Today (26 February), the European Commission published its anticipated omnibus simplification package, which aims to reduce reporting burdens for companies, particularly SMEs. The package includes simplifications in sustainability reporting (CSRD), sustainability due diligence (CSDDD), and sustainable activity taxonomy (EU Taxonomy).
The omnibus represents a dramatic change to several key pillars of the EU Green Deal, the key policy initiative in the path towards net zero by 2050. While we very much support simplification efforts to enhance the competitiveness of the EU’s single market, preserving regulatory certainty, clarity and stability for business is of utmost importance and is also key to remaining competitive.
As the largest professional body on the island of Ireland, representing over 39,000 members and educating over 6,600 students, the Institute has worked closely with members and member firms to equip them with the expertise and skills to prepare for and implement the CSRD both from a reporting and assurance perspective. Many of these have invested significant resources to upskill and meet existing requirements, and the changes proposed today may require several to pivot and understand new ones.
Chartered Accountants Ireland is reviewing today’s omnibus simplification package with stakeholders to assess how we best continue to support businesses whatever size and whatever stage of the process they are at, to meet the standards, and how we train the accountants of the future to meet ESG-related legal requirements.
European Commission news release Commission simplifies rules on sustainability and EU investments