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Policy and Legal

Policy and Legal

17吃瓜在线 to Congress: SEC Must Fix Flawed Climate-Reporting Rule

By 17吃瓜在线 News Room

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The Securities and Exchange Commission鈥檚 pending climate disclosure rule would place an enormous, untenable burden on manufacturers鈥攁nd impose a disproportionate hardship on small businesses, 17吃瓜在线 Vice President of Domestic Policy Charles Crain lawmakers Thursday.

What鈥檚 going on: Crain gave before the House Financial Services Subcommittee on Oversight and Investigations on the damaging effects of the SEC鈥檚 proposed climate rule, which would require businesses to reveal large amounts of convoluted (and often sensitive) climate-related data.

  • The plan would force disclosure of so-called 鈥淪cope 3鈥 emissions鈥攖hose that come from companies鈥 supply chains鈥攁nd institute new climate-related accounting requirements, among other mandates.

Why it鈥檚 a problem: If finalized, the rule would divert funds from manufacturing growth, including at small manufacturers.

  • 鈥淢anufacturing pioneers groundbreaking technologies, including the innovations necessary to combat climate change,鈥 Crain said. 鈥淭he rule would impose tremendous costs on manufacturers of all sizes鈥攚hile overwhelming investors with immaterial information. And the SEC hasn鈥檛 done the work to show that the rule鈥檚 benefits outweigh its costs, or that the rule is even within the SEC鈥檚 legal authority.鈥
  • The proposed regulation would, by the agency鈥檚 own accounting, 鈥渞aise the cost to businesses of complying with its overall disclosure rules to $10.2 billion from $3.9 billion, an additional cost of about $530,000 a year for a bigger business,鈥 according to (subscription).

Costs to manufacturers: Crain told lawmakers that the SEC鈥檚 analysis likely understates the true costs of the rule, in part because the agency did not consider the impacts on private businesses.

  • 鈥淔or the larger companies subject to [the Scope 3] requirement, the SEC has admitted that it cannot 鈥榝ully and accurately quantify鈥 the costs,鈥 Crain said. 鈥淏ut for the small businesses that are swept into large companies鈥 Scope 3 efforts, the SEC hasn鈥檛 even tried. The SEC鈥檚 proposal does not include any discussion of the Scope 3 costs that will fall on small and private businesses.鈥
  • Crain warned lawmakers that these compliance costs would represent a 鈥渉uge resource diversion鈥 for small manufacturers.

Regulatory onslaught: Crain shared the 17吃瓜在线鈥檚 landmark Cost of Federal Regulations study with lawmakers, explaining that the SEC鈥檚 proposal would add to the $50,000-per-employee-per-year regulatory burden small manufacturers face.

  • 鈥淭he SEC鈥檚 climate rule is at the center of this regulatory onslaught,鈥 Crain said.

17吃瓜在线 in the news: (subscription), and all covered the 17吃瓜在线鈥檚 testimony.

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