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SEC Moves to Rescind Climate Rule as States Keep the Mandate

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<p>The Securities and Exchange Commission &lpar;SEC&comma; the federal markets regulator&rpar; on May 29 proposed to wipe out its own 2024 climate disclosure rule&comma; the regulation that would have forced thousands of public companies to report greenhouse gas &lpar;GHG&comma; the emissions tied to warming&rpar; data&comma; climate risks&comma; and the financial-statement effects of severe weather&period; The proposal would <strong>rescind the rules in their entirety<&sol;strong>&comma; and a 60-day public comment window opens once the notice hits the Federal Register&period; For the largest issuers&comma; though&comma; the obligation to count and publish emissions does not vanish with the federal rule&period; It simply moves to Sacramento and Brussels&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>That is the part most wire coverage skipped&period; A company with more than a billion dollars in revenue that does business in California&comma; or that trades on an EU exchange&comma; still owes much of the same data on roughly the same timeline&period; Killing the federal mandate changes who collects the report&comma; not whether the report gets written&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<h2>The Federal Mandate the Commission Just Moved to Erase<&sol;h2>&NewLine;<p>The rule on the chopping block was adopted in March 2024 on a <strong>3-2 vote<&sol;strong>&comma; after a two-year process that drew more than 24&comma;000 comment letters&period; It required large filers to disclose direct &lpar;Scope 1&rpar; and purchased-energy &lpar;Scope 2&rpar; emissions&comma; plus governance and risk-management details&comma; inside their annual reports and registration statements&period; It was the most contested disclosure measure the agency had produced in years&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Chairman Paul S&period; Atkins framed the reversal around a single word&colon; materiality&period; In his view&comma; the agency had strayed from its core job of giving investors decision-useful facts and had instead started steering corporate behavior&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<blockquote>&NewLine;<p>SEC disclosure obligations should comply with the Commission&&num;8217&semi;s statutory authority&comma; be guided by materiality as the North Star&comma; avoid the practical effect of dictating corporate behavior&comma; and be imposed only when the expected benefits justify the likely costs and burdens&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<&sol;blockquote>&NewLine;<p>Those words&comma; from Atkins in the <a href&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;www&period;sec&period;gov&sol;newsroom&sol;press-releases&sol;2026-49-sec-proposes-rescission-climate-related-disclosure-rules" target&equals;"&lowbar;blank" rel&equals;"noopener">SEC&&num;8217&semi;s climate rule rescission release<&sol;a>&comma; are the spine of the legal case the agency now makes&colon; that the rules reach beyond what Congress authorized&comma; and that even if they were lawful&comma; the costs outrun the benefit&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<figure class&equals;"wp-block-image aligncenter featured-image" style&equals;"margin&colon;1&period;5em auto&semi;text-align&colon;center&semi;"><img class&equals;"aligncenter" src&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;budgyapp&period;com&sol;wp-content&sol;uploads&sol;2026&sol;05&sol;sec-climate-disclosure-rule-rescission-and-what-reporting-rules-still-apply-to-c&period;webp" alt&equals;"SEC climate disclosure rule rescission and what reporting rules still apply to companies&period;" style&equals;"width&colon;100&percnt;&semi;max-width&colon;800px&semi;height&colon;auto&semi;border-radius&colon;8px&semi;display&colon;block&semi;margin&colon;0 auto&semi;" &sol;><figcaption style&equals;"text-align&colon;center&semi;font-size&colon;0&period;85em&semi;color&colon;&num;888&semi;margin-top&colon;0&period;5em&semi;">SEC climate disclosure rule rescission and what reporting rules