KoSIF Commentary on
Korea's Final Roadmap for Mandatory Sustainability Disclosure
“KoSIF Welcomes Improvements to the
Mandatory Sustainability Disclosure Roadmap,
Calls for a Reasonable Approach to
the Scope and Duration of
Safe Harbor Provisions through Amendments to the Law
and Enforcement Decree”
On July 8, the government and the
Democratic Party of Korea held a government–party consultation and announced
the final roadmap for mandatory sustainability disclosure, hereinafter referred
to as the “mandatory ESG disclosure roadmap.
Under the roadmap, mandatory sustainability
disclosures will begin in 2028 (FY2027) for KOSPI-listed companies with
consolidated assets of KRW 10 trillion or more. The scope of application will
expand to companies with consolidated assets of KRW 5 trillion or more in 2029
(FY2028), while a further expansion to companies with KRW 2 trillion or more
will be considered in 2030 (FY2029), following an assessment of implementation.
From the outset in 2028, sustainability disclosures will be incorporated
directly into statutory disclosures under the Capital Markets Act, accompanied
by a three-year safe harbor provision. Scope 3 emissions disclosure will begin
in phases from 2031, for FY2030 reports. Third-party assurance will also become
mandatory two years after the implementation of mandatory disclosure.
The Korea Sustainability Investing Forum,
KoSIF, welcomes the fact that the final roadmap announced after the
government–party consultation has been significantly improved compared to the
draft announced by the Financial Services Commission on February 25. At the
same time, however, KoSIF remains concerned that the proposed scope and
duration of the safe harbor provision could undermine the fundamental purpose
of mandatory sustainability disclosures. KoSIF also calls for further
improvements regarding a three-year deferral of Scope 3 emissions disclosures,
which would prevent investors and stakeholders from fully identifying climate
risks for an extended period.
1. Scope of Companies Subject to
Mandatory Disclosure
Compared with the draft proposal, which
initially required disclosures only from KOSPI-listed companies with
consolidated assets of KRW 30 trillion or more beginning in 2028 (FY2027), the final
roadmap lowers the threshold to KRW 10 trillion. Based on FY2025 financial
statements, this increases the number of companies initially subject to
mandatory disclosure from 59 to 107.
The biggest problem with the draft roadmap
was that the number of companies subject to disclosure was extremely limited,
and many of them were concentrated in the financial and insurance sectors. For
this reason, KoSIF had advocated an initial threshold of KRW 5 trillion, rather
than KRW 2 trillion, taking implementation readiness into account.
Nevertheless, KoSIF welcomes the government's decision, recognizing that
establishing the mandatory disclosure regime itself is an important first step.
That said, while the government indicated
that the disclosure will consider expanding the scope to companies with
consolidated assets of KRW 2 trillion or more after evaluating implementation
during 2028–2029, KoSIF believes this expansion should ultimately be confirmed,
rather than merely reviewed, in order to remove market uncertainty.
Furthermore, discussions should begin on extending mandatory sustainability
disclosure requirements beyond KOSPI-listed companies to include KOSDAQ-listed
companies and non-listed companies above an appropriate size threshold.
2. Disclosure Channel and Safe Harbor
Provisions
The FSC's initial draft roadmap proposed
introducing sustainability disclosures through Korea Exchange (KRX) filings
before transitioning to statutory disclosures at a later stage, without
specifying when that transition would occur. By contrast, the final roadmap
provides that mandatory sustainability disclosures will be incorporated
directly into statutory disclosures through business reports under the Capital
Markets Act beginning in 2028 (FY2027), on the premise of introducing a safe
harbor provision.
Statutory disclosure is intended to ensure
a level of reliability comparable to that of financial statements, prevent ESG
washing, enhance comparability, predictability, and promote the efficient
allocation of capital and market transparency. This approach is consistent with
international developments, and KoSIF welcomes the government's decision to
align Korea's disclosure framework with global practice.
However, applying a safe harbor provision to
all sustainability disclosures for a period of three years—while potentially
facilitating a smoother transition and reducing compliance burdens—could also
weaken accountability and undermine confidence in sustainability disclosures.
The scope and duration of the safe harbor should therefore be carefully
reconsidered in conjunction with the third-party assurance system. Through
amendments to the Capital Markets Act and its Enforcement Decree, the National
Assembly should establish a balanced approach that facilitates implementation
without compromising the integrity and objectives of the mandatory
sustainability disclosure regime.
3. Deferral of Scope 3 Emissions
Disclosures
As in the draft roadmap, the final roadmap
confirms that Scope 3 disclosure will be deferred by three years from the start
of mandatory disclosure in 2028, for FY2027 reports, and will begin in 2031,
for FY2030 reports, in phases according to company size.
Accordingly, companies with consolidated
assets of KRW 30 trillion or more will begin disclosing Scope 3 emissions in
2031, those with KRW 5 trillion or more in 2032, while application to companies
with KRW 2 trillion or more will be considered in 2033.
Although the share of Scope 3 emissions
varies by industry, CDP analysis indicates that Scope 3 emissions account for
approximately 75 percent of a company's total greenhouse gas emissions on
average. Without Scope 3 information, climate-related disclosures cannot
provide a comprehensive picture of a company's actual climate-related risks.
This represents a material risk for investors as well as for customers. In
other words, without Scope 3 data, climate disclosure captures only the visible
tip of the iceberg while leaving the much larger underlying risk unexamined.
Scope 3 emissions are precisely the kind of
climate-related information that can be covered by safe harbor provisions. Therefore,
there is little justification for deferring Scope 3 disclosure for as long as
three years after mandatory disclosure begins. As recommended by the
International Sustainability Standards Board (ISSB), global investor groups,
and long-term institutional investors such as the National Pension Service of
Korea (NPS), a one-year deferral would be more appropriate.
This would allow companies to build
knowledge and experience in Scope 3 calculation. Numerous cases have shown that
deferred time is rarely used to accumulate experience; in most cases, it simply
becomes a lost time. If the government swiftly establishes the necessary policy
and technical infrastructure for Scope 3 calculation and provides
administrative and financial support, Scope 3 disclosure is achievable.
4. Third-Party Assurance
Third-party assurance is an essential
mechanism for enhancing the credibility and reliability of sustainability
disclosures. The FSC's draft roadmap contained no proposal regarding assurance.
The final roadmap, however, requires mandatory independent third-party
assurance beginning in 2030 (FY2029), two years after the commencement of
mandatory sustainability disclosures, with the necessary legal framework to be
established through amendments to the Capital Markets Act.
KoSIF welcomes this policy direction. At
the same time, KoSIF expects that the detailed institutional design—including
the scope of assurance, levels of assurance, and market entry requirements for
assurance providers—will ensure the independence, credibility, and neutrality
of the assurance framework while maintaining an efficient and well-functioning
assurance market.
High-quality sustainability information is
fundamental to building a well-functioning sustainable finance ecosystem. Such
an ecosystem enables capital to be allocated efficiently through the
availability and use of reliable sustainability information. This is precisely
why a well-designed and effectively implemented mandatory sustainability
disclosure roadmap is essential.
Since 2012, KoSIF has been at the forefront
of efforts to mandate sustainability disclosure in Korea (initially under the
framework of CSR disclosure). KoSIF will continue to work with policymakers and
market participants to ensure that Korea's disclosure framework supports the
transition of Korean industries and businesses toward a climate-resilient and
sustainable economy, while providing investors with sustainability disclosures
that are credible, decision-useful, and internationally comparable.
July 9,
2026
Korea
Sustainability Investing Forum(KoSIF)