Greenhouse gas emissions remain the most widely assured category of sustainability information
NEW YORK - Almost 3-in-4 of the largest global companies sought assurance on some aspect of their sustainability disclosures, according to an updated report from the International Federation of Accountants (IFAC) and American Institute of Certified Public Accountants (AICPA) & Chartered Institute of Management Accountants (CIMA). The study marks the fifth annual benchmark that now includes 2023 data.
Seventy-three percent of large companies from G20 countries obtained assurance on their sustainability disclosures in 2023, up from 69 percent the previous year, according to the report, The State of Play: Sustainability Disclosure and Assurance, (Five-Year Trends and Analysis, 2019-2023). Five years ago, that number stood at 51 percent. Most of the assurance, then and now is of limited scope.
Audit firms—as opposed to consultants or other service providers—continue to lead (55 percent) in providing assurance on sustainability disclosures by large global companies, with broad variations country to country. Audit firms’ overall share of the market declined from 58 percent in 2022, although there are mitigating factors for the drop, including:
When companies obtain assurance for the first time, they typically focus on greenhouse gas-related information and start by engaging other service providers who specialize in that area.
The report notes the increased use of audit firms over the prior year in several major markets in 2023, including Singapore (+6 percentage points), South Africa (+4), the United Kingdom (+5) and United States (+5). In the latter instance, audit firms’ share of sustainability assurance rose from 23 percent to 28 percent.
“Auditors have extensive education requirements, adhere to strict independence rules and possess a deep and holistic view of an organization’s business, processes and risk profile,” said Susan Coffey, CPA, CGMA, the CEO of public accounting for AICPA & CIMA “That makes them ideal candidates to perform sustainability assurance engagements, and we’re seeing many boards and audit committees endorsing that view as corporate reporting matures.”
More than three-quarters of companies now report sustainability information with financial disclosures in annual or integrated reports. Organizations that include sustainability information with their annual or integrated reports overwhelmingly use their statutory auditor to provide assurance over those disclosures.
“The largest global companies have responded well to voluntary systems of sustainability reporting and assurance, driven by investor demand,” said IFAC Chief Executive Officer Lee White. “With new global standards in place, regulators now have the toolkits to move from voluntary to mandatory disclosures over time, which we expect will further drive high-quality, consistent and comparable sustainability-related information for the investing public and all stakeholders. IFAC and our members, including AICPA & CIMA, remain committed to supporting this shift—advancing trust, good governance, and global alignment in sustainability disclosure, united in shaping a future where sustainability information earns the same level of trust as financial reporting.”
Among other highlights of the updated study: