Artist rendition of the Orbiting Carbon Observatory satellite OCO-2. Image by John Howard / JPL.
The United States is probably the world’s largest contributor to global climate change science and research. It provides a big chunk of ground-based data and is the largest single provider of satellite data. About a fifth of climate modelling and research comes out of American institutions. Much of this is on the chopping block.
The current American administration is proposing huge budget cuts to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, NASA, the National Science Foundation, the Environmental Protection Agency and many academic research grants and programmes focusing on the climate. Perfectly good satellites, like the Orbiting Carbon Observatory instruments, are planned to be destroyed, according to NPR. NASA alone will have €2.9 billion cut from its science budget.
The results of this will include the loss of critical data which is used by everyone from weather forecasters to farmers to insurance companies. In corporate reporting, many companies rely upon these datasets for their disclosures, risk analysis and transition plans. Much of the high-quality data collected by American government institutions is open access, free for anyone to use. Alternative sources, if even available, could be expensive and less reliable.
In recent years America has chosen to stop being a global leader in many areas. Could others pick up the slack?
China has its Fengyun and Gaofen series of satellites, which focus on meteorology and monitoring, respectively. India also has a fleet of modern Earth-observation satellites. Europe has EUMETSAT, the agency for monitoring weather, climate and the environment from space. It has a budget of €763 million, which is only about 23% of NASA’s science budget even after the cuts.
Some private companies, such as MSCI, S&P and a partnership between Intercontinental Exchange and Dun & Bradstreet, will sell climate data to businesses. Overall, though, these sources are likely to be poor substitutes compared to what we used to get.
Although the proposed dismantling of America’s climate science infrastructure has not yet been approved by Congress, it would be safe to start planning for the worst.
Want to talk green?
I can help you to stay compliant with changing sustainability reporting requirements, communicate what’s important, and find added value in the process.
info at davidjcord.com
https://www.davidjcord.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/08/cropped-David-J-Cord-2025-1x1-portrait-512x430.jpg00davidhttps://www.davidjcord.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/08/cropped-David-J-Cord-2025-1x1-portrait-512x430.jpgdavid2025-08-22 09:34:202025-08-22 09:34:20How will America’s gutting of climate science impact businesses?
Don’t make an environmental claim about your product or company unless it can pass the Greta Test. Photo by Kushal Das via Wikipedia.
Companies have been keeping an eye on two greenwashing proposals coming out of Brussels this year. One has passed and one has not. Here is what is happening with the Green Claims Directive (GCD) and the Empowering Consumers for the Green Transition (ECGT) rules.
There seems to be a pattern of reducing sustainability rules in the EU recently. Corporate sustainability reporting is being cut back via the coming CSRD update, and now rules against deceptive environmental marketing are “on pause”, to use the polite terminology.
When it comes to greenwashing, there are two different proposals in which companies should be aware. The Empowering Consumers for the Green Transition (ECGT) set rules on environmental claims while the Green Claims Directive (GCD) was to explain how claims could be verified. The plan was for the GCD to require science-based verification, labelling schemes and third-party verification.
The GCD isn’t dead, but it isn’t breathing
The European People’s Party felt the GCD was too burdensome, particularly towards microenterprises. The main problem was the requirement for third-party verification of environmental claims, which could be expensive and time-consuming. Negotiations were paused and Italy has withdrawn support for the proposal.
The Commission has clarified the GCD has not been formally withdrawn, but its status is uncertain. This occurred close to the end of Poland’s presidency of the EU, so they passed the problem on to Denmark to worry about.
There is nothing specific about the GCD in Denmark’s programme for their presidency, although they pledge to cut back on the complexity of regulations. It is fair to wait and see if the GCD will be revived, but at this point it is flatlining and companies should treat it as such.
The ECGT is alive and well
However, the GCD was only one part of the anti-greenwashing agenda. The ECGT has been passed and companies must be compliant by September 2026. This updates the Unfair Commercial Practices Directive and the Consumer Rights Directive.
(Note the ECGT pertains to more consumer protections than greenwashing, such as software updates, planned obsolescence and the right to repair. I will only discuss greenwashing here.)
The ECGT updates the other directives to prohibit some specific acts, including:
1. Displaying a sustainability label that is not based on a certification scheme or established by public authorities.
2. Making generic, unproven environmental claims.
These are vague claims that suggest good environmental performance without providing any reliable proof, such as:
environmentally friendly
eco-friendly
green
nature’s friend
ecological
environmentally correct
climate friendly
gentle on the environment
carbon friendly
energy efficient
biodegradable
biobased
conscious
sustainable
responsible
These are not black-listed terms; they are merely used as examples when a claim might need to be verified. For example, it is perfectly appropriate to use the term ‘energy efficient’ if a product meets the requirements set out in the energy labelling directive.
3. Making an environmental claim about the entire product or business when it concerns only a certain aspect of the product or business.
The rules give some examples:
Claiming a product is ‘made with recycled material’, giving the impression that the entire product is made of recycled material, when in fact only the packaging is made of recycled material.
When a company suggests it is only using renewable energy when in fact it uses multiple sources, including fossil fuels.
4. Claiming that offsetting greenhouse gas emissions makes a product neutral, reduced or positive to the environment.
These claims are allowed only when they are based on lifecycle impact assessments of the product, and not based on offsetting emissions outside the product’s value chain. The update gives a few terms to be wary of in this context:
climate neutral
CO2 neutral certified
carbon positive
climate net zero
climate compensated
reduced climate impact
limited CO2 footprint
5. Presenting requirements imposed by law as a distinctive feature of the product or service.
The example they give is:
Advertising a product as not having a specific chemical, when that chemical is already forbidden by law.
