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Nigeria provides organizations four years to embrace eco-friendly reporting requirements

Nigeria on Friday stated it will oblige business to divulge their ecofriendly practices and how they handle the impacts of environment change in their financial reporting within four years or face sanctions.

Worldwide financiers are now scrutinising business for their environmental, social, and governance records. Nigeria, Africa's. largest economy and greatest oil exporter, has had a hard time to. draw in financial investments.

Nigeria last June said it would embrace rules of the. International Financial Reporting Standards associating with how. business report environment-related financial details and. climate-related disclosures.

A working group consisting of federal government regulators, company. agents and capital market operators have actually now issued a. roadmap for implementing those requirements.

It's not almost ticking boxes, head of the Financial. Reporting Council of Nigeria, Rabiu Olowo said. We want to. address greenwashing by motivating business to embed. sustainability practices into their operations, which will make. reporting much easier.

Businesses are expected to willingly abide by the rules. between 2024 and 2027. Those who fail to do so could deal with. punitive damages, Olowo said, without offering information.

Small companies have till 2030 to comply.

Nigeria is the very first African nation to adopt the requirements. but has a long history of poor environmental practices in areas. consisting of gas flaring and waste management.

Emmanuel Faber, head of International Sustainability. Standards Board, which sets sustainability requirements internationally,. stated on Friday he had secured a commitment from President Bola. Tinubu that Nigeria will make sure compliance with the guidelines.

(source: Reuters)