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Sustainability update

February 2026

Highlights

  • European Central Bank issues opinion on revised ESRS
  • European Commission updates its request to CEAOB for technical advice on limited assurance standard
  • Council to greenlight agreement on Omnibus Directive

Feature story

European Supervisory Authorities issue opinions on revised ESRS

The three European Supervisory Authorities (ESAs) – ESMA, EBA, EIOPA – issued their opinions on the draft revised European Sustainability Reporting Standards (ESRS). The ESAs welcome the improved readability and structure, as well as the reduction of the volume of requirements in the ESRS. They unanimously expressed concerns on the reliefs introduced.

The European Securities and Markets Authority (ESMA) recommends addressing the following matters:

  • introducing time limits (until 2029) to certain permanent reliefs
  • refining requirements regarding transition plans
  • restoring disclosures on the sustainability competencies of administrative and management bodies
  • enhancing transparency on financial resources allocated to sustainability actions
  • adjusting exemptions for subsidiaries excluded from consolidated financial statements

The European Banking Authority (EBA) reiterated their concerns related to introduction of permanent reliefs, proposing to provide a time limit. EBA encourages the EC to consider the combined effect of (i) the CSRD’s significantly reduced scope and the (ii) set of data to be reported under the amended draft ESRS when striking a balance between simplification and data availability.

The European Insurance and Occupational Pensions Authority (EIOPA) also recommends the introduction of a time limits for certain reliefs.

As next steps, the EC will consider ESAs opinions together with other submitted opinions by public bodies. The EC aims to adopt the revised ESRS via a delegated act by summer 2026.

EU developments

Accountancy Europe statement on the revised ESRS

Accountancy Europe recognises that EFRAG’s draft revised ESRS are easier, simpler and less granular. At the same time, there are challenging aspects that may be addressed with capacity building and in time.

Accountancy Europe calls for stability in the reporting ecosystem and suggests the European Commission does not further dilute the ESRS or subject it to political pressures.

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ECB issues opinion on revised ESRS

The European Central Bank (ECB) published its opinion on the revised ESRS. The ECB welcomes the significant simplification and improved structure, while warning that the revision must not compromise the availability of high-quality data essential for financial stability.

ECB identified three critical areas for improvement:

  • data integrity: the introduction of permanent reliefs and the removal of key datapoints limit meaningful data availability, reduce transparency and hamper comparability of disclosures across companies
  • international alignment: critical deviations, particularly due to reliefs, from international standards, such as the International Sustainability Standards Board (ISSB)
  • financial sector clarity: specific clarifications are needed to ensure meaningful disclosures by financial institutions

The ECB also welcomes the mandate to adopt a limited assurance standard, supports that recommending the revised ESRS for voluntary reporting; emphasise the need for the EU sustainability reporting framework to remain fit for purpose and calls to preserve a clear pathway to the CSRD goals implementation.

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EC updates its request to CEAOB for technical advice on limited assurance standard

The European Commission (EC) requested the Committee of European Auditing Oversight Bodies (CEAOB) to refocus its work on preparing a technical advice to be used for the Delegated Act (DA) adopting limited assurance standard.

The EC specifies that CEAOB’s technical advice should clearly identify add-ons and possibly carve-outs to ISSA 5000:

  • carve-outs could cover items not applicable in or contradictory with EU legal provisions, and those specific to reasonable assurance,
  • add-ons could cover items not covered by ISSA 5000, like the assurance opinion on compliance with markup and the EU Taxonomy Regulation Article 8 requirements, and
  • add-ons could also address additional specifications or clarifications to support the effective implementation of ISSA 5000 within the EU context, including aspects such as double materiality and fair presentation requirements

The deadline to submit the technical advice is 30 September 2026.

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EC consults on post-2030 climate framework

The EC launched two public consultations and calls for evidence to inform the EU climate policy framework after 2030. These consultations will feed legislative proposals due by the end of 2026. The consultations:

  • examine how national targets and flexibilities should look post-2030 to ensure effective and fair emissions reductions,
  • focus on the possible use of high-quality international carbon credits from 2036 onwards, up to 5% of 1990 EU net emissions, and
  • consider a potential pilot phase for these credits between 2031 and 2035.

