More competitiveness, more coherence and less administrative burden – these are key political priorities for the new European Commission (the Commission) which took office last December. One of the earliest moves under the Commission's new mandate will be to publish details of an "omnibus" package, anticipated on February 26, 2025. It is intended to "reduce in one step" the reporting burdens across multiple EU laws, for example the Taxonomy Regulation, the Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive (CSRD) and the Corporate Sustainability Due Diligence Directive (CS3D).
This briefing explains the key drivers for the omnibus legislation, the reactions it has drawn from within and outside the EU, and the great unknowns and critical questions that remain for businesses.
Please click here to download the briefing in PDF or read on below.
Key drivers for the omnibus legislation
A clear, simple and smart regulatory framework is touted by the
EU's leaders as one of the core engines to boost EU
competitiveness. The European Council has warned that unless
decisive action is taken to drastically slash administrative,
regulatory and reporting burdens, businesses' growth will
continue to be stymied. Currently, "regulation is seen by more
than 60% of EU companies as an obstacle to investment, with 55% of
SMEs flagging regulatory obstacles and the administrative burden as
their greatest challenge".1
The Commission recognises that the challenges of regulatory
compliance are compounded by overlaps and inconsistencies across
the legislative landscape. In particular, the EU's
sustainability reporting and due diligence framework is seen as a
"major source of regulatory burden, magnified by a lack of
guidance to facilitate the application of complex rules and to
clarify the interaction between various pieces of
legislation".2
Other factors that add to administrative burdens and compliance
costs are the "gold plating" of EU law at national level
(i.e. when Member States introduce requirements that exceed EU law
requirements) and the "trickle-down effect" (i.e. the
transfer of sustainability reporting burdens from large companies
to actors in their value chain), which can lead to risks of
over-compliance and over-reporting.
Outside of the EU, prior to European Commission President von der
Leyen's public mention of the omnibus legislation in November
2024, several U.S. lawmakers already stated that "the
[CS3D's] extraterritorial scope amounts to a serious breach of
U.S. sovereignty and a direct threat to the global competitiveness
of American companies".3 The omnibus legislation
could be designed to fend off potential retaliatory action from the
U.S. and other third countries where businesses are impacted by the
extraterritorial effect of applicable EU laws.
Presently, a key unknown is the extent to which the omnibus
legislation will change the substance and applicability of the
laws. President von der Leyen emphasised in November 2024 that
"the content of the laws is good, we want to maintain it and
we will maintain it. But the way we get there, the questions
we're asking, the data points we're collecting... is too
much, often redundant and often overlapping". This sentiment
is consistent with the Commission's call for evidence in Q4
2023 which aimed to identify reporting requirements in EU
legislation that can be eliminated or rationalized "without
undermining the policy objectives".
However, the prospect of an omnibus legislation has prompted a
range of reactions, with many seeking to influence its direction of
travel.
Who is jumping on the omnibus?
The Commission has indicated an intent to take a consultative
approach, which would entail focusing its stress testing and
simplification on priority areas identified as burdensome by
stakeholders, in addition to prioritizing sectors where the EU is
particularly exposed to international competition. While awaiting a
clear announcement from the Commission, speculation about what the
omnibus legislation may focus on has been fuelled by the surfacing
(or resurfacing) of ideas for further regulatory change, including:
(i) narrowing the scope of companies affected and reducing
extra-territorial effect; (ii) postponing the CSRD application
deadlines; (iii) scrapping or pausing the development of new
reporting standards; and (iv) reducing the number of data points
required, e.g. removing the Green Asset Ratio under the Taxonomy
Regulation. Other well-known concerns include challenges with
international interoperability, unclear definitions (e.g. the Do No
Significant Harm principle), complex methodologies (e.g. transition
activities), and lack of harmonization in timelines for related
reporting requirements.
