In brief
ESG reporting landscape is rapidly changing at the global level. Considering the ever-increasing global challenges pertaining to ESG environmental, social and governance dimensions. Business leaders in India also see a merit to reorient their corporate purpose and extend beyond wealth creation into broader themes that its key stakeholders are concerned with.
EY ESG Compass is a comprehensive digital ecosystem that seeks to help organizations evaluate their ESG maturity levels and adapt a sector-specific strategy, using the power of analytics.
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India has emerged as a conscious aspirant and shown promise and capability to take great initiative in paving the way in combating climate change and meeting the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) of the United Nations in many of its regulatory schemes internally such as introduction of the Business Responsibility and Sustainability Reporting (BRSR) by SEBI in 2021 and the sustainability reporting format is based on the nine principles of National Guidelines for Responsible Business Conduct (NGRBC) introduced by SEBI.
BRSR is not India’s first foray into ESG regulatory frameworks and disclosures. The original Business Responsibility Reporting (BRR) guidelines were framed by the Ministry of Corporate Affairs (MCA) in 2009. BRR served as a platform upon which a ESG reporting framework having much broader scope could be developed and it served as the launchpad for BRSR which took a decade to refine and broaden its horizons to meet the complex ESG disclosure requirements and meet the global quality requirements and standards that exist in today’s sustainable reporting landscape.
How is BRSR different from BRR? (From BRR to BRSR)
SEBI introduced the requirement of ESG reporting in India in 2012. Their version of ESG reporting was termed the Business Responsibility Report (BRR) and it was mandated by SEBI that the top 100 listed companies in India by market capitalization needed to file a BRR. By 2021, BRR has evolved into BRSR, making it a comprehensive ESG reporting framework. It has also managed to plug the gaps in terms of accuracy and depth of reporting successfully.
The underlying intent of the BRSR can be said to be seamless integration and alignment of the various regulatory frameworks and compliance requirements in terms of environmental, social and governance parameters to be followed by companies operating within India, for the purpose of responsible conduct of business and transparent disclosure of their non-financial parameters and sustainability goals of the company.
Through BRSR reporting, SEBI has defined ESG disclosures in a standardized manner for the listed companies based on which the BRSR guidelines were issued. The BRSR format acts as one standard for all in India for ESG related disclosures and it will be intertwined with the financial performance of the companies as well, as the BRSR report will be published alongside their annual report as an integral part. This will be a standardized alignment of financial and non-financial disclosures of a company to truly represent its business operations in a transparent form.
The BRSR report format will consist of three sections:
The questions have been divided into two types:
With the BRSR reporting, companies require to highlight sustainability-related challenges faced by them and further delve in their ESG related targets, goals, and achievements while also mapping the probable risks and opportunities they will potentially face in their ESG journey.
BRSR will act as an effective mode of communicating a company’s non-financial disclosures and should be seen as the next step in ESG reporting going forward. Publishing a BRSR report should be seen as a mandatory compliance exercise as per SEBI’s vision as to what it intends BRSR’s purpose to be.