Clause 7 is a key provision, inserting new Part 7A into the Act. New Part 7A contains climate-related disclosure requirements for certain FMC reporting entities considered to have a higher level of accountability under existing section 461K. These entities are defined in new section 461O as climate reporting entities. Broadly, new Part 7A provides for climate reporting entities to prepare climate statements in accordance with climate standards issued by the XRB, to obtain an assurance engagement in relation to those statements to the extent that those statements are required to relate to greenhouse gas emissions, to lodge those statements with the Registrar of Financial Service Providers (the Registrar), and to keep CRD records.
New Part 7A is in 7 subparts.
Subpart 1 contains the main overview, ongoing application, and interpretation provisions for new Part 7A. New section 461O defines climate reporting entity for the purposes of identifying the entities to which new Part 7A applies, and new sections 461P and 461Q define large and large manager for the purposes of that definition.
Climate reporting entities under new section 461O(1) are required to prepare climate statements in respect of themselves, their group, or (for some overseas companies) their New Zealand business or their group’s New Zealand business. These entities include—
listed issuers of quoted equity securities or quoted debt securities:
certain other persons (for example, registered banks and licensed insurers) if they are large.
“Large”
generally means that, as at the balance date of each of the 2 preceding accounting periods, the combined assets of an entity and its subsidiaries were more than $1 billion. In the case of a licensed insurer, if the insurer is not large on account of assets it will still be large if, in each of its 2 preceding accounting periods, the combined annual gross premium revenue of the insurer and its subsidiaries was more than $250 million. “Large”
, in the case of an entity that is a body corporate incorporated outside New Zealand, looks at whether its New Zealand business, or its group’s New Zealand business, is large.
Managers of registered schemes may be climate reporting entities in respect of those schemes under new section 461O(2). (A manager may also be a climate reporting entity under new section 461O(1).) Broadly, managers of registered schemes will be climate reporting entities in respect of those schemes, and required to prepare climate statements for each separate fund of each scheme (or for the scheme itself if any liability of the manager or the scheme is not limited to a separate fund), if they are “large managers”
; the size of individual schemes or funds is immaterial. The definition of large manager in new section 461Q looks at whether the assets of schemes managed by the manager and schemes managed by authorised bodies providing that service under the manager’s licence total more than $1 billion as at the balance date of each of the manager’s 2 preceding accounting periods. If a manager is a large manager, the authorised bodies will also be large managers.
Because large and large manager are defined by reference to accounting periods, an entity may be a climate reporting entity in relation to some accounting periods but not in relation to other accounting periods.
Subpart 2 of new Part 7A relates to CRD records.
In subpart 3 of new Part 7A,—
new sections 461W to 461Z contain the obligations of climate reporting entities to prepare climate statements (discussed broadly under the notes for subpart 1 above):
new section 461ZA sets out exceptions to the obligations to prepare climate statements under any of new sections 461W to 461Z and new section 461ZB sets out conditions that an entity must meet to rely on an exception. Exceptions relate to whether the entity reasonably determines, in accordance with applicable climate standards, that the relevant activities (for example, the activities of the entity or group) are not materially affected by climate change:
new section 461ZC contains offences for knowingly failing to comply with climate standards issued by the XRB.
Subpart 4 of new Part 7A relates to assurance engagements that climate reporting entities are required to obtain under new Part 7A. New Part 7A contains 2 circumstances where an entity would be required to obtain an assurance engagement: one is in new section 461ZB (and applies if an entity wishes to rely on an exception); the other is in new section 461ZD, which relates to climate statements to the extent that those statements are required to disclose greenhouse gas emissions.
An assurance engagement under new Part 7A must be undertaken by a qualified CRD assurance practitioner: see new section 461ZE, which defines qualified CRD assurance practitioner, and new sections 461ZG to 461ZM, which relate to the carrying out of an assurance engagement, access to information by an assurance practitioner, the assurance practitioner’s report, and associated offences. Among other things,—
a qualified CRD assurance practitioner must be a natural person and a member, and subject to a code of conduct and disciplinary process, of a CRD assurance body approved by the FMA under subpart 6 of new Part 7A:
there is provision for a qualified CRD assurance practitioner to be a partnership (see new section 461ZF):
assurance engagements must be carried out in accordance with, and the assurance practitioner’s report must comply with, applicable auditing and assurance standards (see new sections 461ZG and 461ZH(1)).
In subpart 5 of new Part 7A,—
new section 461ZN requires a climate reporting entity to lodge copies of climate statements and the assurance practitioner’s report on those statements with the Registrar:
new section 461ZO requires a climate reporting entity (other than a manager in respect of climate statements prepared in relation to registered schemes) to provide information in its annual report about where climate statements, etc, can be accessed.
In subpart 6 of new Part 7A,—
new section 461ZP empowers the FMA to approve as CRD assurance bodies entities whose members are eligible to be qualified CRD assurance practitioners for the purposes of new Part 7A, and to impose such conditions on those approvals as the FMA thinks fit:
new section 461ZQ contains provisions relating to the cancellation or suspension of recognition of a CRD assurance practitioner by a CRD assurance body, and the cancellation or suspension of approval of an entity as a CRD assurance body by the FMA:
new section 461ZR relates to what happens to assurance engagements that are underway when a CRD assurance body has its approval cancelled or suspended.
Subpart 7 of new Part 7A relates to civil liability for certain contraventions of new Part 7A.