Europaudvalget 2020-21
EUU Alm.del Bilag 375
Offentligt
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12 March 2021
The Danish Government’s response to the Targeted Consultation on
the establishment of a European Single Access Point (ESAP) for finan-
cial and Non-Financial information publicly disclosed by companies
The Danish Government supports the initiative of the Commission to es-
tablish a European Single Access Point, gathering public financial and non-
financial company information from other existing systems. The Danish
Government considers this initiative a positive step, fostering digitalization
and ensuring transparency and easy access to important comparable infor-
mation for investors and other stakeholders, hence facilitating the further
development of the Capital Markets Union (CMU) and a market-based
transition to a sustainable economy.
The Danish Government supports the Commission’s efforts towards
strengthening transparency and comparability across Europe, while under-
lining that this initiative should work together with existing national sys-
tems. The aim should be to ensure wider access to the information, while
not imposing disproportionate burdens on the reporting companies, the
companies in general, or investors using the information. This is in line
with the Council conclusions on the Commission's CMU Action Plan from
December 2020.
In order to avoid imposing unnecessary administrative burdens on compa-
nies and Member States it is crucial not to require companies to report the
same information to various authorities/systems. The Commission should
therefore ensure that ESAP is compatible with national reporting systems
already in place
and with the European Single Electronic Format (ESEF).
Any proposal establishing a ESAP should be based on a thorough and de-
tailed impact assessment to counter challenges and risks of overlaps with
existing systems as well as privately provided services.
We therefore stress that a thorough mapping and cost-benefit analysis must
be performed to identify the nature of demand for information and provide
a quantitative basis for assessing costs and benefits of an ESAP. Only this
could allow the Commission to move swiftly forward in the areas where
there is a strong demand and need for transparency and easily accessible
EUU, Alm.del - 2020-21 - Bilag 375: Notat samt høringssvar vedr. etablering af en fælles europæisk indgang til offentlige finansielle og ikke-finansielle virksomhedsoplysninger
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comparable data, such as for sustainability data, while waiting or even re-
fraining from including very specialised financial data only relevant to a
subset of investors.
The Danish Government suggests a step-by-step approach:
Step one
information already available in a machine readable format
and sustainability information:
Should focus on transparency regarding
information that is already digitally available in machine readable formats
such as XBRL. From Danish non-financial companies this would be data
reported in the annual report. It should be noted that the information from
the annual reports might not be comparable, as the member states can
choose different options for recognition and measurement. However, data
availability will be an advantage.
Furthermore, an important first focus of ESAP should be securing access
to standardized and comparable sustainability data. There is a clear and
growing market demand for such data, while availability and comparability
are lacking. The ongoing review of the non-financial reporting directive
(NFRD) and the implementation of the Disclosure and Taxonomy Regula-
tions provide good opportunities for establishing structured data to form
the first elements of ESAP. It is important that the financial and non-finan-
cial information from the annual report is aligned. As this information
could be made digitally available in a machine readable format within the
near future the Danish Government proposes to expand ESEF to include
sustainability information already in step one.
Step two
information that is already digitally available:
The Danish
Government suggests a focus on information already digitally available,
but not necessarily in a machine readable format, regarding financial com-
panies such as certain information under the Short Selling Regulation or
the Transparency Directive
1
. Certain aspects would need further harmoni-
zation in the specific acts before inclusion would be possible.
Step three
information where there is a potential for harmonization:
The Commission should look into possibilities to further harmonize report-
ing requirements regarding financial and non-financial information for
non-listed companies which have cross border activities or which on other
grounds have a need to present their financial statements in more countries.
It could be relevant to assess whether IFRS for SMEs could form the basis
for such a harmonization.
Finally, any possible further expansion of ESAP to specialised financial
data only relevant to a subset of stakeholders, should be based on thorough
cost-benefit and demand analyses as mentioned above.
1
For more detail see [annex 2 or the questionnaire]
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The scope of ESAP
In Denmark, non-financial undertakings are obliged to submit digital
(XBRL) annual financial statements to The Danish Business Authority.
