The SEC’s Climate Disclosure Rule Is a Dark Cloud Over Energy Abundance

By Stone Washington

July 23, 2024

The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) climate disclosure rule posts real problems for public companies. The SEC’s mission is to do facilitate capital formation and maintain market efficiency, but for the first time in its 90-year history, the SEC has injected political risk factors into its traditionally principles-based disclosure framework.

Leading up to the new rule, the SEC buckled under pressure from left-wing special interests to impose the first environmental disclosure mandate on public companies. If the SEC’s final rule is allowed to go into effect by the courts, it will be a financial disaster for the public markets.

My latest policy report illustrates many of the ways that U.S. firms will suffer under the SEC’s climate rule. The report was published on the same day the RealClearFoundation hosted its 2024 Energy Future Forum, where the SEC’s excessive overreach on climate policy was a point of contention.

The climate rule will require most large and mid-sized public firms to report annual and quarterly disclosures that account for an endless range of climate risk factors. This translates to approximately 3,488 firms spending upwards of $628 million on direct disclosure costs and millions on indirect costs.

Consequentially, firms will need to expend great resources hiring climate scientists, ESG experts, lawyers, and accountants to properly prepare their disclosures for SEC review, neglecting the time normally spent on enhancing their market value.  

Corporate boards will lose much of their discretionary decision making, forced to prioritize environmental risk factors over purely financial concerns. In its place, corporate boards must infuse speculative climate science to determine which climate risks warrant inclusion in their SEC disclosure.

With the SEC’s 12 new climate disclosure categories, investors will be spammed with a flood of confusing and potentially contradictory environmental data. This will undermine the ability of investors to navigate the actual meaningful risks in the markets or assess the health of a company. The doom and gloom of climate risks will imperil sensible financial analysis.

But now the SEC has run headlong into a hostile legal environment, facing multiple lawsuits from a host of disgruntled organizations and concerned investors seeking to prevent the rule’s implementation. As many as 25 state attorneys general have pursued two lawsuits against the SEC for exceeding its statutory authority and violating the major questions doctrine by promulgating climate regulation.

The Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals was chosen by the Judicial Panel on Multidistrict Litigation to consolidate nine challenges into one case against the SEC. Soon after, the SEC halted the rule’s implantation to fend off its legal challenges.

The SEC is in the unenviable position of  trying to defend the indefensible.

The SEC lacks any legislative authority to enforce its climate disclosure rule. In 1976, the SEC provided minimal updates to corporate disclosure requirements to reflect new environmental laws like the 1969 National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA). This was so that companies could adhere to NEPA’s standards in their annual SEC filings and report executive expenditures.

This is in stark contrast with today’s climate rule, which was imposed with no proper regard to the democratic will of Congress.

Proponents of the climate rule rely on loose interpretations of Section 12 of the Securities Act of 1934 and Section 7 of the Securities Act of 1933 to wrongfully assume that Congress granted it broad authority for setting disclosure criteria.

RealClearFoundation’s Energy recent Future Forum challenged the financial shakiness and investor detriment posed by ESG disclosures like the SEC’s.

During the “capital (mis)allocation” session featuring Terrence Keeley (see the video linked at top to see his part), Chairman and CEO of 1PointSix, he raised the issue over how the SEC’s rule is backdoor environmental activism writ large. Mandatory climate disclosures represent an undemocratic form of ESG policymaking that neither Congress nor the U.S. electorate actually approved.

“There are a number of decisions that society needs to make in regard to the environment. Those things need to be made democratically,” Keeley said, “not by some self-appointed elite at the Securities and ‘Emissions’ Commission that has decided in a backway [manner] that we’ve got to do this about Scope 3 emissions. That’s just not the way to make decisions. And it’s going to unfortunately be a road to less abundance, less energy independence, and less energy cleanliness ultimately.”

In response to the notion of the SEC’s serving the best interest of investors by forcing companies to disclose their climate risks, Keeley mentions that most ESG fund disclosures do not justify their purpose or meet their environmental impact. The SEC’s rule would do nothing to rectify the lack of positive environmental impact emanating from ESG funds or ESG-oriented companies.

“None of them [ESG funds] make any claim to have any impact,” Keeley asserts. “All it is trying to do is beat the MSCI index, which by itself, was created to further this ESG industrial complex. And it’s not achieving its goals.”

Keeley and I both make clear that the SEC’s rule will artificially infuse environmental consciousness into the corporate board’s decisions. This undermines their discretion to conduct proper risk management for the company.

