Skip to content

Menu

LexBlog, Inc. logo
NetworkSub-MenuBrowse by SubjectBrowse by PublisherJoin the NetworkGet StartedSubscribeSupport
Contact Us
Search
Close

EU Omnibus Update

By Dr. Dylan Geraets, Johannes Weichbrodt, Sam Eastwood, Tim Baines & Peter Pears on December 10, 2025
Email this postTweet this postLike this postShare this post on LinkedIn

Yesterday, 10 December 2025, the Council’s presidency and European Parliament’s negotiators reached a provisional agreement to simplify the EU’s sustainability reporting and due diligence requirements.  The provisional agreement must be now endorsed by the Council and the European Parliament, before it is formally adopted by the two institutions.  However, further changes are unlikely and the legislative changes should be fully agreed by 16 December. 

As regards the Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive (CSRD), the Commission proposed to increase the employee threshold to 1000 employees and to remove listed SMEs from the scope of the directive, meaning that entities with fewer than 1000 employees and listed SMEs would not need to provide sustainability reports. It is now agreed, in addition, that only entities with a turnover of over €450 million will have to do so.  Finally, companies that had to start reporting from financial year 2024 (the so-called “wave one” companies) will be formally “out of scope” for 2025 and 2026.  We note that some “wave one” companies have already reported. 

As regards the Corporate Sustainability Due Diligence Directive (CS3D), the CS3D’s transposition deadline has been postponed by another year, to 26 July 2028. Companies will have to comply with the CS3D’s requirements by July 2029.  It has been agreed that entities will only be in scope if they have more than 5,000 employees and €1.5 billion net turnover. In addition, (in a change to amendments proposed by the Commission which limited scope of the due diligence requirements to a company’s own operations, those of its subsidiaries, and those of its direct business partners), it has been agreed that companies can focus on the areas of their chains of activities where actual and potential adverse impacts are most likely to occur.  Further, when a company has identified adverse impacts, they are given the ability to prioritise assessing adverse impacts which involve direct business partners.  They are no longer required to carry out a comprehensive value chain mapping exercise but instead can conduct a more general scoping exercise. Companies will no longer be required to adopt a climate transition plan.  The liability regime has also been watered down. 

Photo of Tim Baines Tim Baines

Tim Baines is a partner in the London environmental and planning team of Mayer Brown. Tim has a particular interest and background in advising companies and financial institutions in the real estate, energy and sustainability sectors. He has considerable knowledge of UK planning…

Tim Baines is a partner in the London environmental and planning team of Mayer Brown. Tim has a particular interest and background in advising companies and financial institutions in the real estate, energy and sustainability sectors. He has considerable knowledge of UK planning and environmental regimes, renewables incentives regimes, and emissions and climate-related matters.

Read full bio

Read more about Tim BainesEmail
Show more Show less
Photo of Peter Pears Peter Pears

Peter Pears is a partner in the Banking & Finance practice of the London office. He acts for issuers and underwriters on a range of domestic and international capital markets products including Eurobond, medium term note, commercial paper, regulatory capital, corporate hybrid and…

Peter Pears is a partner in the Banking & Finance practice of the London office. He acts for issuers and underwriters on a range of domestic and international capital markets products including Eurobond, medium term note, commercial paper, regulatory capital, corporate hybrid and liability management transactions. Peter’s clients include financial institutions, major corporations, sovereigns, municipalities and supranationals across Europe, the United States, Africa and Asia. Peter has considerable experience in sustainable debt and ESG principles and regularly advises on green, social and sustainable bonds, sustainability-linked bonds and ESG regulatory matters. In addition to his debt capital markets practice, Peter has experience advising on a variety of infrastructure finance transactions, including project bonds, private placements and whole business securitizations.

Read full bio

Read more about Peter PearsEmail
Show more Show less
  • Posted in:
    Business and Commercial, Government and Public Policy
  • Blog:
    Eye on ESG
  • Organization:
    Mayer Brown
  • Article: View Original Source

Call us at 1-800-913-0988 or email sales@lexblog.com.

Facebook LinkedIn Twitter RSS
  • About LexBlog
  • The Field We Built
  • Our Beliefs
  • Our Team
  • Contact LexBlog
  • Disclaimer
  • Editorial Policy
  • Terms of Service
  • Get Started
  • Publishing Solutions
  • Compass
  • Submit a Request
  • Support Center
  • System Status
Copyright © 2026, LexBlog, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Law blog design & platform by LexBlog LexBlog Logo