SEC Adopts Final Climate Rules

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The SEC adopted amendments to its rules under the Securities Act of 1933 and Securities Exchange Act of 1934 that will require registrants to provide certain climate related information in their registration statements and annual reports. The final rules will require information about a registrant’s climate-related risks that have materially impacted, or are reasonably likely to have a material impact on, its business strategy, results of operations, or financial condition. In addition, under the final rules, certain disclosures related to severe weather events and other natural conditions will be required in a registrant’s audited financial statements.

The final rules will become effective 60 days after publication in the Federal Register, and compliance will be phased in based on a registrant’s filing status.  For large accelerated filers (“LAF”), compliance starts with fiscal years beginning in 2025, for accelerated filers (“AF”) other than smaller reporting companies (“SRC”) and emerging growth companies (“EGC”), compliance starts with fiscal years beginning in 2026 and for other filers (including SRCs and EGCs) for fiscal years beginning in 2027.

Content of the Climate-Related Disclosures

The final rules will create a new subpart 1500 of Regulation S-K and Article 14 of Regulation S-X. In particular, the final rules will require a registrant to disclose information about the following items:

  • Any climate-related risks identified by the registrant that have had or are reasonably likely to have a material impact on the registrant, including on its strategy, results of operations, or financial condition in the short-term (i.e., the next 12 months) and in the long-term (i.e., beyond the next 12 months);
  • The actual and potential material impacts of any identified climate-related risks on the registrant’s strategy, business model, and outlook, including, as applicable, any material impacts on a non-exclusive list of items;
  • If, as part of its strategy, a registrant has undertaken activities to mitigate or adapt to a material climate-related risk, a quantitative and qualitative description of material expenditures incurred and material impacts on financial estimates and assumptions that, in management’s assessment, directly result from such mitigation or adaptation activities;
  • If a registrant has adopted a transition plan to manage a material transition risk, a description of the transition plan, and updated disclosures in the subsequent years describing the actions taken during the year under the plan, including how the actions have impacted the registrant’s business, results of operations, or financial condition, and quantitative and qualitative disclosure of material expenditures incurred and material impacts on financial estimates and assumptions as a direct result of the disclosed actions;
  • If a registrant uses scenario analysis and, in doing so, determines that a climate-related risk is reasonably likely to have a material impact on its business, results of operations, or financial condition, certain disclosures regarding such use of scenario analysis;
  • If a registrant’s use of an internal carbon price is material to how it evaluates and manages a material climate-related risk, certain disclosures about the internal carbon price;
  • Any oversight by the board of directors of climate-related risks and any role by management in assessing and managing the registrant’s material climate-related risks;
  • Any processes the registrant has for identifying, assessing, and managing material climate-related risks and, if the registrant is managing those risks, whether and how any such processes are integrated into the registrant’s overall risk management system or processes;
  • If a registrant has set a climate-related target or goal that has materially affected or is reasonably likely to materially affect the registrant’s business, results of operations, or financial condition, certain disclosures about such target or goal, including material expenditures and material impacts on financial estimates and assumptions as a direct result of the target or goal or actions taken to make progress toward meeting such target or goal;
  • If a registrant is an LAF or an AF that is not otherwise exempted, and its Scope 1 emissions and/or its Scope 2 emissions metrics are material, certain disclosure about those emissions;
  • The capitalized costs, expenditures expensed, charges, and losses incurred as a result of severe weather events and other natural conditions, such as hurricanes, tornadoes, flooding, drought, wildfires, extreme temperatures, and sea level rise, subject to applicable one percent and de minimis disclosure thresholds;

Attestation Reports

In addition, under the final rules, a registrant that is required to disclose Scopes 1 and/or 2 emissions and is an LAF or AF must file an attestation report in respect of those emissions subject to phased in compliance dates. An AF must file an attestation report at the limited assurance level beginning the third fiscal year after the compliance date for disclosure of GHG emissions. An LAF must file an attestation report at the limited assurance level beginning the third fiscal year after the compliance date for disclosure of GHG emissions, and then file an attestation report at the reasonable assurance level beginning the seventh fiscal year after the compliance date for disclosure of GHG emissions. The final rules also require a registrant that is not required to disclose its GHG emissions or to include a GHG emissions attestation report pursuant to the final rules to disclose certain information if the registrant voluntarily discloses its GHG emissions in a Commission filing and voluntarily subjects those disclosures to third-party assurance.

