Environmental verification: less mechanical, more collaborative

Whilst the Mandatory Greenhouse Gas regulation in 2013 went some way to enhancing engagement on non-financial issues with top management, the latest changes to the reporting landscape feel like a more emphatic game changer. We are already seeing in-house sustainability teams gain heightened profile for their work and establish firmer communication channels with top management ensue of the newest industry developments.  We have also seen extra attention paid to 2017 environmental disclosures by those working in legal and risk departments; with more questions being asked about the validity and verifiability of environmental data by these gatekeepers to annual report and accounts content.

CDP analytics show that that third-party verification of scope 1 emissions increased to 64% (+7%) and scope 2 to 53% (+11%) in 2017 disclosures from the UK registered organisations.  At Carbon Smart, we are forecasting that, whilst neither the TCFD nor the transposition of the EU NFR regulation in the UK mandates third-party assurance of non-financial data (although they both recommended it), demand for verification will increase over the course of the coming years.

So what is stopping so many organisations from having their sustainability data audited with similar rigour to financial data? In our view the benefits of external verification are clear, and with the right verification approach clients should be using verification to their strategic advantage; rather than it being an annual burden.

Principal benefits of third-party verification for organisations

Organisations can gain considerable value from verification, we have listed some of the key benefits below:

 

So why don’t all organisations do it?

In our experience there are a number of key reasons why nearly half of CDP respondents from the UK  don’t verify their data; many of which have persisted for the past 10 years and which we have been working hard to dispel:

Make verification work for your organisation rather than the other way around

In our view – whilst verification must remain standards lead, independent verifiers need to be more creative with their offerings to clients. This means adding additional value outside of the verification process rather than ceding to a strict standards-only based approach and making the engagements seem onerous and a tick in the box. In addition; businesses need to be more demanding of their verifiers – not only seeking third-party sign-off but insisting on a clear verification strategy that will evolve their reporting over the coming years. The best verification outcomes, based on our knowledge include the following approaches:

 

Whilst having a verifier in attendance at either of the above may appear as high risk to an organisation, we would caution the opposite; material methodological decisions and/or data updates are best checked and ratified at the point of decision rather than later in the process

 

Our firm view is that verification can be extremely beneficial to businesses; however, both verifiers and their clients should step beyond the execution of the mechanics of the verification process and take a more collaborative approach; laying out a roadmap to future best in class reporting and sculpting verification engagements to support this.

Julie Craig is a director at Carbon Smart