Global Financial Service Provider Prepares for New Sustainability Reporting Mandates

Client Snapshot

Profile

This company is a European stock exchange operator and financial market infrastructure provider

 

Situation

Due to requirements of the EU’s new Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive (CSRD), the client will publish a 2025 sustainability disclosure in its 2024 financial report and wanted to ensure it meets required deadlines while considering further ESG requirements that may impact the 2024 management report.

 

Work Performed

After performing a materiality assessment and gap analysis, we supported the client in developing different work packages to become CSRD compliant. We also analysed data requirements and tools needed to support the required CSRD disclosure activities and further ESG requirements.

 

Outcome/Benefits

With a foundation now in place, including clear responsibilities for CSRD programme management, the client has laid the foundation to become CSRD compliant. Smart technology and consistent CSRD programme management across the organisation handle increasing regulatory requirements and meet robust reporting needs.

 

For companies operating in the European Union (EU), the Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive (CSRD) requires those businesses to report on the environmental and social impact of their activities as well as how their environmental, social, and governance (ESG) actions affect their business. Companies subject to the CSRD will have to report according to the European Sustainability Reporting Standards (ESRS), with the new rules applying for the first time in the 2024 financial year, to reports published in 2025. This company, a European stock exchange operator and financial market infrastructure provider, falls in scope of this new regulation and wanted to ensure it would be ready within the required timeframe, while also taking into consideration possible further ESG requirements that may impact the management report.

Building a solid foundation

Working closely with the organisation’s Finance Governance and Controls Director, we set out to develop a foundation that would prepare the organisation for this first report but would also put it on a solid path to stay ahead of possible future regulatory changes.

The CSRD required the organisation to perform a double materiality assessment to identify and assess material topics and related relevant data points. We supported that assessment, which covered a broad range of topics, from climate, biodiversity, and further environmental topics to social and governance topics. To manage these data points and ensure an accurate, comprehensive and timely report, we brought together different departments within the organisation to clearly define roles and responsibilities. We helped establish the basis for consistent CSRD programme management across different business units and legal entities and provided project management support for coordinating the various stakeholders that needed to provide input for CSRD.

We also:

  • Performed a CSRD- compliant double materiality assessment, which included:
    • Identifying a stakeholder representative
    • Conducting impact and financial workshops to identify and assess material topics relevant for the organisation
    • Defining materiality thresholds
    • Summarising the results and presenting a list of material impacts, risks and opportunities and related material topics
       
  • Performed a detailed gap analysis and definition of work packages based on the list of identified gaps, including:
    • Assignment of responsibilities to the material topics
    • Preparation of the relevant and material CSRD/ESRS requirements for the responsible departments
    • Developed work packages to close identified gaps (e.g., reporting basics, Internal Control System (ICS))
       
  • Analysed tool requirements for supporting the required CSRD disclosure activities and further ESG requirements, including:
    • Pre-selection of possible tooling vendors
    • Development of a requirements catalogue

A note about the EU’s digital taxonomy: this classification system defines what economic activities can be considered sustainable and is an important part of the EU’s regulatory approach to achieving its sustainability goals. For the CSRD, this taxonomy helps standardise and enhance the transparency of sustainability reports, providing clear guidelines about what constitutes sustainable activities. Both the foundation developed for the CSRD and the further ESG requirements we incorporated into this project were done with the EU taxonomy in mind.

Ready for reporting

As a result of our work over a 10-month period, this client is now well-prepared to file a comprehensive CSRD- and ESRS-compliant management report for the 2024 fiscal year. The organisation now has a common understanding of what is required for CSRD programme management, along with well-defined responsibilities and accountabilities across the firm.

Together, we laid the foundation for achieving the project goal of creating sustainability reporting that is compliant with CSRD/ESRS as a first step, while at the same time enabling the client to adapt to the increasing legal requirements of the future.

Together, we laid the foundation for compliant sustainability reporting today and the increasing requirements in the future.

We recommend these resources

Loading...