The California Air Resources Board (CARB) announced that allowing businesses more time to prepare to comply with the new regulations will ease the standards for reporting emissions and prevent them from taking enforcement action during the first year of reporting. The new announcement specifically refers to the companies subject to Senate Bill 253, also known as the Climate Corporate Data Accountability Act.
The decision to ease and delay the enforcement may give private market firms, asset managers, and impact investors more time to assess and adapt their investment strategies in response to the new regulatory landscape while potentially reducing immediate compliance costs for portfolio companies.
Let’s discuss the delay in climate reporting rules in detail.
The Climate Corporate Data Accountability Act is a regulation that consists of a set of rules approved by California Governor Gavin Newsom last October. The regulation mandates large corporations operating in California (with revenues exceeding $1 billion) for disclosing their greenhouse gas emissions (GHG) emissions across Scope 1 (direct emissions), Scope 2 (indirect emissions from electricity), and Scope 3 (indirect emissions from the entire value chain). In addition, the regulation is expected to impact more than 5,300 companies operating in California.
Professionals in private markets and asset management firms use Auquan's Intelligence Engine to automate research and monitoring for deal sourcing, borrow screens and due diligence, risk monitoring, sustainability, and compliance workflows.
Using advanced AI techniques, Auquan generates material insights on any company or issuer worldwide — public or private — instantaneously, tailored for your workflow.
Let's explore how Auquan can help you and your team eliminate tedious and time-consuming manual data work and focus more on what you do best.