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Gensler says SEC will propose climate risk rules by year-end

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The SEC chairman signals that the disclosures about the risks corporations face from climate change may appear in the mandatory filings public companies make to the agency.

The Securities and Exchange Commission plans to propose rules by the end of the year that will require corporations to publicly disclose the risks they face from climate change, the agency’s chair said.

SEC chief Gary Gensler said the upcoming proposal will likely call for businesses to provide “qualitative” and “quantitative” information to investors. That could include particulars about how executives manage climate-related risks, as well as more granular details about greenhouse gas emissions and the financial impact of global warming. Gensler signaled the disclosures may appear in the mandatory filings public companies make to the SEC.

The new regulations will also seek to provide “truth in advertising” for investment funds that market themselves as “green,” he said. That would mean asset managers need to lay out the data they use to make so-called sustainable investments.

“We’ve seen a growing number of funds market themselves as green, sustainable, low-carbon and so on,” Gensler said in a speech before the Principles for Responsible Investment group. “What information stands behind those claims?”

[More: SEC to emphasize climate risk in exams, step up Reg BI reviews]

Here are additional details from Gensler’s remarks:
The SEC chair said disclosure should be mandatory for companies and not voluntary. He also said the reports should be “consistent and comparable” across firms.
Gensler said he has asked the agency’s staff to consider requiring the information in year-end financial filings, known as 10-Ks.
The SEC staff is also looking at whether companies should reveal emissions from other firms in their supply chains, known as “Scope 3.”
Businesses may need to provide “scenario analyses” on how they “might adapt to the range of possible physical, legal, market, and economic changes,” Gensler said.

[More: Peirce’s concerns about ESG rulemaking could split SEC]

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