The European Commission has released a new set of proposed sustainability reporting standards, introducing both mandatory and voluntary disclosure frameworks aimed at broadening ESG transparency across businesses of different sizes and capacities.
The mandatory standards are designed primarily for companies falling under the EU’s Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive (CSRD), requiring detailed disclosures on environmental, social, and governance impacts. These standards focus on areas including climate change, workforce practices, biodiversity, governance, and value chain transparency.
Alongside the mandatory framework, the EU also introduced voluntary sustainability reporting standards tailored for small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) and organizations not legally required to report under CSRD. The voluntary framework aims to simplify ESG reporting while helping smaller businesses respond to increasing investor, customer, and supply chain demands for sustainability data.
According to the European Commission, the new standards are intended to improve consistency, comparability, and reliability in sustainability disclosures across the European market. The initiative also seeks to reduce reporting complexity by providing structured guidance that aligns with broader EU sustainability objectives.
The proposal reflects the EU’s continued push toward standardized ESG reporting while recognizing the operational realities faced by smaller businesses. Policymakers believe the dual-framework approach can strengthen transparency without creating disproportionate compliance burdens.
The development marks another major step in Europe’s evolving sustainability reporting ecosystem, reinforcing the EU’s strategy to integrate ESG accountability more deeply into corporate governance and long-term economic planning.

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