
In March 2022, the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) proposed a rule requiring public companies to disclose climate‐related information in their registration statements and annual reports. This rule proposal was broad and unprecedented. It sought disclosure of a company’s climate‐related risks; climate‐related effects on the company’s strategy, business model, and outlook; the company’s board and management oversight of climate‐related issues; the company’s plans for energy transition; and the company’s greenhouse gas emissions (including not only its direct emissions but also the “indirect” emissions of companies it buys from or sells to), among other things.
This rule proposal intended to create an extensive parallel disclosure regime relating to the impact of climate change on a company and the company’s impact on the environment. By the SEC’s estimates, the rule would have more than tripled the cost of disclosure.
After receiving a historic number of comments on the rule proposal—including one filed by Cato Institute scholars critical of many aspects of the proposal—the SEC finalized a scaled‐back version of the disclosure rule in March 2024. The finalized rule limited emissions reporting by companies, including dropping the disclosure of the most “indirect” category of emissions, and alleviated other proposed prescriptive disclosure requirements. But the core of the proposal remained: the finalized climate disclosure rule establishes a burdensome separate disclosure regime for climate‐related information.
The SEC rule was immediately challenged by the state of Iowa (and eight other states), Liberty Energy, and the US Chamber of Commerce, among others, who asserted that the SEC’s rule exceeded the agency’s authority. Two environmental groups also sued (and then dismissed their cases), asserting that the SEC failed to require sufficient environmental disclosure. Nine suits are currently pending in the United States Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit, where the litigation was consolidated.
Now Cato has joined Andrew Vollmer of the Mercatus Center (himself a former deputy general counsel at the SEC) to file an amicus brief in the Eighth Circuit supporting the challengers in arguing that the SEC lacks the authority to impose climate‐related disclosures.
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The amicus brief (29 page .PDF):