CSRD, EU taxonomy, double materiality, ESRS, supply chain due diligence (CS3D), greenwashing and the lawyer's role in ESG.
Directive (EU) 2022/2464 on corporate sustainability reporting (CSRD) replaces the previous NFRD and dramatically expands non-financial reporting obligations. Its transposition into Spanish law will proceed progressively between 2024 and 2028.
The sustainability report must be integrated into the management report (not a separate document) and cover:
Regulation (EU) 2020/852 establishes a unified classification system determining which economic activities can be considered "environmentally sustainable." The taxonomy defines six environmental objectives:
For an activity to be taxonomy-aligned, it must substantially contribute to at least one objective, cause no significant harm (DNSH) to the others, and comply with minimum social safeguards.
Relevance for lawyers: financial entities and large companies must report the percentage of their activities aligned with the taxonomy. Incorrect advice on classification can generate liability for greenwashing.
The CSRD introduces the concept of double materiality, central to ESG reporting:
A matter is material if it is relevant from either perspective. The lawyer must verify that the materiality analysis covers both dimensions, as it forms the foundation of the entire sustainability report.
The ESRS are the technical standards implementing the CSRD. Approved by the European Commission (Delegated Regulation 2023/2772), they include:
Reports must be auditable with a limited assurance level (initially), evolving toward reasonable assurance.
Directive (EU) 2024/1760 on corporate sustainability due diligence (known as CS3D or CSDDD) requires large companies to identify, prevent, mitigate, and remediate adverse human rights and environmental impacts in their value chain.
Key points:
Greenwashing is the practice of presenting products, services, or the company itself as more sustainable than they actually are. Directive (EU) 2024/825 (amending the Unfair Commercial Practices Directive) expressly prohibits:
Risk for lawyers: advising a client on ESG communications without verifying the substantiation can generate professional liability if the communication proves misleading.
The lawyer specializing in ESG and compliance operates at the intersection of multiple disciplines:
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A company with 300 employees, a 30 M euro balance sheet and 60 M euro turnover asks whether it must publish a sustainability report under the CSRD. What is your answer?
When performing a double materiality analysis for a client, the finance team argues they only need to report climate risks affecting the company's balance sheet. Is this correct?
A client launches an advertising campaign describing their product line as "100% sustainable" with no verifiable data. What legal risk do they face?
A company subject to CS3D discovers that a second-tier supplier in its supply chain uses child labor. Is it obligated to act?
An institutional investor asks what percentage of a company's activities are "EU taxonomy-aligned." What three conditions must an activity meet to be considered aligned?
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