still apply to companies&period;<&sol;figcaption><&sol;figure>&NewLine;<h2>From Adoption to Abeyance&colon; How the Rule Stalled<&sol;h2>&NewLine;<p>The 2024 measure barely took a breath before the courts closed in&period; Industry groups and Republican-led states sued within days&comma; the litigation consolidated in the Eighth Circuit&comma; and the agency itself eventually stopped defending the regulation it had written&period; The retreat unfolded across five clear steps&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<ol>&NewLine;<li><strong>March 6&comma; 2024<&sol;strong> &&num;8211&semi; the Commission adopts the climate disclosure rules in a 3-2 vote&period;<&sol;li>&NewLine;<li><strong>April 4&comma; 2024<&sol;strong> &&num;8211&semi; the agency stays the rules pending consolidated litigation in the U&period;S&period; Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit&period;<&sol;li>&NewLine;<li><strong>March 27&comma; 2025<&sol;strong> &&num;8211&semi; the Commission votes to end its defense of the final rules&period;<&sol;li>&NewLine;<li><strong>September 12&comma; 2025<&sol;strong> &&num;8211&semi; the Eighth Circuit holds the petitions in abeyance until the agency either reconsiders the rules through notice-and-comment or renews its defense&period;<&sol;li>&NewLine;<li><strong>May 29&comma; 2026<&sol;strong> &&num;8211&semi; the Commission proposes full rescission&comma; opening a 60-day comment period&period;<&sol;li>&NewLine;<&sol;ol>&NewLine;<p>That timeline matters because rescission is not a press release&period; Under federal procedure&comma; unwinding a final rule takes its own rulemaking&comma; with its own comment record that can itself be litigated&period; Commissioner Caroline A&period; Crenshaw&comma; who voted against the move&comma; has argued the Commission cannot simply abandon a duly adopted rule because its membership has changed&comma; calling the approach inconsistent with the Administrative Procedure Act and historical practice&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The federal fight echoes a wider rollback of climate regulation under the current administration&period; State officials have already gone to court over the Environmental Protection Agency&&num;8217&semi;s bid to revoke the 2009 endangerment finding&comma; the legal foundation for federal emissions rules&comma; as <a href&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;budgyapp&period;com&sol;colorado-sues-trump-epa-climate-endangerment-finding-repeal&sol;" target&equals;"&lowbar;blank" rel&equals;"noopener">Colorado&&num;8217&semi;s planned litigation over the EPA climate repeal<&sol;a> shows&period; The disclosure rescission is one front in a much larger campaign&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<h2>Why the Compliance Bill Does Not Disappear<&sol;h2>&NewLine;<p>Here is the second-order story&period; A finance chief reading the SEC headline might assume the climate-reporting project is dead&period; For a large multinational&comma; it is not&period; Two other regimes already capture much of the same data&comma; and neither answers to Washington&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>California passed two laws in 2023 that survive entirely independent of the federal rule&period; The EU&&num;8217&semi;s sustainability reporting regime&comma; trimmed but not scrapped this year&comma; reaches US companies through their European operations&period; The table below lines up the three regimes a big US issuer now has to track&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<table>&NewLine;<thead>&NewLine;<tr>&NewLine;<th>Regime<&sol;th>&NewLine;<th>Who it captures<&sol;th>&NewLine;<th>Core requirement<&sol;th>&NewLine;<th>Status<&sol;th>&NewLine;<&sol;tr>&NewLine;<&sol;thead>&NewLine;<tbody>&NewLine;<tr>&NewLine;<td>SEC climate rule &lpar;federal&rpar;<&sol;td>&NewLine;<td>Most US public companies<&sol;td>&NewLine;<td>Scope 1 and 2 emissions&comma; climate risk&comma; weather effects in filings<&sol;td>&NewLine;<td>Proposed for rescission&comma; May 2026<&sol;td>&NewLine;<&sol;tr>&NewLine;<tr>&NewLine;<td>California SB 253<&sol;td>&NewLine;<td>Companies doing business in California with over &dollar;1 