
Businesses urge EU not to weaken sustainability rules
A group of 29 businesses and 80 investors and financial institutions including EDF, Nokia (NOKIA.HE), opens new tab and Allianz said in a statement that rather than hindering growth, the rules were "conducive to competitiveness and growth, as well as long-term value creation and subsequent returns for investors".
European Union policymakers are negotiating proposals that would loosen the bloc's corporate sustainability reporting rules for a large majority of businesses, and soften a policy requiring firms to check their supply chains for abuse, amid criticism from some governments and industries that red tape hinders productivity.
Germany, France and some businesses have demanded the reporting requirements be dramatically reduced, but environmental campaigners and now a broader group of companies and investors say the rules are key to helping them manage climate risks and drive capital to the green transition.
By promoting transparency and responsible business conduct, the rules are conducive to growth, better risk management and to reorienting investment to green technologies and growth across the bloc, said the statement, which was also signed by IKEA's parent company Ingka Group.
"Where there is room for smart simplification, let's tweak the regulation, but we need to stay the course and be proud of it to assert our leadership," Carine de Boissezon, chief impact officer at EDF, said in a statement.
The group recommended that the EU reporting rules apply to companies with more than 500 employees, and require firms to adopt "transition plans" showing how they're aligning with climate goals.
The European Commission has proposed exempting companies with fewer than 1,000 employees - cutting more than 80% of the roughly 50,000 currently covered. The law currently applies to firms with more than 250 employees.
Some EU lawmakers want to scale back the laws further to only cover companies with at least 3,000 employees. EU countries and lawmakers must both approve the final changes to the rules.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Sun
35 minutes ago
- The Sun
Exact date Next is launching its 50% off summer sale – find out how to spot secret codes for special bargains
THE exact date Next is launching its 50% off summer sale has been revealed. The beloved fashion and beauty retailer is kick-starting its seasonal event this week, with shoppers keen to bag a bargain. 1 The fashion chain gives exclusive online access to its VIP members before the sale is launched in-store, and they've taken to social media to share the details. Invites were sent over the weekend, with the earliest slot available tomorrow July 2, according to the Next Sale, VIP, Bargains,and Codes Facebook group. Typically, when Next launches an online sale to VIP customers, it means the main sale will launch in stores a few days later. Next told The Sun its in-store sale will launch on Saturday, July 5. If you want to shop the offers in store, you can find your nearest branch by visiting But it is worth noting that each store may have different opening hours, so it is best to check with your local branch before going. Usually on the day of the Next sale, some stores open as early as 6am meaning some shoppers can be queuing in the early hours of the morning. But you don't need to be a VIP member to find special discounts at Next. Bargain hunters have discovered a way to predict which items will be in the sale ahead of time. Homebase is selling premium outdoor lanterns which don't require any plugs for under £30 - they're perfect for the summer nights Items are usually marked by staff in the days before the sale starts. These codes are written in pencil on the price tag, and the numbers next to the letters generally indicate the sale price of the item. So, if you want to visit your local store and earmark a bargain, you should keep your eyes peeled. The codes and the marked-down items can vary from store to store. SIGN UP FOR FUTURE VIP SLOTS If you want to receive a VIP Sale invite, you will need to open a nextpay credit account ahead of the event. This is a credit account that allows you to spread the cost of purchases from Next. It is too late to become a VIP for the summer sale, but you can always sign up ahead of time for the next one. When taking out a store card it is important to be careful and ensure it is something you can pay off. That is because interest rates can be very high, so you need to make sure you can pay them off in full each month. Other requirements to become a Next VIP include: Having a Next flexible credit account with at least £250 credit available Placing and keeping an order from the Next Directory within the last year Having an up-to-date email address registered with Next, and being registered to receive sale and promotional emails Receiving a copy of the Next Directory Returning less than two-thirds of the items ordered All VIP sale slots are granted on a first-come, first-served basis, and they're restricted to one per customer. Users have the best chance of getting amazing deals by accepting the first slot they're allocated because things can sell out quickly. How to make the most of the Next sale THESE tips from a Next employee can help you make sure you bag the best bargains when the sale launches. Familiarise yourself with the stock - check in store and online to see what items you might fancy, that means you'll be able to act fast once prices start dropping. Check online - often the sale launches online before stores open so go digital to get the best bargains. Consider the VIP scheme - if you have a credit account you can get access to the sale before the general public. Choose the right store - smaller outlets are likely to be less rammed, so you may have less competition for deals. Shop late in the day - around two hours before closing, staff start replenishing stock for the next day, so this is a great time to hit the stores. Look at ticket codes - if you're in a Next keep an eye out for black dots on tickets; chances are that means an item is going to be discounted, so you're better off waiting till the price drops. Homeware and women's clothing sells fastest - so you might want to get to stores first thing for these items.