Groups of EU businesses have called for the Commission to adhere to
the current timeline for legal implementation and spoken out
against watering down the rules, noting that changes to the
reporting framework would create legal uncertainty and undo the
progress that has been achieved with the European Green Deal. While
the official narrative frames the simplification revolution as an
imperative for European competitiveness, some businesses consider
that the sustainability reporting rules provide "essential
tools to ensure European companies are prepared for ESG risks and
can thrive in a competitive global economy".4
Additionally, in a multi-stakeholder statement dated December 12,
2024, more than 90 signatories (representing civil society,
businesses, banks and investors) asserted that "the strategic
work on standardising corporate sustainability disclosures in the
EU is being wrongly portrayed as a threat to competitiveness,
[which] seems to serve a full deregulatory agenda, not a
simplification initiative".5
Great unknowns of the omnibus legislation
At the time of writing, actual details of the scope and
substance of the omnibus package remain scant.
Numerous questions remain, among which are:
When will the omnibus legislation take effect?
As noted above, the Commission's legislative proposal may be published on February 26, 2025. The legislative procedure, which additionally involves the European Council and European Parliament, will need to run its course before the omnibus legislation can be finalized and take effect. The length of the legislative procedure will depend on multiple factors including the complexity of the proposed amendments and the unity of political will (the relatively isolated amendments to the EU Deforestation Regulation entered into force on December 26, 2024, within three months of the Commission's proposal).
Will high standards and high ambitions be maintained?
Commissioner Valdis Dombrovskis recently remarked that "simplification does not mean deregulation". However, that has not stopped speculation across the industry as to whether the omnibus legislation will lower the EU's social and environmental standards. In addition, reporters and users of sustainability data have concerns about how the omnibus legislation might impact on the availability of comparable, high-quality sustainability data to enable investors to assess firms' sustainability profiles and inform capital allocation decisions for a timely and ambitious economy-wide transition.
Will the omnibus legislation, or a later stage of the simplification revolution, cover other laws?
Apart from the CSRD, CS3D and Taxonomy Regulation, the Draghi report identified several other laws that make the EU's sustainability reporting and due diligence framework a major regulatory burden, e.g. the sustainable finance disclosure regulation (SFDR), the eco-design for sustainable products regulation, the industrial emissions directive, the emissions trading system, and the regulation on the registration, evaluation, authorization and restriction of chemicals (REACH). MEP Axel Voss also named other EU laws where overlaps are posing a challenge, including the batteries regulation, the conflict minerals regulation, the carbon border adjustment mechanism, the forced labor ban and the deforestation regulation.
Is the omnibus legislation the best way forward?
The multi-stakeholder letter from over 90 organizations (referenced above) identified alternative avenues to achieve simplification and effective implementation, including: more practical guidance and implementation support from the Commission and the European Financial Reporting Advisory Group (EFRAG); and pragmatic implementation of reporting requirements that help companies focus on what is truly material. Digitalizing reporting procedures and simplifying formats can also contribute to reducing compliance burdens.
Will the omnibus legislation achieve tangible simplification?
The previous Commission acknowledged that "the streamlining of reporting requirements is a long-term effort that will require focus for the foreseeable future".6 The Commission has some history in seeking to simplify EU laws, and its efforts have been criticized for having limited impact. President von der Leyen has stressed that "it will be different this time" (speech on November 8, 2024).
The Commission's publication of its omnibus package is highly anticipated. In the meantime, as reporting under the Taxonomy Regulation and wave one of CSRD reporting continue to push ahead, businesses will do well to build in flexibility to remain adaptable to evolving requirements. Businesses should be alive to the areas of sustainability reporting that are particularly burdensome, complex and duplicative and finetune a pragmatic, streamlined approach to compliance.
Footnotes
1. Draghi report and EIB report to the Commission on Investment Barriers 2023
2. Draghi report
3. 'Barr, Hegarty sound alarm on Europe's regulator encroachment' (press release, September 27, 2024)
4. 'Amundi, EDF join firms asking EU not to water down ESG rules' (BNN Bloomberg, January 8, 2025)
5. 'Smart implementation of EU sustainability reporting standards: make complying with rules easy' (multi-stakeholder statement, December 2024)
6. Commission work programme 2024 (October 17, 2023)
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