What would Greta say?
What’s next? The ECGT already includes independent third-party verification, such as for forward-looking environmental statements, but with the GCD in a coma it isn’t clear how this will work in practice. If nothing else, companies should fall back on the existing rules against deceptive marketing and use their best judgement. If you aren’t sure about a claim, ask yourself what Greta Thunberg would say.
This is a rule of thumb I suggest for clients sometimes. Once I was in a meeting with executives from a major Nordic company who had contracted me to write an article for them. They wanted a rather eyebrow-raising environmental claim in their story. I suggested they ask themselves the following question.
What would Greta Thunberg say if she read this? Would you be happy with an environmental activist such as her discussing your claim in front of the media?
The executives looked at each other and changed their minds.
Sometimes the simplest solutions are the best. If your environmental claim won’t pass the Greta test, then maybe you shouldn’t claim it.
Want to talk green?
I can help you to stay compliant with changing sustainability reporting requirements, communicate what’s important, and find added value in the process.
info at davidjcord.com
https://www.davidjcord.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/08/cropped-David-J-Cord-2025-1x1-portrait-512x430.jpg00davidhttps://www.davidjcord.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/08/cropped-David-J-Cord-2025-1x1-portrait-512x430.jpgdavid2025-07-22 13:38:172025-07-22 13:38:17Greenwashing and Greta
A Green MEP is denounced in the European Parliament for suggesting the CSRD remain unchanged (dramatised).
In my career I have read (and contributed to) thousands of annual financial reports. I think I have become quite good at efficiently getting the information I want out of them. I could not be as quick and efficient with the current EU sustainability reports. Luckily help is on the way.
The new CSRD sustainability reports are problematic. They often are too burdensome on the reporting entity and too irrelevant for the reader. This spring, the European Parliament decided to take another look at the sustainability reporting requirements with the goal of simplifying them.
This decision was broadly welcomed by the corporate world. The Greens/European Free Alliance voted against it, with understandable worry that the requirements would be watered down.
Current status
The European Commission asked EFRAG to make recommendations how to reduce the sustainability reporting burden on companies without compromising the core goal. At the end of June 2025 EFRAG sent a progress report to the Commission. Here is my brief summary based on EFRAG’s list of goals:
I. Simplification of the Double Materiality Assessment
There are too many ambiguities and uncertainties when companies do their assessments. It is becoming a compliance exercise, a checklist to follow and a process, with less focus on the outcome.
Proposed solutions
Reduce complexity
Clarify information materiality
Emphasise usefulness to decision-making
II. Better readability and inclusion into corporate reporting
Currently, the ESRS are too granular, too focused on a myriad of tiny details. There can be dozens of pages of irrelevant EU Taxonomy disclosures in a report. Also, companies can’t tell their own sustainability story because they have to focus on the tiny details.
Proposed solutions
Allow executive summary as introduction
Option to disclose most granular information in appendices
EU Taxonomy information in specific appendix
Reducing duplication of information
III. Modification of Minimum Disclosure Requirements and topical specifications
Again, the requirements are too burdensome, too granular and too ambiguous. There are too many overlapping disclosure requirements from different sections and topics.
Proposed solutions
Reduce mandatory datapoints
Clarify when disclosures are necessary and when they are voluntary
IV. Improved understandability, clarity and accessibility
Reduce voluntary disclosures
Clearly separate mandatory and non-mandatory content, restructure standards
V. Miscellaneous burden reductions and clarifications
How to account for M&A
IFRS relief
Commercially sensitive information
Non-relevant datapoints from other EU regulations
Forced to report information even when it is irrelevant or unavailable; Reduce ‘undue cost and effort’
Exclude non-material activities from calculations
Clarify boundaries and responsibilities (leasing, pension funds; operational control approach; value chain estimates or direct data collection)
EFRAG hopes to reduce the number of mandatory datapoints by 50 per cent (some whispers say they are aiming for 66 per cent), which would be great if they can pull it off without reducing the usefulness of sustainability reports. Another goal is to reduce granularity and ‘boilerplate text’ to promote narrative disclosures, which is something I’m personally looking forward to.
What’s next? Here is an updated timeline which takes into account the Commission’s pushing back their deadline for EFRAG’s suggestions by a month.
14 April 2025: Legislation postpones reporting requirements
May-July 2025: EFRAG works on Exposure Drafts to amend the ESRS
11 July 2025: Commission adopts ‘quick fix’ act so wave one companies don’t have additional reporting in 2025 and 2026, compared to 2024
August-September 2025: Publishing Exposure Drafts and public consultation
30 November 2025: EFRAG delivers advice to EU Commission on revision and simplification
31 December 2025: Unofficial goal to finalise simplification packages
Early 2026: Conceivable time for final adoption
Want to talk green?
I can help you to stay compliant with changing sustainability reporting requirements, communicate what’s important, and find added value in the process.
info at davidjcord.com
https://www.davidjcord.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/08/cropped-David-J-Cord-2025-1x1-portrait-512x430.jpg00davidhttps://www.davidjcord.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/08/cropped-David-J-Cord-2025-1x1-portrait-512x430.jpgdavid2025-07-16 14:27:502025-07-16 14:27:51Status of ESRS simplification
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