Stakeholders can respond by 4 May 2026.

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Council to greenlight agreement on Omnibus Directive

The European Parliament (EP) adopted a corrigendum to the Omnibus I Directive during its February 2026 plenary session in Strasbourg.

The corrigendum ensures the legal and linguistic accuracy of the text before its final publication.

The Council is expected to formally approve the agreement on the Omnibus I Directive on 24 February. The Directive is expected to be published in the EU Official Journal.

 

ECOFIN on sustainable finance legislation

The Economic and Financial Affairs Council (ECOFIN) exchanged on the current legislative proposals within financial services, including sustainable finance files. The Cyprus Presidency of the Council of the EU (Council) noted that:

  • the work on the Sustainable Finance Disclosure Regulation (SFDR) is underway
  • the Presidency aims to reach a Council general approach at the June ECOFIN meeting.

Commissioner Maria Luís Albuquerque on SFDR:

  • expressed support for reaching a general approach to balance investor protection against greenwashing with simplification of disclosure requirements
  • identified the introduction of clear sustainability-related product categories as a key innovation to mobilise private capital
  • called for a pragmatic agreement to establish robust categories while reducing reporting burdens for investors.

She also urged Member States to transpose the ‘Stop the clock’ Directive, enabling companies to benefit from immediate alleviations in the sustainable finance framework.

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ESMA shows national authorities compliant to GLESI

ESMA published a table with the competent national authorities in the EU and EEA/EFTA states complying with the Guidelines on Enforcement of Sustainability Information (GLESI).

  • Competent authorities complying with the GLESI are those from Belgium, the Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, Croatia, Ireland, Italy, Lithuania, Latvia, Poland, Sweden, Slovenia, Slovakia, and Lichtenstein
  • Competent authorities intending to comply with the GLESI are those from Bulgaria, Cyprus, Germany, Greece, Spain, Hungary, Luxembourg, Malta, Portugal, and Iceland
  • Competent authorities not complying with the GLESI are those from Austria, Denmark*, France, the Netherlands, Romania, and Norway

*In Denmark, only one competent authority will comply, while the other will not

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International developments

AFRC consults on new framework for sustainability assurance

The Hong Kong Accounting and Financial Reporting Council (AFRC) published a consultation paper proposing a new regulatory framework for sustainability assurance. The framework:

  • promotes high-quality assurance by adopting international standards,
  • enhances the credibility and reliability of sustainability-related information, and
  • ensures a level playing field for all assurance providers, including both accounting and non-accounting firms.

Stakeholders must submit their responses to the AFRC by 30 March 2026.

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China issues disclosure standard on climate

China’s Ministry of Finance and eight other departments jointly issued the Sustainability Disclosure Standard for Business Enterprises No.1 – Climate, built on the ISSB’s IFRS S2. This standard establishes a unified national framework for reporting climate-related impacts and risks.

Read more

MEPs questions & answers

Deregulatory drift in EC’s simplification agenda and weakening of European Green Deal

  • Question by MEP César Luena (S&D/Spain)
  • Reply by Commissioner Roswall

 

EU Deforestation Regulation

  • Question by MEP Kristoffer Storm (ECR/ Denmark)
  • Reply by Commissioner Roswall

 

Excluding printed products from EUDR’s scope

  • Question by MEP Fernand Kartheiser (NI/Luxembourg)
  • Reply by Commissioner Roswall

 

EUDR – Impact on SMEs and retreading industry

  • Question by MEP Christine Singer (Renew/Germany)
  • Reply by Commissioner Roswall

 

Negative economic impact of Deforestation Regulation and cost of slogan-driven politics, motivated by virtue signalling

  • Question by MEP Charlie Weimers (ECR/Sweden) and others
  • Reply by Commissioner Roswall

Other news

Events

This curated content was brought to you by Vita Ramanauskaité, Accountancy Europe Senior Manager, Head of Sustainability, since 2015. You can send her tips by email, follow her on X and connect with her on LinkedIn.