This new report: “The State of Play in Reporting and Assurance of Sustainability Information: 2019-2021 Trends & Analysis” from the International Federation of Accountants (IFAC), the AICPA, and CIMA, updates data included in the second annual report and the inaugural report released by these organizations in 2022 and 2021, respectively, on sustainability disclosure and assurance practices as of the fiscal year 2021 reporting cycle (through March 21, 2022) among 1,350 companies headquartered in 21 jurisdictions consisting of the 100 largest companies in the six largest economies (including the US and the UK) and the 50 largest companies in 15 other jurisdictions.
Disclosure—US companies continued to rely primarily on standalone sustainability reports (as opposed to, e.g., annual or integrated reports) for their ESG disclosure—more so than any jurisdiction other than Canada. Use of stand-alone sustainability reports globally declined.
Standards/Frameworks—Up from 68% in 2019, 86% of companies globally used more than one framework/standard for reporting—most commonly the GRI and UN SDGs, although disclosure of the use of the SASB standards and TCFD framework increased 29% and 39%, respectively, year-over-year. Looking at the US specifically, more than 90% of companies referenced SASB and more than 80% of companies referenced the TCFD in their ESG reporting for fiscal 2021.
Net Zero Targets—Nearly half of companies globally disclosed having set a net zero emissions reduction target in fiscal 2021. Looking at the US specifically, ~38% of companies set targets including Scopes 1, 2, and 3; ~32% set targets for Scope 1 and 2; and ~28% set other targets.
Assurance (For purposes of these statistics below, note that assurance over even one ESG metric counts as having obtained assurance.)