Introduction
We are the chief executives of the global professional accountancy bodies listed below and members of The Prince of Wales’s Accounting for Sustainability Project (A4S) Accounting Bodies Network. We represent over 2.5 million professional accountants and students across 179 countries. We call upon the accountancy profession to act now to help the organizations they work with respond to climate change with the urgency and scale required.
The impacts of climate change are already being felt throughout the world and urgent action is needed to limit its negative effects. With climate change come potentially profound negative economic consequences including impacts on production, financial stability, living standards and employment, and more widely on social cohesion and political stability. We recognize that mitigation and adaptation will rely, to a very substantial degree, on both macro and micro economic policies and the associated market mechanisms into which accounting practices are embedded. Climate change nevertheless presents transformation opportunities.
Role of the accountancy profession
The accountancy profession can play a significant role in achieving both climate change mitigation and adaptation at individual business, industry sector and economy-wide levels. We acknowledge that these are multifaceted challenges and will work with other professions and stakeholders in pursuit of solutions.
Our profession can contribute positively. Professional accountants have a responsibility to act in the public interest. Many argue that this responsibility must now include helping organizations to address climate change.
We frequently use our skills and expertise to help deliver meaningful change and we are now applying these to the uncharted challenges that climate change presents. Identifying material risks with financial consequences and providing the information needed to make decisions are the domain of the accountancy profession. This includes providing relevant financial and strategic analysis, disclosure, scenario analysis and assurance to help organizations generate and preserve value. We can therefore be influential in driving sustainable behaviours. Acting together with organizations of all types, we can help to deliver environmental, social and economic sustainability.
Better disclosure will facilitate more informed decision making while enabling market forces to drive efficient allocation of capital and support a smooth and just transition to a net zero greenhouse gas emissions economy. Our profession can play an important role in ensuring transparency and appropriate disclosure around climate related risks and opportunities, which in turn will help to maintain financial stability.
Support for a favourable policy and regulatory context
The regulatory framework in any jurisdiction needs to provide stability and future certainty to enable the necessary transition. To encourage and achieve business investment in technology and innovation, decarbonization strategies, budgets and targets must be established to allow for effective planning. Policy certainty is essential if we are to attain motivating action across the private sector.
Both transition to net zero emissions and climate change adaptation measures are clearly linked to other areas of public policy, especially those directed at economic development. Our organizations advocate, and will support, a more integrated approach to policy development so that it is consistent with net zero emissions and climate change adaptation goals.
With a vital role to play, professional accountants should commit to:
As the chief executives of the global professional accountancy bodies, we commit to:
As influential members of every sector of the economy, professional accountants are uniquely positioned to help effect meaningful and positive change in a collective effort.
The accountancy profession has a crucial role to play in addressing climate change. We call upon our members to play their part.
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