Highlights from the New GRI G4 Guidelines
1. Structure and Format: There are two new GRI publications that make up G4. The first details the actual requirements for a GRI report; the principles, standard disclosures, performance indicators, etc. The second provides supporting guidance on the first.
2. In Accordance Scheme: The Level A-B-C scheme is officially gone. It's been replaced by a two-tier "in accordance with GRI" scheme. The two tiers are:
- "Core" – the easier level, it should not scare off new reporters
- "Comprehensive"– a much higher bar, kind of like the current "Level A" subject to a materiality screen
4. Strategy and Profile Disclosures: This is where the most significant changes to G3.1 have taken place. The new disclosure elements include:
- Specifically listing your material aspects (as you've determined them)
- Providing a description of your supply chain
- 10 new governance disclosures -- mostly about board oversight of sustainability-related impacts and the report content, but also including remuneration ratios comparing the top executive to the average remuneration for all other employees (by country with significant operations!)
- A new section on Ethics and Integrity
- Many other existing disclosure requirements were bulked up with additional expectations.
- GHG emissions intensity
- Energy use in your supply chain and product use
- Supply chain screening and significant impacts, both overall and specifically related to environment, labor practices, human rights and society.
- Many other existing indicators were revised (some streamlined, others expanded)
- The distinction between "core" and "additional" indicators is gone (gone with the A-B-C levels); everything is driven by the materiality assessment.
7. Sector supplements: The sector supplements themselves haven't changed, but how you use them has. You only have to report on the sector-specific performance indicators if you have determined they are material through the materiality assessment.
I hope these initial highlights are useful. There will be much more to come in NAEM's webinar on May 30, when we'll dig into the above changes and how the implications for reporters. Also, come join ERM for a free two-hour in-person download on G4 in one of seven US cities (Atlanta, Boston, Chicago, Denver, Philadelphia, Seattle, and San Francisco) in early June. If you have any questions, feel free to contact me at james.margolis@erm.com.
Topics:
Metrics & Reporting
Sustainability
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About the Author
James Margolis