Additionally, the greenhouse gas disclosure will provide ample informational ammunition to climate activists, who will use this as leverage to “coerce them into adopting costly decarbonization targets,” Keeley explains.

The SEC’s finalized climate disclosure rule represents the greatest regulatory detriment to corporate freedom in the agency’s history. If the rule were to survive litigation or congressional intervention, many investors would suffer from lower returns and higher prices for goods and services. The last thing investors need is costly climate disclosure spam masquerading as corporate transparency.

Stone Washington is a research fellow at the Competitive Enterprise Institute.

This article was originally published by RealClearEnergy and made available via RealClearWire.

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Bryan A
July 24, 2024 2:10 pm

Big government at work creating more government jobs for like minded democrats to bloat government even further to create even more government jobs for like minded democrats

Reply to  Bryan A
July 24, 2024 2:25 pm

Two-thirds of Republicans under 30 and 41% of all Republicans support the so-called “climate change” agenda.
https://www.pewresearch.org/short-reads/2023/08/09/what-the-data-says-about-americans-views-of-climate-change

Political parties usually go where the votes are.

Reply to  scvblwxq
July 24, 2024 5:11 pm

I wonder how many of those republicans supporting the climate change agenda get their information solely from our oh-so-unbiased media?

Reply to  scvblwxq
July 25, 2024 5:11 am

Just because Pew Research did a survey doesn’t mean it’s true. Anyone with even half a brain knows that such “research” is mediocre at best. Tiny samples don’t prove anything. One reason so many people like Trump is because he said the climate scare is a hoax.

Reply to  scvblwxq
July 25, 2024 1:11 pm

ANYBODY who “supports the climate agenda” only does so because nobody told them the costs, the limitations on their freedom, the danger it poses to national sovereignty and security, and the futility of it.

Reply to  Bryan A
July 25, 2024 5:09 am

more burros!

J Boles
July 24, 2024 2:27 pm

All this green BS going on in the UK and the USA and Aus…but then Asia, Russia, India are just not participating, and the western leftist bureaucrats think that the C02 reductions will make a difference! Insanity, it must end soon, I hope Trump can end it.

SteveZ56
Reply to  J Boles
July 24, 2024 2:36 pm

I also heard that there was a recent major discovery of oil in India, estimated to be larger than Texas’ Permian Basin. India will have every incentive NOT to participate in any international scheme to reduce CO2 emissions in the near future.

At the Republican Convention, Trump promised that the USA will “drill, baby, drill” if he is elected. Hopefully more than half of America’s voters agree with him.

Sparta Nova 4
Reply to  SteveZ56
July 25, 2024 8:59 am

Hopefully more than half of America’s voters will be allowed to vote.

July 24, 2024 2:46 pm

Coming next (assuming the courts don’t drop the hammer on this absurd “climate disclosure rule”): the SEC requires all companies they supervise to make annual reporting on their progress to meeting “Net Zero” by 2050.

Followed by a requirement to report annually on how each of the companies will transition from governance by a Board of Directors to an AI bot no later than 2055.

Failure to report, of course, will be subjected to a fine of $20 million and/or 1 year jail time for CEOs and CFOs for each occurrence.

Reply to  ToldYouSo
July 24, 2024 9:49 pm

You missed quarterly reporting on compulsory pronoun disclosure by 2025 for all boards, advisors and employees including downstream. Pronouns him and her will be inadmissible.

Reply to  ToldYouSo
July 25, 2024 5:13 am

along with a public whipping and or “dunking” in old New England style /s

Sparta Nova 4
Reply to  ToldYouSo
July 25, 2024 9:00 am

You missedd the quarterly reporting on compulsory “affirmative action” and DEI mandates.

Rud Istvan
July 24, 2024 2:59 pm

Having studied the SEC Act of 1934 at HLS, I offer three legally and personally informed opinions.

  1. Climate risk is not and never was within the SEC purview. These regulations will be struck via (at least) the major questions doctrine (WV v EPA).
  2. New SCOTUS opinion Loper Bright (repealing the Chevron deference doctrine) means they will also be struck sooner rather than later as SEC has no legal appeal recourse.
  3. That Biden thought he could get away with this is further evidence of his legal status as ‘non compos mentis’—cognitively impaired, which in other legal ventures does not, for example, allow one to sign a last will and testament. Which is why my long beloved Patricia just died intestate. We had her wished draft will started almost two years ago, but her lawyer would not later sign off, and her newish consulting neurologist agreed with her lawyer. Her anxiety psych doc had signed off as OK to dictate will two years ago, but the intervening legal drafting time (complicated will so took over 6 months to draft) overruled him. Cognitive impairment slides can be fairly fast—personal experience.
Reply to  Rud Istvan
July 24, 2024 6:22 pm

Rud, I doubt that Biden even knew about this. Who are the folks behind the scenes who have been running the Executive Branch for the last year or two?