The mandatory digital submission was introduced over the course of the
period 2012-14. The Danish experiences with this type of digital reporting
are very positive, and we therefore recommend including them in the first
step of ESAP. To avoid administrative burdens, this information should
still be digitally reported in the national system, and then automatically be
made public through ESAP as well. The tasks of ensuring data exchange
and interoperability should hence be placed with the authorities through
automated solutions, not the companies. However, assignment to relevant
authorities depends on the structure and goal of the ESAP as well as any
potential additional information/data requirements.
Sustainability related information, and in particular information and data
feeding into the demands of the Sustainable Financial Disclosure Regula-
tion (SFDR), would be very beneficial to include. Data provided through
this regulation could serve as another good starting point for ESAP inclu-
sion. Reporting templates under the SFDR are being standardized and data
on sustainability risks are generally scarce, but important for investor deci-
sions. However, this has to be done with respect to Officially Appointed
Mechanisms (OAMs) and while keeping the burdens of data validation at
a minimum.
In regard to sustainability data, the Danish Government would like to un-
derline the importance of giving companies access to “upstream”
sustaina-
bility data, which the reporting companies need to make reliable calcula-
tions. The Danish Government therefore stresses that similar initiatives are
needed aiming at giving better access to the data needed by non-financial
companies. One such example is data on direct and indirect emissions of
CO2 equivalents of a wide range of both energy and non-energy resource
consumption throughout value chains, i.e. allowing companies to assess
their carbon footprint in scopes 1, 2 and 3 of the Green House Gas Protocol.
We understand that this is outside the scope of ESAP, but it is an important
factor to limit the burdens for the companies. This is further elaborated in
annex 1.
As a consequence, we find that the scope should be targeted in order to
maximize benefits while avoiding unnecessary burdens. A main guiding
principle should be that quality of information must outweigh quantity, and
information overload should be avoided. Only high quality, consistent,
timely and correct information will be able to instill the necessary trust and
credibility in the system and facilitate investment decisions across the EU.
We therefore urge that any ESAP project be developed as a step-by-step
process over time allowing for identification of relevant (sectoral) infor-
EUU, Alm.del - 2020-21 - Bilag 375: Notat samt høringssvar vedr. etablering af en fælles europæisk indgang til offentlige finansielle og ikke-finansielle virksomhedsoplysninger
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mation for inclusion. If undertaken, such a project should start with a tar-
geted, but harmonized set of information in structured machine-readable
formats across the EU, as described above.
Please see annex 2 for a more detailed argumentation regarding including
information made public under each of the acts listed in the public consul-
tation question 7 in ESAP.
Usability and accessibility
The Danish Government agrees that financial and non-financial company
information should be included in a comparable, digitally structured format
with a clear scope focusing on information relevant to a broad set of users.
The Danish Government is open to how the information might be accessi-
ble once in ESAP and it should allow for efficient data processing.
To allow for a broad set of users and ensure a user-friendly interface, the
Danish Government recommends that the portal cater to national lan-
guage regimes and that search functions will be made available in all EU
languages. Regarding reporting, ESAP should not focus on one or a few
languages but respect the carefully considered language regimes in the
sectoral legislation, and for information that today can be given in na-
tional languages, this should remain possible in the future. We wish to
underline that the subject of translation of reporting is already a source for
large expenses for many companies, to which we should not add.
Infrastructure and data governance
The Danish Government strongly believes that the infrastructure should
leverage and expand on existing national systems in Member States rather
than phasing out such systems, whether at EU or national level.. This could
be done by inter-connecting the available systems. Moreover, not every na-
tionally relevant information is relevant to a cross-border solution and the
current systems in a Member State also rely on non-standardized data for-
mats from multiple stakeholders. These differences should be taken into
consideration.
The Danish Government strongly recommends that ESAP is built on exist-
ing national reporting systems, i.e. that the ESAP is not the single or first
reporting channel but an access point where information is supplied via
existing systems.