billion revenue<&sol;td>&NewLine;<td>Annual Scope 1 and 2 emissions disclosure<&sol;td>&NewLine;<td>In force&semi; first deadline August 10&comma; 2026<&sol;td>&NewLine;<&sol;tr>&NewLine;<tr>&NewLine;<td>California SB 261<&sol;td>&NewLine;<td>Companies doing business in California with over &dollar;500 million revenue<&sol;td>&NewLine;<td>Biennial climate financial-risk report<&sol;td>&NewLine;<td>In force&semi; first deadline delayed by injunction<&sol;td>&NewLine;<&sol;tr>&NewLine;<tr>&NewLine;<td>EU CSRD &lpar;post-Omnibus&rpar;<&sol;td>&NewLine;<td>Non-EU groups above EU turnover thresholds<&sol;td>&NewLine;<td>Standardized sustainability and climate reporting<&sol;td>&NewLine;<td>In force&comma; simplified scope<&sol;td>&NewLine;<&sol;tr>&NewLine;<&sol;tbody>&NewLine;<&sol;table>&NewLine;<h3>California&&num;8217&semi;s Two-Track Rule<&sol;h3>&NewLine;<p>SB 253&comma; the Climate Corporate Data Accountability Act&comma; makes companies doing business in the state with at least <strong>&dollar;1 billion in annual revenue<&sol;strong> disclose Scope 1 and Scope 2 emissions every year&comma; with Scope 3 &lpar;supply-chain and value-chain emissions&rpar; phasing in later&period; The California Air Resources Board &lpar;CARB&comma; the state&&num;8217&semi;s clean-air regulator&rpar; approved its initial regulation at a February 2026 hearing and set the first Scope 1 and 2 deadline for August 10&comma; 2026&comma; per the agency&&num;8217&semi;s <a href&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;ww2&period;arb&period;ca&period;gov&sol;news&sol;carb-approves-climate-transparency-regulation-entities-doing-business-california" target&equals;"&lowbar;blank" rel&equals;"noopener">climate transparency regulation announcement<&sol;a>&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>SB 261 runs alongside it&comma; requiring companies above &dollar;500 million in revenue to publish a climate-related financial-risk report every two years&period; Enforcement of its January 1&comma; 2026 deadline is paused while litigation plays out&comma; and CARB has said it will set an alternate date once the appeal resolves&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<h3>Who Crosses the Revenue Line<&sol;h3>&NewLine;<p>The reach is national&comma; not local&period; Both laws apply to any entity &&num;8220&semi;doing business&&num;8221&semi; in California&comma; a test that pulls in firms headquartered far outside the state&period; Estimates from law firms tracking the statutes put the number of affected companies in the thousands&comma; many of which would also have fallen under the federal rule&period; For those issuers&comma; the SEC&&num;8217&semi;s exit changes the cover sheet&comma; not the workload&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<h2>Brussels Still Wants the Same Numbers<&sol;h2>&NewLine;<p>The EU&&num;8217&semi;s Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive &lpar;CSRD&comma; the bloc&&num;8217&semi;s mandatory sustainability disclosure framework&rpar; was scaled back this year through an Omnibus simplification package&comma; but it was not abandoned&period; The Council signed off on the changes in February&comma; narrowing scope while keeping the core reporting duty intact&comma; as the <a href&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;www&period;consilium&period;europa&period;eu&sol;en&sol;press&sol;press-releases&sol;2026&sol;02&sol;24&sol;council-signs-off-simplification-of-sustainability-reporting-and-due-diligence-requirements-to-boost-eu-competitiveness&sol;" target&equals;"&lowbar;blank" rel&equals;"noopener">EU sustainability reporting simplification decision<&sol;a> describes&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>For US companies&comma; the revised thresholds capture non-EU parents with net turnover above 450 million euros inside the bloc and subsidiaries or branches above 200 million euros&period; A large American firm with meaningful European sales remains on the hook for climate and sustainability data under the European Sustainability Reporting Standards&comma; regardless of what the SEC does at home&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<h2>The Cost Argument at the Center of the Fight<&sol;h2>&NewLine;<p>Both sides agree the rule is expensive&period; They disagree about whether the price buys anything investors actually need&period; That single dispute&comma; cost versus informational value&comma; is what the entire rescission turns on&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>When it adopted the rule in 2024&comma; the agency itself published the numbers now used against it&period; Its <a href&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;www&period;sec&period;gov&sol;newsroom&sol;press-releases&sol;2024-31" target&equals;"&lowbar;blank" rel&equals;"noopener">2024 climate disclosure adoption release<&sol;a> laid out compliance estimates that critics call proof the burden outweighs the benefit&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<ul>&NewLine;<li><strong>&dollar;1&period;0 million<&sol;strong> in estimated first-year compliance cost for large accelerated and accelerated filers&period;<&sol;li>&NewLine;<li><strong>&dollar;862&comma;000<&sol;strong> in estimated first-year cost for all other filers&period;<&sol;li>&NewLine;<li><strong>&dollar;197&comma;000 to &dollar;739&comma;000<&sol;strong> in annual cost averaged across the first decade&comma; depending on the filer and disclosures&period;<&sol;li>&NewLine;<&sol;ul>&NewLine;<h3>The Numbers Each Side Cites<&sol;h3>&NewLine;<p>Atkins and Commissioner Hester Peirce&comma; who supports the rollback&comma; treat those figures as a burden imposed on shareholders without a matching payoff&period; They argue the data was already available through voluntary reporting and that the rule duplicated what materiality standards already require firms to disclose&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Investor advocates read the same record the opposite way&period; During the rulemaking&comma; hundreds of institutional investors managing tens of trillions of dollars backed mandatory climate disclosure&period; Environmental groups argue the cost is modest against the risk being measured&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<h3>The Authority Question<&sol;h3>&NewLine;<p>Underneath the cost math sits the harder legal claim&comma; that the agency lacked the power to write the rule at all&period; Jessye Waxman of the Sierra Club rejected that framing in the group&&num;8217&semi;s <a href&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;www&period;sierraclub&period;org&sol;press-releases&sol;2026&sol;05&sol;sec-moves-toward-rescinding-climate-disclosure-rule-retreating-further" target&equals;"&lowbar;blank" rel&equals;"noopener">statement on the proposed rescission<&sol;a>&comma; arguing the regulator&&num;8217&semi;s authority here is plain&period; &&num;8220&semi;Investors have long recognized climate risk as financially material&comma;&&num;8221&semi; Waxman said&comma; casting the data as exactly the kind of information securities law exists to surface&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<h2>What Companies Are Doing While the Comment Clock Runs<&sol;h2>&NewLine;<p>For corporate compliance teams&comma; the practical answer is to keep building&period; The infrastructure needed for California and the EU is largely the same plumbing the federal rule would have demanded&colon; emissions inventories&comma; internal controls over climate data&comma; and assurance-ready reporting&period; Tearing it down now to save money would only mean rebuilding it before the August California deadline&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The smart play looks less like relief and more like triage across overlapping rulebooks&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<ul>&NewLine;<li>Map which entities cross the California and EU thresholds&comma; since those deadlines are live regardless of the SEC outcome&period;<&sol;li>&NewLine;<li>Keep emissions data systems running rather than mothballing them during the comment period&period;<&sol;li>&NewLine;<li>Treat voluntary investor demand as its own driver&comma; because large asset managers continue to ask for the numbers&period;<&sol;li>&NewLine;<&sol;ul>&NewLine;<p>If the rescission is finalized after the 60-day window&comma; the federal filing requirement ends and the patchwork hardens into the default&period; If the comment record or fresh litigation slows it&comma; companies that paused their reporting programs will be the ones scrambling&period; Either way&comma; the data still gets collected&semi; the only open question is which government desk it lands on&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<h2>Frequently Asked Questions<&sol;h2>&NewLine;<h3>Has the SEC climate disclosure rule been officially repealed&quest;<&sol;h3>&NewLine;<p>No&period; As of May 29&comma; 2026&comma; the agency has only proposed to rescind the rule&period; A 60-day public comment period must run after the proposal is published in the Federal Register&comma; and the Commission must finalize the rescission through formal rulemaking before the requirement is legally gone&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<h3>Do US companies still have to report greenhouse gas emissions&quest;<&sol;h3>&NewLine;<p>Many do&period; Even if the federal rule is rescinded&comma; companies that meet California&&num;8217&semi;s revenue thresholds or fall within the EU sustainability regime through their European operations must still measure and disclose emissions and climate risk on their own timelines&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<h3>What is the SB 253 reporting deadline&quest;<&sol;h3>&NewLine;<p>California&&num;8217&semi;s Air Resources Board set the first Scope 1 and Scope 2 emissions disclosure deadline under SB 253 for August 10&comma; 2026&comma; following the regulation it approved at its February 2026 hearing&period; Scope 3 emissions phase in later&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<h3>What revenue level triggers California&&num;8217&semi;s climate disclosure laws&quest;<&sol;h3>&NewLine;<p>SB 253 applies to companies doing business in California with more than &dollar;1 billion in annual revenue&period; SB 261&comma; which requires a biennial climate financial-risk report&comma; applies to companies with more than &dollar;500 million in annual revenue&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<h3>Does the EU CSRD still apply to US companies after the 2026 simplification&quest;<&sol;h3>&NewLine;<p>Yes&period; The Omnibus package narrowed the directive&&num;8217&semi;s scope but kept it in force&period; US groups with EU net turnover above 450 million euros&comma; and subsidiaries or branches above 200 million euros&comma; remain subject to sustainability and climate reporting under the European standards&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<h3>Why is the SEC rescinding the rule&quest;<&sol;h3>&NewLine;<p>The Commission says the rules exceed its statutory authority&comma; stray from a materiality-based disclosure approach&comma; and impose costs on companies and shareholders that are not justified by the benefit to investors&period; Chairman Paul S&period; Atkins has framed materiality as the agency&&num;8217&semi;s guiding standard&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<h3>When does the SEC comment period close&quest;<&sol;h3>&NewLine;<p>The public comment period stays open for 60 days following publication of the proposing release in the Federal Register&period; The agency cannot finalize the rescission until that window closes and it reviews the comments&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><script type&equals;"application&sol;ld&plus;json">&NewLine;&lbrace;&NewLine; "&commat;context"&colon; "https&colon;&sol;&sol;schema&period;org"&comma;&NewLine; "&commat;type"&colon; "FAQPage"&comma;&NewLine; "mainEntity"&colon; &lbrack;&NewLine; &lbrace;&NewLine; "&commat;type"&colon; "Question"&comma;&NewLine; "name"&colon; "Has the SEC climate disclosure rule been officially repealed&quest;"&comma;&NewLine; "acceptedAnswer"&colon; &lbrace;&NewLine; "&commat;type"&colon; "Answer"&comma;&NewLine; "text"&colon; "No&period; As of May 29&comma; 2026&comma; the agency has only proposed to rescind the rule&period; A 60-day public comment period must run after the proposal is published in the Federal Register&comma; and the Commission must finalize the rescission through formal rulemaking before the requirement is legally gone&period;"&NewLine; &rcub;&NewLine; &rcub;&comma;&NewLine; &lbrace;&NewLine; "&commat;type"&colon; "Question"&comma;&NewLine; "name"&colon; "Do US companies still have to report greenhouse gas emissions&quest;"&comma;&NewLine; "acceptedAnswer"&colon; &lbrace;&NewLine; "&commat;type"&colon; "Answer"&comma;&NewLine; "text"&colon; "Many do&period; Even if the federal rule is rescinded&comma; companies that meet California's revenue thresholds or fall within the EU sustainability regime through their European operations must still measure and disclose emissions and climate risk on their own timelines&period;"&NewLine; &rcub;&NewLine; &rcub;&comma;&NewLine; &lbrace;&NewLine; "&commat;type"&colon; "Question"&comma;&NewLine; "name"&colon; "What is the SB 253 reporting deadline&quest;"&comma;&NewLine; "acceptedAnswer"&colon; &lbrace;&NewLine; "&commat;type"&colon; "Answer"&comma;&NewLine; "text"&colon; "California's Air Resources Board set the first Scope 1 and Scope 2 emissions disclosure deadline under SB 253 for August 10&comma; 2026&comma; following the regulation it approved at its February 2026 hearing&period; Scope 3 emissions phase in later&period;"&NewLine; &rcub;&NewLine; &rcub;&comma;&NewLine; &lbrace;&NewLine; "&commat;type"&colon; "Question"&comma;&NewLine; "name"&colon; "What revenue level triggers California's climate disclosure laws&quest;"&comma;&NewLine; "acceptedAnswer"&colon; &lbrace;&NewLine; "&commat;type"&colon; "Answer"&comma;&NewLine; "text"&colon; "SB 253 applies to companies doing business in California with more than &dollar;1 billion in annual revenue&period; SB 261&comma; which requires a biennial climate financial-risk report&comma; applies to companies with more than &dollar;500 million in annual revenue&period;"&NewLine; &rcub;&NewLine; &rcub;&comma;&NewLine; &lbrace;&NewLine; "&commat;type"&colon; "Question"&comma;&NewLine; "name"&colon; "Does the EU CSRD still apply to US companies after the 2026 simplification&quest;"&comma;&NewLine; "acceptedAnswer"&colon; &lbrace;&NewLine; "&commat;type"&colon; "Answer"&comma;&NewLine; "text"&colon; "Yes&period; The Omnibus package narrowed the directive's scope but kept it in force&period; US groups with EU net turnover above 450 million euros&comma; and subsidiaries or branches above 200 million euros&comma; remain subject to sustainability and climate reporting under the European standards&period;"&NewLine; &rcub;&NewLine; &rcub;&comma;&NewLine; &lbrace;&NewLine; "&commat;type"&colon; "Question"&comma;&NewLine; "name"&colon; "Why is the SEC rescinding the rule&quest;"&comma;&NewLine; "acceptedAnswer"&colon; &lbrace;&NewLine; "&commat;type"&colon; "Answer"&comma;&NewLine; "text"&colon; "The Commission says the rules exceed its statutory authority&comma; stray from a materiality-based disclosure approach&comma; and impose costs on companies and shareholders that are not justified by the benefit to investors&period; Chairman Paul S&period; Atkins has framed materiality as the agency's guiding standard&period;"&NewLine; &rcub;&NewLine; &rcub;&comma;&NewLine; &lbrace;&NewLine; "&commat;type"&colon; "Question"&comma;&NewLine; "name"&colon; "When does the SEC comment period close&quest;"&comma;&NewLine; "acceptedAnswer"&colon; &lbrace;&NewLine; "&commat;type"&colon; "Answer"&comma;&NewLine; "text"&colon; "The public comment period stays open for 60 days following publication of the proposing release in the Federal Register&period; The agency cannot finalize the rescission until that window closes and it reviews the comments&period;"&NewLine; &rcub;&NewLine; &rcub;&NewLine; &rsqb;&NewLine;&rcub;&NewLine;<&sol;script><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><strong><em>Disclaimer&colon;<&sol;em><&sol;strong> <em>This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal&comma; accounting&comma; or investment advice&period; Securities disclosure and climate-reporting obligations carry significant compliance risk and vary by jurisdiction and company&period; Consult a qualified legal or financial professional before acting&period; Figures and regulatory status are accurate as of publication on May 30&comma; 2026&period;<&sol;em><&sol;p>&NewLine;

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