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EU countries divided on whether to delay green reporting regulations

EU countries divided on whether to delay green reporting regulations

Documents seen by revealed that the European Union's largest economies are divided over whether to weaken sustainability reporting requirements for companies. Spain and Italy defend some rules, while Germany and France wish to delay them, according documents.

The European Commission will publish an "omnibus proposal" next week, which will simplify green rules and make businesses more competitive. This is in response to the promise made by U.S. president Donald Trump to eliminate regulations.

The proposal will cover the EU's Corporate Sustainability Reporting Rules (also known as CSRD), due diligence laws, and its "taxonomy system" for labelling climate friendly investments.

In a letter sent to the Commission and seen by, the Spanish government asked Brussels not to weaken due diligence laws, which will be enforced in 2027, requiring companies to monitor human rights issues and environmental concerns within their supply chains.

The letter was signed by Spain’s Economy Minister Carlos Cuerpo and Environment Minister Sara Aagesen.

It said that "its revision should not be undertaken."

Spain said that the EU should wait until smaller companies are included in the reporting requirements for corporate sustainability before introducing them, but after the deadline, it should be mandatory for "all" companies.

In a separate letter to the European Commission, Italy's Finance Minister Giancarlo Giorgetti urged the EU to not delay the CSRD in order to meet the reporting requirements for the tens and thousands of companies that will be subject to these rules this year.

Rome, however, said that smaller firms due to report later in 2026 should be given more time and have simpler rules. The EU should also delay their due diligence policy.

The letter, dated 6th February, stated that "Companies identified potential risks arising from these new [due-diligence] requirements which could weigh down on their competitiveness."

Madrid and Rome's interventions add pressure to Brussels. Germany and France are also calling for a rewrite of some green laws. The four largest economies in the EU are Germany, France and Italy.

Germany called in December for a 2-year delay of the CSRD, which would affect 13,000 German firms. France asked the EU last month to delay its due diligence regulations indefinitely and to delay the CSRD by two years.

(source: Reuters)