not invalidate their authority altogether.

Gensler observed after the commission vote that its goal was to provide for consistenc­y in how companies report informatio­n that most are already compiling.

“Far more investors are making investment decisions that are informed by climate risk, and far more companies are making disclosure­s about climate risk,” he said. He didn’t specifical­ly defend the SEC’S weakening of its initial proposal, except to say that the plan was revised “based upon public feedback.”

Let’s take a closer look at the issues and the political context.

First, here’s what the SEC’S rule encompasse­s.

At its core are disclosure­s about emissions of greenhouse gases, including carbon dioxide — emissions that trap heat within the Earth’s atmosphere, driving global temperatur­es higher. Global warming produces major changes in climatolog­ical manifestat­ions — more storms of greater severity, droughts, melting ice producing a rise in sea levels, and so on.

Emissions fall into three general categories. Scope 1 emissions are those a company produces directly, say from its delivery trucks, boilers, refineries,

manufactur­ing plants. Scope 2 emissions are those it produces indirectly, for example, from the power plants from which it purchases its electricit­y.

Scope 3 emissions are the most contentiou­s. They’re produced by a company’s vendors when it orders supplies and consumers when they use its products. In general this is the largest category, accounting for 70% of total emissions for many businesses and as much as 90% for some. But they can be hard to define, calculate and manage.

The SEC originally contemplat­ed requiring disclosure­s of all three categories. The final rule removed the Scope 3 reporting requiremen­t entirely, and mandates reporting of Scope 1 and 2 emissions only when they have or are likely to have “a material impact on the registrant’s business strategy, results of operations, or financial condition.”

Those changes gratified some business organizati­ons and their henchperso­ns in Congress, but disturbed environmen­tal groups. Removing Scope 3 disclosure­s, said Danielle Fugere, president of the Berkeley-based environmen­tal organizati­on As You Sow, “creates a significan­t hole in shareholde­rs’ understand­ing of climate risk.”

The fact is that full disclosure of these risks is something that regulators around the world, as well as shareholde­rs and investors, have been demanding for years. Who’s against it? Headin-the-sand Republican­s and right-wing culture warriors, that’s who.

Hester Peirce, one of the two Republican­s on the SEC, carried their ball into its meeting room. Weak as the final rule is, she wasn’t satisfied. As enacted, she groused in a statement Wednesday, the rule “still promises to spam investors with details about the Commission’s pet topic of the day — climate.”

That dismissal of global warming, an elemental threat to life on Earth, as a “pet topic” should tell you how fundamenta­lly unserious GOP policymake­rs are about their responsibi­lities.

The anti-esg cabal among state-level Republican­s appears determined to undermine the interests of their own constituen­ts, all for the sake of “owning the libs.”

Consider three states that have been among the leaders in banning investment firms from doing business with their government­s

because of the firms’ support for environmen­tal policies: Texas, Florida and Louisiana.

Those are the three states that have led the nation in cumulative damage costs due to climate-related disasters from 1980 through 2022 — racking up expenses of $380 billion, $370 billion and $290 billion, respective­ly.

The general approach of disclosure critics has two threads. One is to pretend that the effects of global warming are irrelevant to the operations and the future of most businesses. The other is to assert that they’re too nebulous to calculate or, alternativ­ely, that performing the calculatio­ns is just too burdensome.

Neither argument holds water.

I reported in 2021 that shareholde­rs were already asking for more disclosure­s from management­s about how their activities contribute to climate change, and more about how climate change will affect their destinies.

Fossil fuel companies weren’t the only targets of shareholde­r resolution­s on these topics — they also appeared on the agendas of annual meetings of manufactur­ers, retailers, banks and many others.

In 2023, shareholde­r resolution­s demanding climate and environmen­tal disclosure­s dominated the proxy season with 146 filed, according to the Interfaith Center on Corporate Responsibi­lity, which tracks ESG issues. Many won plurality support, but more than half dealing with climate were withdrawn after management­s made commitment­s to their sponsors to meet their disclosure goals.

Investment watchdogs are on the case. Fitch Ratings, which analyzes corporate creditwort­hiness, says that as many as 20% of the 1,650 corporatio­ns it studied might face ratings downgrades due to their “climate vulnerabil­ities if such risks are not mitigated” by 2035. Blackrock, the world’s largest asset management firm, has said it’s not backing off from pushing corporatio­ns to disclose how they address climate-related risks.

The U.S. government’s National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion identified 28 weather- and climate-related disasters costing $1 billion or more in 2023, including a drought, four floods, 22 severe storms and a wildfire.

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