Subscribe

Climate disclosures should be mandatory, investors say

climate risk

People trust climate data more often if companies are required to report it, a recent survey found.

Retail investors broadly like the idea of the SEC requiring public companies to disclose their climate risk data, according to the results of a recent survey.

Seventy percent of more than 2,500 current investors surveyed in March said they either somewhat or strongly supported the requirement, according to a survey published April 28 by Public Citizen and the Americans for Financial Reform Education Fund. Those groups commissioned the survey, which was conducted by Embold Research.

While 36% of people said they would trust the climate risk data in disclosures made voluntarily by companies — which is the current standard — 58% said they would trust that information if companies were mandated to report, the survey found. Further, 71% indicated they would trust the data if companies made disclosures to the SEC and the information was audited by a third party.

In March, the SEC unveiled a proposed rule that would require most public companies to report emissions data, including Scope 3, with third-party verification eventually being required for Scope 1 and 2 emissions. The agency is currently reviewing public comments and preparing a final version of the rule.

The recent survey data echo the results of a December poll commissioned by Just Capital, Ceres, Public Citizen and SSRS. That report found that 87% of 1,100 Americans surveyed said they think the government should require large companies to disclose their climate risks, with 97% of Democrats and 74% of Republicans agreeing.

Related Topics:

Learn more about reprints and licensing for this article.

Recent Articles by Author

Retirees spend twice as much when they have guaranteed income, research finds

Most people don't plan bequests and many unnecessarily cut back on discretionary spending in retirement, according to a paper from an industry group.

Supreme Court muddies regulatory authority of SEC and DOL

Federal agencies could be more easily defeated in court over their interpretations of laws passed by Congress.

How fast-growing advisors get clients to give referrals

Asking clients why they're satisfied helps advisors plant stories that lead to referrals, a report from Capital Group found.

A Republican makes a case for ESG and sustainable investing

Despite attacks on environmental, social, and governance data being used, one former Congressman said he is hopeful about climate investing.

Retirement worries span market performance and the election

Nearly 90 percent of people told Schroders they are worried about the presidential election, and savers are overweighted in cash, the company found.

X

Subscribe and Save 60%

Premium Access
Print + Digital

Learn more
Subscribe to Print