Skip to content

Menu

Environment, Land & Resources

Insights and commentary on environmental issues and developments impacting business across the world

HomeAbout UsTopicsSubscribe
Latham & Watkins logo
HomeAbout UsTopics
Subscribe
Search
Close

Environment, Land & Resources

Insights and commentary on environmental issues and developments impacting business across the world

CDP

Subscribe to CDP via RSS

Science Based Targets Initiative Sets 2022 Action Plan

Posted on January 19, 2022
Posted in Air Quality and Climate Change, Environmental, Social, and Governance

Market participants can expect the initiative’s proposals to offer guidance on setting targets for emissions reduction and decarbonisation.

By Paul A. Davies, Michael D. Green, and James Bee

On 12 January 2021, the Science Based Targets initiative (SBTi) published its “SBTi Climate Action in 2022” proposals (the 2022 Proposals), highlighting the areas that the organisation is seeking to work on and develop throughout 2022. The SBTi is a partnership between the CDP (formerly the Carbon Disclosure Project), the UN Global Compact, the World Resources Institute, and the World Wide Fund for Nature, which seeks to mobilise the private sector to reduce its carbon footprint by defining, promoting, and verifying best practices in corporate emissions reduction strategies in line with the goal of the Paris Agreement to limit global temperature increases to 1.5°C above pre-industrial times.

The SBTi continued to grow rapidly throughout 2021, with more and more companies setting SBTi-aligned or verified targets and stakeholders increasingly expecting corporate climate commitments and targets to be aligned with SBTi. As a result, the 2022 Proposals, by identifying the key areas which SBTi is seeking to develop this year, may considerably impact a large number of companies looking to set climate targets.

Setters of Sustainability Standards Pledge to Collaborate on Comprehensive Corporate Reporting

Posted on September 23, 2020
Posted in Environmental, Social, and Governance

Leading sustainability and integrated reporting organisations plan to provide joint market guidance, in an effort to achieve comprehensive harmonisation.

By Paul A. Davies and Michael D. Green

A group of leading sustainability and integrated reporting organisations — including the Carbon Disclosure Project (CDP), the Climate Disclosure Standard Board (CDSB), the Global Reporting Initiative (GRI), the International Integrated Reporting Council (IIRC), and the Sustainability Accounting Board (SASB) — have pledged to work together on the harmonisation of sustainability standards. In the document, which was published on 11 September 2020, the organisations commit to collaborating together by providing joint market guidance on sustainability standards while also building a shared vision of how such standards could complement generally accepted financial principles.

Background

A number of initiatives have accelerated progress towards a comprehensive environmental, social, and governance (ESG) corporate reporting system in the past year. In particular, regulators and policymakers have demonstrated a growing appetite to address the connection between financial risks and ESG-related concerns. Recent examples of initiatives in this area include:

Latham & Watkins logo
Facebook Twitter RSS LinkedIn

Austin, Beijing, Boston, Brussels, Chicago, Dubai, Düsseldorf, Frankfurt, Hamburg, Hong Kong, Houston, London, Los Angeles, Los Angeles – Downtown, Los Angeles – GSO, Madrid, Manchester – GSO, Milan, Munich, New York, Orange County, Paris, Riyadh, San Diego, San Francisco, Seoul, Silicon Valley, Singapore, Tel Aviv, Tokyo, and Washington, D.C.

Portions of this blog may constitute attorney advertising. Any testimonial or endorsement on this profile does not constitute a guarantee, warranty, or prediction regarding the outcome of your legal matter. Prior results do not guarantee a similar outcome. Results depend upon a variety of factors unique to each representation.

Latham & Watkins operates worldwide as a limited liability partnership organized under the laws of the State of Delaware (USA) with affiliated limited liability partnerships conducting the practice in France, Hong Kong, Italy, Singapore, and the United Kingdom and as an affiliated partnership conducting the practice in Japan. Latham & Watkins operates in Israel through a limited liability company, in South Korea as a Foreign Legal Consultant Office, and in Saudi Arabia through a limited liability company.

Topics

Archives

© 2026, Latham & Watkins
Law blog design & platform by LexBlog LexBlog Logo