CLEPA — 2025-02-06
News from Brussels
While reporting and due diligence requirements play a key role in driving positive change, the current patchwork of European ESG (Environment, Social and Governance) regulations burdens companies with excessive data collection and compliance efforts, diverting resources from impactful action. As the European Commission moves to streamline ESG frameworks, automotive suppliers are calling for a regulatory framework that empowers innovation while ensuring sustainability.
CLEPA welcomes the Commission’s ambition to cut reporting obligations for firms by 25%, as expressed in the Competitiveness Compass. This reduction must be implemented effectively to free up capacity for companies to innovate, implement strategies to bring down emissions, increase circularity, and create positive social impact.
Reforming the current framework should focus on the removal and reduction of reporting obligations rather than the reformulation of reporting requirements in the Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive and Taxonomy Regulation, and fast track changes that can have an immediate impact. The European Commission should also provide companies with more time to comply with mandates to collect value chain data. Businesses that have already prepared to comply with certain reporting standards should not suddenly face shifts in reporting standards and requirements that create additional complexity and costs.
CLEPA’s key recommendations for ESG Omnibus approach: