European Union Core Reporting Directives
United Kingdom Frameworks
Climate and Environmental Specific Regulations
Why Multiple Frameworks Create a Data Challenge
Common Implementation Challenges and How to Address Them
Taking the First Step
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)

These are The best software to comply with ESG regulations in 2025 (not ranked in any particular order):
The regulatory shift happening across Europe and the UK isn't optional anymore. Companies that haven't started organizing their ESG information are already falling behind in contracts, financing rounds, and market access.
This isn't about being "better for the planet." It's about staying competitive when clients, investors, and governments demand proof of how your operations affect human rights, climate, and governance structures.
We've built this guide to cover the most relevant ESG frameworks currently shaping business across Europe and the UK. Each regulation comes with specific requirements, deadlines, and scope.
The challenge isn't just understanding them individually. It's managing the data infrastructure needed to comply with all of them without duplicating effort or creating gaps in your reporting.
The reality is straightforward: regulations like CSRD, CSDDD, EU Taxonomy, and the UK's SDR all require overlapping data sets.
If your systems aren't built to collect ESG information once and distribute it across multiple frameworks, you're setting yourself up for inefficiency, errors, and compliance failures.
This guide breaks down twelve key regulations, organized by what they actually require from your business.
No fluff, no jargon, just the facts you need to build a compliance strategy that works.
The Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive is Europe's flagship sustainability reporting framework. It replaces the older Non-Financial Reporting Directive and dramatically expands both who must report and what they must disclose.
Who's in scope:
What makes CSRD different is the concept of double materiality. Companies must disclose:
This isn't a choice between perspectives. You need both.
The data requirements are extensive and cover:
CSRD reports must be audited. That means your data collection processes, methodologies, and evidence trails need to withstand external scrutiny.
The reports become part of your management report, giving them the same legal weight as financial statements.
Missing CSRD deadlines or providing incomplete information can result in:
The European Sustainability Reporting Standards form the technical backbone of CSRD reporting. These standards define exactly what information companies must disclose and how to present it.
ESRS structure includes:
Companies can't cherry-pick which standards to follow. You must assess materiality across all topics and report on those determined material to your business.
Even topics deemed non-material require a brief explanation of why they were excluded.
The environmental standards cover:
Each requires quantitative data, qualitative explanations, and forward-looking information about targets and transition plans.
Social standards address:
This includes diversity metrics, health and safety data, human rights due diligence findings, and information about working conditions throughout your supply chain.
The governance standard focuses on business conduct, including:
What makes ESRS particularly demanding is the requirement to provide both retrospective data and forward-looking commitments.
You can't just report what happened last year. You need transition plans showing how you'll address material issues over the next 5-10 years.
The Corporate Sustainability Due Diligence Directive introduces mandatory human rights and environmental due diligence across company operations and value chains. This isn't just about reporting. It's about taking action to prevent and remediate adverse impacts.
Who's covered:
Core requirements include:
Once impacts are identified, companies must take appropriate measures to prevent or mitigate potential impacts and bring actual impacts to an end or minimize them. This might mean:
CSDDD also requires:
Enforcement mechanisms include:
CSDDD interacts with other EU regulations like the Conflict Minerals Regulation, Battery Regulation, and Deforestation Regulation.
Where more specific requirements exist, those take precedence, but CSDDD sets a baseline across sectors.
The EU Taxonomy is a classification system defining which economic activities qualify as environmentally sustainable. It's not primarily a reporting framework, though it does include disclosure requirements.
The Taxonomy establishes six environmental objectives:
For an activity to be Taxonomy-aligned, it must:
Large companies subject to CSRD must disclose what proportion of their turnover, capital expenditure, and operating expenditure comes from Taxonomy-aligned activities.
Financial market participants must disclose the Taxonomy alignment of their investments.
The technical screening criteria are highly detailed and sector-specific. For example, the criteria for manufacturing cement specify:
Companies often find that activities they consider sustainable don't meet the Taxonomy's strict criteria. This creates a disclosure gap between what companies claim about sustainability and what they can formally report as Taxonomy-aligned.
The Taxonomy directly affects access to sustainable finance:
Non-EU companies aren't directly required to report Taxonomy alignment. But if you want to access EU sustainable finance or work with EU clients subject to the Taxonomy, you'll need to demonstrate alignment to stay competitive.
The Sustainable Finance Disclosure Regulation applies to financial market participants and financial advisers in the EU.
If you're an asset manager, pension fund, insurance company, or investment adviser, SFDR shapes what you must disclose about how you integrate sustainability into your processes.
SFDR introduces two disclosure levels:
Investment products fall into three categories:
For Article 8 and 9 products, financial market participants must produce detailed pre-contractual disclosures explaining:
Principal Adverse Impact (PAI) statements require large financial market participants to disclose how their investment decisions create negative effects across:
SFDR challenges:
Despite its imperfections, SFDR has become the dominant framework for sustainable investment product disclosure in Europe.
It influences product design, marketing, and reporting across the financial services industry.
Non-EU asset managers offering products to EU investors must comply with SFDR if they want to market their products as sustainable within the EU.
The UK Sustainability Disclosure Requirements represent the UK's post-Brexit approach to sustainable finance regulation. Developed by the Financial Conduct Authority, SDR focuses on asset managers and investment products.
SDR introduces four voluntary sustainability labels:
To use a sustainability label or ESG-related terms in product naming and marketing, firms must provide:
Product-level disclosures expand on climate-related financial reporting to cover:
Entity-level disclosures require firms to report on:
The anti-greenwashing rule applies to all FCA-authorized firms from May 2024. Any sustainability claim in client or prospect communications must be:
SDR currently applies to:
Portfolio management services and overseas funds are currently out of scope, though consultations on extending coverage are underway.
Phased implementation timeline:
SDR draws on international standards including TCFD, ISSB, SASB, and GRI, while maintaining a principle-based approach that differs from the more prescriptive EU regulations.
The UK's Streamlined Energy and Carbon Reporting framework requires large UK companies to report on energy use and carbon emissions in their annual reports.
SECR applies to:
Required disclosures include:
The required disclosure covers Scope 1 and Scope 2 emissions, with Scope 3 reporting recommended but not mandatory.
Energy consumption must be reported in kWh.
SECR replaced the Carbon Reduction Commitment Energy Efficiency Scheme and combined it with existing reporting requirements for quoted companies, creating a single framework.
While SECR's requirements are less extensive than CSRD, UK companies should consider it a baseline.
Many are already subject to more demanding frameworks through:
Compliance considerations:
The Task Force on Climate-related Financial Disclosures framework, while technically voluntary at the global level, has become mandatory for many companies through national implementation.
In the UK, TCFD-aligned disclosures are mandatory for:
TCFD organizes climate-related disclosures around four pillars:
Key requirements include:
TCFD's global influence:
Companies already reporting under TCFD have a head start on other climate-related frameworks, as the core structure and requirements align closely with newer regulations.
The UK Sustainability Reporting Standard is currently in development as the UK's response to the ISSB's global baseline standards.
When finalized, SRS will replace existing voluntary frameworks with mandatory sustainability reporting requirements.
Current status:
Expected SRS structure:
Implementation approach:
Software to comply with UK SRS will need to:
The relationship between SRS and CSRD will be important for companies operating in both jurisdictions:
The UK is positioning SRS to maintain international connectivity while allowing for UK-specific adaptations. This balance between alignment and sovereignty will shape the final requirements.
The EU's Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism isn't a disclosure framework, but it has major implications for how companies track and report emissions data.
CBAM applies a carbon price to imports of carbon-intensive goods into the EU.
Initially covered sectors:
The scope may expand to other sectors in future phases.
Two-phase implementation:
Transitional phase (through 2025):
Definitive phase (from 2026):
Calculating embedded emissions requires:
For UK companies exporting to the EU, CBAM creates new obligations:
Carbon price adjustments:
Non-compliance consequences:
The UK operates its own carbon pricing mechanisms separate from the EU Emissions Trading System since Brexit. Understanding these requirements is essential for UK companies in covered sectors.
The UK Emissions Trading Scheme (UK ETS) covers:
Installations in scope must:
Covered installations need robust systems including:
Potential expansion:
Beyond the ETS, additional carbon pricing mechanisms exist:
Carbon Price Support (CPS):
Climate Change Levy (CCL):
Software for UK carbon tax compliance must handle:
International considerations:
Here's the reality: every regulation we've covered requires ESG data, but each asks for it slightly differently.
CSRD wants double materiality assessments. CSDDD demands due diligence documentation.
SFDR needs PAI indicators. TCFD requires scenario analysis.
The temptation is to treat each framework as a separate project with its own data collection process. This leads to:
The typical compliance nightmare:
The underlying information these frameworks need overlaps substantially:
The solution isn't trying to find a perfect framework that covers everything. It's building a data infrastructure that:
This means:
Otherwise, you're setting up a compliance nightmare that gets worse as more regulations come into force.
Each new framework adds another layer of complexity to an already unmanageable system.
Companies that can't demonstrate ESG compliance are being excluded from opportunities. The market has shifted, and the consequences are tangible.
Major corporations now require sustainability data from suppliers before awarding contracts.
Public procurement increasingly includes ESG criteria. Investment funds screen for regulatory compliance before allocating capital.
Having your ESG data organized means you can:
Banks and investors increasingly tie financing terms to ESG performance. This isn't future thinking. It's happening now.
Sustainability-linked loans offer:
Green bonds require:
Private equity firms conduct:
Companies with robust ESG data management can access these financing instruments and negotiate better terms based on demonstrated performance.
Those without the data infrastructure to support these claims pay a premium or lose access entirely.
ESG regulations force companies to identify risks they might otherwise overlook. The compliance process itself creates value.
Climate scenario analysis reveals:
Human rights due diligence uncovers:
Pollution monitoring prevents:
The data collection and analysis required for compliance often reveals operational inefficiencies, procurement risks, and exposure to regulatory changes.
Companies that view compliance purely as a reporting exercise miss the strategic value of this insight.
Once you've built systems to collect and manage ESG data for one framework, extending to others becomes significantly easier.
The initial investment in data infrastructure pays off through reduced cost and effort for each additional reporting requirement.
Companies that centralize ESG data report:
The efficiency gains compound as more regulations come into force.
Each new framework becomes easier to implement because the underlying data infrastructure already exists.
Transparent, verified ESG reporting builds trust with customers, employees, investors, and communities.
Companies that can back up their sustainability claims with audited data have credibility that marketing statements alone can't provide.
The consequences of unsupported claims:
The anti-greenwashing provisions in regulations like SDR and CSRD mean vague sustainability statements without supporting data are increasingly risky.
The bar for what constitutes acceptable disclosure has risen dramatically.
ESG data collected for regulatory compliance has strategic value beyond reporting. This is where the real competitive advantage emerges.
Emissions data identifies:
Supply chain due diligence reveals:
Workforce data informs:
Companies that integrate ESG data into business decision-making gain insights their competitors lack.
This isn't about compliance for its own sake. It's about using regulatory requirements to drive better business outcomes.
The biggest challenge most companies face is getting accurate, complete ESG data. Information often sits in different systems, departments, or external parties.
Common data problems:
How to address this:
ESG compliance requires knowledge spanning sustainability, regulatory interpretation, data management, and auditing.
Most companies don't have these skills in-house and can't afford to hire specialists for every area.
The expertise dilemma:
How to address this:
ESG data collection touches every part of the organization.
Getting these functions to coordinate is often harder than the technical requirements.
Who owns what:
How to address this:
Attempting to manage ESG compliance through spreadsheets becomes unmanageable quickly. But implementing a full-scale ESG management system is expensive and time-consuming.
The technology trap:
How to address this:
ESG regulations are evolving rapidly.
Standards get updated, new frameworks emerge, and implementation guidance changes.
The moving target problem:
How to address this:
We're not auditors or consultants.
We're a solution built for companies that need to collect, manage, and distribute ESG data across multiple frameworks without creating duplicate work or compliance gaps.
The challenge we address is fundamental: companies need to respond to CSRD, CSDDD, Taxonomy, SDR, TCFD, SECR, CBAM, and more, all drawing on overlapping data sets. Treating each as a separate project creates inefficiency, inconsistency, and risk.
Our platform centralizes ESG information in a single workspace. Data gets collected once, validated against relevant methodologies, and automatically distributed to whatever framework you need to report against.
Whether you're preparing:
You're working from the same underlying data. No duplication, no inconsistency, no reconciliation headaches.
This eliminates common problems:
We focus on the practical aspects of compliance that companies struggle with:
Supplier data collection and validation:
Emissions calculations across Scopes 1, 2, and 3:
Due diligence workflow management:
Report generation aligned with specific frameworks:
Evidence documentation for audit trails:
The automation handles routine data processing and distribution, freeing your team to focus on analysis, strategy, and continuous improvement.
Updates to regulations or standards get incorporated without rebuilding your entire reporting process.
Most importantly, we recognize that ESG compliance isn't separate from business operations. The same data that goes into regulatory reports should inform strategic decisions about:
Companies using our platform report:
But the real value is turning sustainability from a compliance burden into a strategic advantage through better information management.
When your ESG data infrastructure works properly, compliance becomes easier and the insights become more valuable.
The scope of ESG regulations can feel overwhelming, especially if you're starting from limited existing reporting. Breaking down the challenge into manageable steps makes it achievable.
Start by assessing which frameworks apply to your company based on:
Not every regulation will be relevant, and not all have the same urgency. Prioritize based on:
Compare what data you currently have against what your priority frameworks require. This reveals:
Common gaps include:
Suppliers, customers, and partners all play a role in ESG compliance.
The earlier you start conversations about data sharing and expectations, the smoother implementation will be.
Key engagement activities:
Clear roles, responsibilities, and decision-making processes prevent projects from stalling when cross-functional issues arise.
Essential governance elements:
Invest in data infrastructure and systems that support multiple frameworks rather than point solutions for individual regulations.
System requirements:
The initial investment is higher, but the long-term efficiency gains and flexibility justify the cost. Building separate systems for each framework costs more in the long run.
Don't wait for perfect data or complete systems before starting. Begin reporting with the best information you have:
Auditors and regulators understand that ESG reporting maturity is a journey.
What matters is demonstrating progress and having a credible plan for improvement.
Finally, recognize that ESG compliance isn't a project with an end date. It's an ongoing capability your company needs to build and maintain.
The regulations will evolve:
Stakeholder expectations will increase:
Your own business will change:
Building adaptable systems and processes now sets you up for long-term success.
The companies that treat this as a one-time compliance exercise will find themselves constantly playing catch-up.
It depends on your size, legal structure, geographic presence, and sector. CSRD and CSDDD have specific thresholds based on employees and turnover.
UK frameworks apply to companies incorporated or operating in the UK.
Financial services firms face different requirements than manufacturers. The first step is mapping which frameworks actually apply to your specific situation rather than assuming all regulations are relevant.
Yes, and you should. While each framework has specific disclosure requirements, the underlying data overlaps significantly.
Emissions data, workforce information, supplier due diligence, and governance structures apply across multiple regulations.
The key is collecting and managing this data in a way that allows distribution to different frameworks without duplication or inconsistency.
Consequences vary by regulation and jurisdiction.
CSRD non-compliance can result in fines, audit qualifications, and director liability in some member states. CSDDD includes fines up to 5% of global turnover.
UK frameworks have their own penalty regimes. Beyond formal penalties, non-compliance risks losing contracts, financing access, and market position as counterparties increasingly require ESG compliance.
It varies dramatically based on starting point, organizational complexity, and scope. Companies with existing sustainability reporting and decent data management might implement core frameworks in 6-12 months.
Those starting from scratch typically need 18-24 months to build robust systems. The key is starting early, building incrementally, and not waiting for perfection before beginning reporting.
Most companies need both.
External expertise helps with methodology development, framework interpretation, and specific technical challenges. But ongoing compliance requires internal capabilities.
The optimal approach is typically building core internal competencies while using consultants strategically for specialized needs.
Over-reliance on consultants creates cost and knowledge dependencies, while going entirely alone leads to mistakes and inefficiency.
Expect continued expansion of scope, more detailed requirements, and greater harmonization between frameworks.
The UK will likely adopt ISSB-based standards that align more closely with CSRD.
CSDDD may expand to more sectors and smaller companies.
CBAM will likely extend to additional product categories. Building flexible systems that can adapt to regulatory changes is more important than optimizing for current requirements alone.
Carbon footprint calculation analyzes all emissions generated throughout a product’s life cycle, including raw material extraction, production, transportation, usage, and disposal.
The most recognized methodologies are:
Digital tools like Dcycle simplify the process, providing accurate and actionable insights.
Some strategies require initial investment, but long-term benefits outweigh costs.
Investing in carbon reduction is not just an environmental action, it’s a smart business strategy.