Modifications From Proposed Rules

The final rules reflect a number of modifications to the proposed rules based on the comments the SEC received. The SEC revised the proposed rules in several respects, including by:

  • Adopting a less prescriptive approach to certain of the final rules, including, for example, the climate-related risk disclosure, board oversight disclosure, and risk management disclosure requirements;
  •  Qualifying the requirements to provide certain climate-related disclosures based on materiality, including, for example, disclosures regarding impacts of climate-related risks, use of scenario analysis, and maintained internal carbon price;
  • Eliminating the proposed requirement to describe board members’ climate expertise;
  • Eliminating the proposed requirement for all registrants to disclose Scope 1 and Scope 2 emissions and instead requiring such disclosure only for LAFs and AFs, on a phased in basis, and only when those emissions are material and with the option to provide the disclosure on a delayed basis;
  • Exempting SRCs and EGCs from the Scope 1 and Scope 2 emissions disclosure requirement;
  • Modifying the proposed assurance requirement covering Scope 1 and Scope 2 emissions for AFs and LAFs by extending the reasonable assurance phase in period for LAFs and requiring only limited assurance for AFs;
  • Eliminating the proposed requirement to provide Scope 3 emissions disclosure (which the proposal would have required in certain circumstances);
  • Removing the requirement to disclose the impact of severe weather events and other natural conditions and transition activities on each line item of a registrant’s consolidated financial statements;
  • Focusing the required disclosure of financial statement effects on capitalized costs, expenditures expensed, charges, and losses incurred as a result of severe weather events and other natural conditions in the notes to the financial statements;
  • Requiring disclosure of material expenditures directly related to climate-related activities as part of a registrant’s strategy, transition plan and/or targets and goals disclosure requirements under subpart 1500 of Regulation S-K rather than under Article 14 of Regulation S-X;
  • Extending a safe harbor from private liability for certain disclosures, other than historic facts, pertaining to a registrant’s transition plan, scenario analysis, internal carbon pricing, and targets and goals;
  • Eliminating the proposal to require a private company that is a party to a business combination transaction, as defined by Securities Act Rule 165(f), registered on Form S-4 or F-4 to provide the subpart 1500 and Article 14 disclosures;
  • Eliminating the proposed requirement to disclose any material change to the climate related disclosures provided in a registration statement or annual report in a Form 10-Q (or, in certain circumstances, Form 6-K for a registrant that is a foreign private issuer that does not report on domestic forms); and
  • Extending certain phase in periods.

Presentation and Submission of the Climate-Related Disclosures

The final rules provide that a registrant (both domestic and foreign private issuer) must:

  • File the climate-related disclosure in its registration statements and Exchange Act annual reports;
  • Include the climate-related disclosures required under Regulation S-K, except for any Scopes 1 and/or 2 emissions disclosures, in a separate, appropriately captioned section of its filing or in another appropriate section of the filing, such as Risk Factors, Description of Business, or Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations (“MD&A”), or, alternatively, by incorporating such disclosure by reference from another Commission filing as long as the disclosure meets the electronic tagging requirements of the final rules;
  • If required to disclose its Scopes 1 and 2 emissions, provide such disclosure:
    • If a registrant filing on domestic forms, in its annual report on Form 10-K, in its quarterly report on Form 10-Q for the second fiscal quarter in the fiscal year immediately following the year to which the GHG emissions metrics disclosure relates incorporated by reference into its Form 10-K,or in an amendment to its Form 10-K filed no later than the due date for the Form 10-Q for its second fiscal quarter;
    • If a foreign private issuer not filing on domestic forms, in its annual report on Form 20-F, or in an amendment to its annual report on Form 20-F, which shall be due no later than 225 days after the end of the fiscal year to which the GHG emissions metrics disclosure relates; and
    • If filing a Securities Act or Exchange Act registration statement, as of the most recently completed fiscal year that is at least 225 days prior to the date of effectiveness of the registration statement;
  • If required to disclose Scopes 1 and 2 emissions, provide such disclosure for the registrant’s most recently completed fiscal year and, to the extent previously disclosed, for the historical fiscal year(s) included in the filing;
  • If required to provide an attestation report over Scope 1 and Scope 2 emissions, provide such attestation report and any related disclosures in the filing that contains the GHG emissions disclosures to which the attestation report relates;
  • Provide the financial statement disclosures required under Regulation S-X for the registrant’s most recently completed fiscal year, and to the extent previously disclosed or required to be disclosed, for the historical fiscal year(s) included in the filing, in a note to the registrant’s audited financial statements; and
  • Electronically tag both narrative and quantitative climate-related disclosures in Inline XBRL.

Safe Harbor for Certain Climate-Related Disclosures The final rules provide a safe harbor for climate-related disclosures pertaining to transition plans, scenario analysis, the use of an internal carbon price, and targets and goals, provided pursuant to Regulation S-K sections 1502(e), 502(f), 1502(g), and 1504. The safe harbor provides that all information required by the specified sections, except for historical facts, is considered a forward-looking statement for purposes of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act safe harbors for forward-looking statements provided in section 27A of the Securities Act and section 21E of the Exchange Act.

DISCLAIMER: Because of the generality of this update, the information provided herein may not be applicable in all situations and should not be acted upon without specific legal advice based on particular situations.

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