Verification of the sustainability report

“Assurance of sustainability reporting” means the performance of procedures resulting in the opinion expressed by the statutory auditor or audit firm (or conformity assessment body accredited in accordance with Regulation (EC) No 765/2008 for the specific conformity assessment activity).

The Get It Fair “GIF ESG rating and assurance scheme” shall provide the assurance services in accordance with ISO 17029 and the additional requirements of the standard IAASB ISSA (International Standard for Sustainability Assurance) 5000.

IAASB ISSA 5000 is a standard for sustainability reporting assurance and applies irrespective of the sustainability reporting standards (GRI, EFRAG-ESRS, IFRS).

The conclusions shall distinguish two different levels of assurance:

  • limited
  • reasonable

The client, upon positive completion of the verification process, shall receive the following documents under accreditation:

  • Assurance report
  • Verification statement

Why sustainability reporting verification is important

Transparency leads to better performance. The economic benefits related to non-financial transparency tend to become more apparent on the long-term, and they appear to be larger in those countries with mandatory disclosure requirements.

Therefore, beyond compliance with regulatory framework, there is an emerging needs to provide banks, insurance and finantial organizations with, accurate, reliable and credible sustainability reporting verified by an accredited third party body.

As a result of the request of various stakeholders, organizations are urged to prepare a sustainability report in accordance with internationally recognized sustainability reporting standards. Increasingly, organizations require external assurance of the sustainability report before its disclosure.

Benefits

The verification of the sustainability report provides organizations with the following benefits:

  • Increasing transparency to investors and other stakeholders
  • Enhancing integration between non-financial and financial consideration
  • Improving support to business strategy design
  • Strengthening the link between risk management and financial performance
  • Increasing internal performance (i.e. employee satisfaction, management systems, etc.)
  • Enhancing reputation, perception by and dialogue with customers and other stakeholders
  • Improving the way Organizations are perceived in terms of accountability towards society.
  • Increasing consumers’ trust and have a positive effect on the demand side,
  • Creating new entrepreneurial opportunities and better management of externalities
  • Facilitating access to capital and reducing funding costs
  • Minimizing risks of business disruptions and, above all
  • Reducing administrative burden

In Europe, the Directive 2022/2464/EU (CSRD) establishes rules concerning the assurance of annual and consolidated sustainability reporting.

A sustainability report shall include all information necessary to understand the undertaking’s impacts on sustainability matters, and information necessary to understand how sustainability matters (governance, social, safety, environmental and ethics, anti-corruption) affect the undertaking’s development, performance and position. Information shall be qualitative and quantitative, retrospective and predictive.

Initially, the assurance of sustainability reporting shall be mandatory only for large enterprises. However, such obligation shall be progressively extended also to SMEs.