Reply to  Retired_Engineer_Jim
July 25, 2024 1:17 pm

I think you meant “year or three and a half.”

There’s a reason the 2020 campaign had Biden tucked out of view in his basement.

Sparta Nova 4
Reply to  Rud Istvan
July 25, 2024 9:02 am

I grieve with you for your loss.

Reply to  Rud Istvan
July 25, 2024 10:52 am

Re #3, I am just now stepping into that same boat with my wife, luckily we did wills and POA’s years ago that has saved me much grief with various government entities. It’s a tough row to hoe. Getting old ain’t for the faint of heart.

mleskovarsocalrrcom
July 24, 2024 3:49 pm

More over reach, more useful idiots at work.

July 24, 2024 4:44 pm

The risk to companies is not climate change. It is government climate change policy.

July 24, 2024 5:34 pm

WIll the SEC have an approved list of ‘experts’ that companies must use or can they pick their own?

Results will vary dramatically regarding risks (or not)

July 24, 2024 9:12 pm

“If the rule were to survive litigation or congressional intervention, many investors would suffer from lower returns and higher prices for goods and services.”

Regulations are created and eradicated with a stroke of the pen. A new administration can quickly wipe the slate clean which short circuits the costly and lengthy litigation or congressional route.

Sparta Nova 4
Reply to  Ollie
July 25, 2024 9:03 am

Step functions always induce transients. Eliminating it with a stroke of the pen after it has been incorporated and integrated will have consequences.

Best not have it in place at all. It is cost without value.

July 24, 2024 10:45 pm

Since there is no extra risk from “climate” over the last 50+ years (probably less risk, according to data)…

… if they thought that weather would ever effect their business…

… all their risk assessments would already include “weather risk”

observa
July 25, 2024 12:36 am

firms will need to expend great resources hiring climate scientists, ESG experts, lawyers, and accountants to properly prepare their disclosures for SEC review, neglecting the time normally spent on enhancing their market value.  

Don’t forget the battery passports-
‘Battery passport’ call to solve electric car recycling (msn.com)

“All batteries, including EV batteries, must be regulated,”


July 25, 2024 4:54 am

“The climate rule will require most large and mid-sized public firms to report annual and quarterly disclosures that account for an endless range of climate risk factors.”

Looks like a jobs program for people pretending to be climate scientists- as there’ll have to be some pretense of legitimacy if climate risk factors are “disclosed”. I can see it now- lots of “Climate Risk Factor Scientists” consulting firms. Universities will offer degrees in it.

July 25, 2024 5:08 am

I’ll send a link to that YouTube video to all the energy/enviro/green/forestry honchos in Wokeachusetts- though of course, none will watch it.

observa
July 25, 2024 8:16 am

I note well meaning ‘Disclosure Rules’ are always somewhat asymmetric and subjective-
Gaetz grills Wray over ‘not disclosing’ Biden’s mental decline | Watch (msn.com)

John Hultquist
July 25, 2024 8:29 am

 Un-elected bureaucrats infuse the federal government, state agencies, and non-governmental groups. They impose a crushing load of schist on “we the people.” They write stifling regulations that staff members follow and thereby cover-their-butts while harassing and fining the rest of us.

John Hultquist
July 25, 2024 8:49 am

TIP — something to watch
Surface wind is still flowing from the Atlantic Ocean into West Africa. Thus, one of the precursors of hurricanes is missing. At 10,000 feet, dust is flowing out over the Atlantic, another suppressant. Peak season is eight weeks away, but ramp-up should begin, maybe in 2 weeks.

Sparta Nova 4
July 25, 2024 8:57 am

Freedom versus chaos.
Makes it clear.

July 25, 2024 2:03 pm

How does any company subject to the SEC requirements going to find and afford the personnel needed to determine the RISK FACTOR TO A THEORY THAT IS STILL JUST THAT A THEORY. Climate Change is CHASO. PERIOD. No one knows the entire set of parameters that determine “Clime Change”, No one knows the entire set of Triggers that will or could effect these hundreds of parameters nor the relationship between cause and effect. It is literally impossible to solve a system of with an unknown number of linear equations with an unknown number of variables. Worse the equations are unknown and an undetermined number of these equations are chaotic. In addition it would take years just to determine the risks that could affect the financial status of the company.