We therefore recommend that there is no additional validation requirement
of the information going into the ESAP, as such checks are placed at the
original data entry point.
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Entities with no access to capital markets (non-listed entities), includ-
ing SMEs
The Danish Government supports the initiative of the Commission in the
European Green Deal to evaluate the Non-Financial Reporting Directive
(NFRD) and in this regard to consider expanding the scope to include more
companies, as well as facilitating voluntary reporting on sustainability as-
pects by SMEs.
The Danish Government would find it beneficial if more companies could
be encouraged to report on non-financial information voluntarily to ESAP,
while keeping in mind that resources, size and competences vary signifi-
cantly at the company level in Member States, and therefore a requirement
for SMEs to report would be disproportionate. This is not without chal-
lenges as we also support the view that if you use or opt into a regime you
should follow the same rules. We see no reason for a different approach in
the ESAP.
We do however see significant challenges if the scope were to include all
companies regardless of size or sector, whether mandatory or on a volun-
tary reporting basis, as their systems and governance structures are not
equipped to address this type of reporting and it is not proportionate to ask
them to participate considering their local and regional market orientation.
To help overcome this, the establishment of ESAP should be coherent with
the work in the current revision of the NFRD and a voluntary standard for
SMEs should be established. The voluntary standard should focus on a core
of ESG indicators, which should also, to the extent possible, be aligned
with reporting requirements in the SFDR. This would allow SMEs to create
transparency around their sustainability initiatives towards investors, hence
facilitating the process of attracting capital.
Costs and benefits
The Danish Government encourages the Commission to ensure that the es-
tablishment of a European Single Access Point is based on automatically
collected information from existing European or national systems for digi-
tal publication of financial and non-financial company information in a
comparable standardized machine-readable format.
Notwithstanding such a solution, implementation of an ESAP regulation
covering capital market participants would have considerable administra-
tive consequences imposing significant burdens to the capital market sector
since it would require resources (IT, human etc.).
Financial institutions and companies operating in the capital markets pub-
lish a considerable amount of information and there are a wide range of
databases, registers, etc. already set up to address publication requirements
and information access for the public. Therefore, ESAP should be based on
EUU, Alm.del - 2020-21 - Bilag 375: Notat samt høringssvar vedr. etablering af en fælles europæisk indgang til offentlige finansielle og ikke-finansielle virksomhedsoplysninger
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a thorough market analysis and impact assessment to evidence several as-
pects. Firstly, presence of market failure in providing this information. Sec-
ondly, establishing the demand for information from the potential target
audience in order to ascertain the benefit of the proposal. Thirdly, the costs
and benefits of a system developed in the public sphere as opposed to a
private endeavor, considering the costs of establishing as well as operating
such a system. The Danish Government recommends the Commission to
focus the efforts in the areas where no private operators are providing a
market covering service, such as on ESG data.
When considering format and content, due consideration must be given to
ensure easily accessible information that will be used by the intended target
group and thus avoid information overload in the system. In this context
we would question the benefit of including data that is not in an EU-stand-
ardized and structured format whether initially or at a later stage.
Finally, when it comes to funding we find it important that ESAP should
be funded by EU funds. It is important that the funds come from the exist-
ing EU budget and does not lead to further contributions to the EU budget
from the Member States.
In conclusion,
the Danish Government finds the Commission’s focus on
transparency of financial and non-financial information publicly disclosed
by companies to be an important step towards facilitating a market-based
transition to sustainable finance and a more integrated CMU. This, how-
ever, must be done in a proportionate and targeted fashion, focusing in the
first place on information of relevance to a broad set of investors across the
EU and where comparable data is lacking today. Furthermore, existing sys-
tems should be used to the extent possible in order to avoid increasing ad-
ministrative burdens for companies as well as authorities.
We look forward to continuing contributing actively to the process of es-
tablishing an ESAP and are at your disposal for further elaboration.