SEC proposes broad climate rules as Chair Gensler says risk disclosure will help investors

SEC proposes broad climate rules as Chair Gensler says risk disclosure will help investors


Gary Gensler, chairman of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), at the SEC headquarters office in Washington, D.C., U.S., on Thursday, July 22, 2021.

Melissa Lyttle | Bloomberg | Getty Images

The Securities and Exchange Commission on Monday debuted expansive rules that would require publicly traded companies to provide more information on how their operations affect the climate and carbon emissions.

The SEC said the new rule — approved by a 3-1 margin — would compel companies to disclose how climate risks affect their business, outline their own greenhouse gas emissions and report on climate-related targets and goals.

In a media briefing with reporters following the SEC’s Monday meeting, Chair Gary Gensler said the proposed rules would not only help to protect investors but also respond to a barrage of requests for greater clarity about corporate carbon emissions.

“I really do think that the SEC has a role to play here when this amount of investor demand and need is there,” he said, noting that future risks often affect what traders think of an investment.

Gensler added that investors today make decisions based on what they see as a company’s ability to generate cash in the future. If climate change is forecast to weigh on a company’s future earnings, investors have an incentive to learn as much about that risk as possible prior to their trade.

The SEC outlined specific rules including a requirement compelling companies to disclose information about how climate risks have had, or are likely to have, a material effect on business in the short and long terms. Another would force companies that use internal carbon pricing to detail how those prices are set.

Other rules would seek to measure and display big companies’ direct greenhouse gas emissions, as well as indirect emissions from upstream and downstream business partners.

The suite of rules now enters a 60-day public comment period during which businesses, investors and other market participants can remark on and offer changes to the proposals.

CNBC Politics

Read more of CNBC’s politics coverage:

Should the rules be approved and adopted, companies would have time to phase the disclosures into annual financial reports, according to a fact sheet provided by the regulator. Companies with over $700 million worth of shares on the public market would have the most aggressive phase-in period and would be expected to file climate-related data to the SEC in fiscal year 2023.

Gensler said he expects the ambitious set of rules to prompt a flurry of responses from investors and lawmakers alike, many of whom see the SEC’s latest proposal as a way to jump-start the Biden administration’s stalled environmental policy agenda.

Not all of those replies are likely to be encouraging. Some business groups could mount formal legal challenges that would delay the rules.

A key skeptic of the regulator’s latest move is former SEC Chair Jay Clayton. On Sunday, he echoed many industry groups in wondering if the rules overstep the powers of the SEC, which is tasked by Congress with investor protection and facilitating capital formation in the U.S. economy.

In a Wall Street Journal op-ed, Clayton wrote that “setting climate policy is the job of lawmakers, not the SEC.”

“Taking a new, activist approach to climate policy — an area far outside the SEC’s authority, jurisdiction and expertise — will deservedly draw legal challenges,” he added.

But Gensler told CNBC on Monday that climate disclosure rules are nothing new. Some of the globe’s largest companies, including Apple and Microsoft, report volumes of climate-related data and are proactively working to cut carbon emissions to zero.

“We have hundreds, if not thousands of companies already making disclosures and yet those disclosures are fragmented. They’re sort-of different, they’re following different standards,” Gensler said. “We have a role to bring in some standardization: Some consistency and some comparability.”



Source

Construction on Trump’s White House ballroom can continue for now, U.S. appeals court says
Politics

Construction on Trump’s White House ballroom can continue for now, U.S. appeals court says

US President Donald Trump holds a rendering of the East Wing modernization as he speaks to reporters aboard Air Force One en route to Joint Base Andrews, Maryland, on March 29, 2026. Mandel Ngan | Afp | Getty Images A federal appeals court is allowing President Donald Trump to continue building a $400 million ballroom […]

Read More
Trump signs order to speed review of psychedelics, including the controversial drug ibogaine
Politics

Trump signs order to speed review of psychedelics, including the controversial drug ibogaine

President Donald Trump on Saturday directed his administration to speed up reviews of certain psychedelic drugs, including ibogaine, which recently has been embraced by combat veterans and conservative lawmakers despite having serious safety risks. Ibogaine is banned under the federal government’s most restrictive category for illegal, high-risk drugs. But the administration is taking steps to […]

Read More
Three things to know about FISA Section 702: Congress passes short-term extension of controversial surveillance program
Politics

Three things to know about FISA Section 702: Congress passes short-term extension of controversial surveillance program

Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore., speaks as U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer testifies before a Senate Finance Committee hearing on President Donald Trump’s trade policy, on Capitol Hill in Washington, April 8, 2025. Kevin Mohatt | Reuters The House and Senate on Friday approved a short-term extensive of a section of federal law that allows the […]

Read More