For example, proposed new Item 1501(a) of Regulation S-K would require companies to describe the board of directors’ oversight of climate-related risks, including the following, as applicable to a particular company:
While only one portion of the proposed rules is specifically focused on the topic of governance, because of the interconnectedness of all parts of the proposed rules, we encourage companies to think about governance as part of an integrated approach both to complying with all of the proposed rules and to articulating an appropriate narrative regarding the company’s overall strategy to climate-related risks and opportunities.
We expect the proposed rules to galvanize shareholder voting and activism, in particular as institutional shareholders and proxy advisory firms focus more intently on the adequacy of board and management oversight. Might voting guidelines be further modified considering the disclosures required by the proposed rules? Will an approach to climate-related risk that fully complies with adopted disclosure rules but is perceived to be a less-than-fulsome embrace of climate-related risk and disclosure lead to complaints relating to responsiveness and accountability and eventually efforts to have board or committee members replaced? We think the answer to each of these questions is likely to be “yes.”
As companies think about corporate governance through the lens of compliance with the proposed rules, they should keep potential stakeholder reaction to disclosures in mind, in addition to the systemic changes they may need to make to comply with the rules and, of course, governance that is actually appropriate and effective under the company’s particular circumstances.
The proposed rules could be read effectively to require that public company boards have an additional skill set, lest a company be required to disclose that no member of the board or applicable committee has any expertise in climate-related risks. Companies therefore should be thinking about board composition in view of this disclosure requirement. Questions a company may wish to consider include:
Individuals with the relevant climate-related experience and expertise likely will be in high demand. Accordingly, companies might benefit from prioritizing the assessment of board expertise and beginning a search for candidates if appropriate.
We expect that the adoption (or anticipated adoption) of the proposed rules will lead the boards of many public companies to form a board committee with responsibility for oversight of climate-related risks and related disclosures if they have not already, whether with sole responsibility for climate-related matters or with broader environmental, social and governance or environmental, health and safety responsibility. Boards that currently have such a committee may want to reassess the appropriateness of the committee’s responsibilities and composition in light of the proposed rules.
As companies evaluate the committee issue, questions to consider include:
The questions and challenges identified above touch just one aspect of the SEC’s proposed climate-related rules and are certainly not a comprehensive list of what public company boards will need to consider if the rules survive in substantially their current form. Regardless of the proposed rules, stakeholder support for climate-focused strategies and management requires ongoing board and executive leadership attention and execution, which we think should be driving companies to consider the matters discussed above as they may apply during the time prior to implementation of the final rules, or even in a world in which the final rules are not implemented or are implemented in a substantially scaled-back form.
Article originally published by Agenda Week on May 16, 2022 (subscription required).