The Sun
35 minutes ago
- The Sun
Hard-working Brits foot £3bn bill for flood of migrants Labour is letting into UK – and bigger tax black hole to come
ANOTHER day, another illegal arrival of a small boat packed to the gunnels with young, selfie-taking men who'll no doubt be delivering a pizza to the virtue- signalling 'no borders' brigade by next week. Clearly, Treasury minister Darren Jones, who claimed on Question Time that the majority of vessels were carrying ' children, babies and women' wasn't on the beach in France that day. 4 4 This latest shipment of mostly economic migrants brings the tally this year alone (that we know of) to approximately 20,000 and, with it, an extra £3billion on the UK tax bill. But hey, a record 16,500 of another demographic are set to leave the UK this year, so perhaps it all balances out in the end? Trouble is, the escapees are wealthy and this exodus puts the UK on top of the global rankings for 'dollar millionaire' departures for the first time in a decade. According to the Henley Private Wealth Migration Report, it's part of a 'historic wave of wealth migration' as a result of tax increases and falling economic confidence. Taking jobs The Tory government's closure of the Tier 1 investor visa didn't help, nor did its overhaul of non-dom rules, and now Labour's inheritance tax changes have accelerated the trend. It's estimated that those leaving collectively hold £66billion in investable assets, and they'll be taking jobs with them too. Jason Hollands, from wealth manager Evelyn Partners, says: 'It's not just the tax receipts of wealthy people leaving the UK that will be missed — businesses and charities that benefit from their spending will be affected too. Cooks, gardeners, cleaners, restaurants, theatres, car showrooms, hotels and property will all suffer, undermining the jobs market.' Quite. So while it's easy for some to sit back and blithely say 'good riddance, who cares about wealthy people', the economic repercussions aren't as easy to brush off. The Centre for Economics and Business Research estimates that if even half of the UK's non-doms decide to up sticks and leave, then tax revenues to the Treasury will drop by an estimated £12.2billion by 2030. And where will the money come from to plug that hole in the country's finances? Illegal Channel migrant delivery riders ARRESTED as cops swoop on major asylum hotel after Sun expose Well, considering today's news that chancellor Rachel Reeves plans to axe the £20,000 limit on ISAs — the tax-free savings vehicle that successive governments have encouraged everyone to take advantage of — it looks like the very 'working people' that Labour claims to champion will be footing the bill. So well done everyone. BEAUTY NOT SO SWELL I WENT to see Danny Boyle's new movie 28 Years Later at the weekend. Although not for the faint-hearted, one scene made me laugh out loud. A young lad who has lived a sheltered life on a remote UK island without phones or social media, meets a Swedish soldier who's had full access to modern living. When the man shows the boy a photo of his girlfriend with the cosmetically enhanced lips that are so commonplace these days, the kids says: 'What's wrong with her face?' He then innocently suggests it's reminiscent of when his friend had a shellfish allergy. As a social commentary on how skewed our idea of beauty has become, it was perfect. Kim a front-runner for lingerie campaign 4 RECEIVING an invite with the theme of 'pyjama party' is my idea of heaven. If it's winter, off I trot in my tartan winceyettes and furry slippers. And if it's the warmer months, then it's light cotton jimmies all the way down to the ankle. Either way, it involves the minimum of effort and means you spend the entire evening in a blissful state of comfort. Better still, you're ready for bed as soon as you get home. Unless, that is, you're Kim Kardashian, pictured arriving at the post-wedding 'pyjama party' of Jeff Bezos and Lauren Sanchez in Venice. Ye gods. Whatever it is that she's almost wearing, it's certainly not anything you could sleep in. And the golden memo of 'never upstage the bride' appears to have somehow got lost in the post. Coincidentally, famous Italian lingerie brand La Perla has just been saved from bankruptcy thanks to a €25million buyout by US businessman Peter Kern. If he wants an, er, front-facing celebrity to help buoy sales, look no further. BAN ON BUDGIE BULGE UH-OH. Just when you thought it was safe to go back in the water . . . The much-maligned 'budgie smugglers' are back in fashion. Except, they were maligned for a reason. For not all men look like swimmer Adam Peaty, seen here modelling a pair of tight trunks. Yes, yes, I know we're all about body positivity these days and the fact that all shapes should be celebrated. But if the shape I'm seeing is the outline of someone's excessively hirsute meat and two veg, the long shorts of it is 'put it away'. TEACH HOW TO THINK GARY LINEKER reckons those running the BBC have 'lost their way' when it comes to impartiality. 'The impartiality issue has become a massive problem that I think they've probably created themselves . . . we just need to know the truth,' he says. But what is 'the truth' in this post-truth world? Is it Gary's 'truth'? Is it the 'truth' of someone who might disagree with him on an issue? Or does it sit somewhere between the two? We just don't know. So the BBC policy of providing both sides of an argument via guests, while presenters maintain impartiality, is the best way to let viewers make an informed viewpoint of their own. Which is why teaching young people how to think, rather than what to think, remains so important. WHILE Brad Pitt was posing on the red carpet for the London premiere of his new movie F1, opportunistic thieves were ransacking his home in LA. Three suspects fled the house with 'miscellaneous property' and, like the burglary at Nicole Kidman's LA home in February, it's believed the break-ins are linked to organised gangs. Be it drugs, online scams, street begging, large-scale shoplifting or car thefts, the exploits of such gangs who consider a day's work to be taking what other, law-abiding people have toiled hard for, now seem to be so out of control that one wonders whether it can ever be tackled effectively. CERTAIN critics say it's infuriating that Evita star Rachel Zegler sings Don't Cry For Me Argentina to the crowd gathered below the London Palladium's balcony rather than to the paying ticket-holders inside the theatre. I disagree. If you wished to attend the show this evening, the only two tickets available are £218 each – meaning a plus one outing costs the same as a week's holiday on the Costa Brava. So all credit to director Jamie Lloyd for making a brief slice of it available to anyone who can afford the bus fare to get there.


The Sun
an hour ago
- The Sun
Arsenal ‘close to Viktor Gyokeres transfer with Gunners in advanced talks with Sporting after ruling out Benjamin Sesko'
ARSENAL are in advanced talks to sign Viktor Gyokeres after honing in on the Swede over their other target Benjamin Sesko, according to reports. The Gunners have been weighing up their options for a new centre-forward and it would appear they are now focusing on Gyokeres. 3 3 According to Belgian journalist Sacha Tavolieri, Arsenal feel like they are "touching the final line" when it comes to agreeing a deal for the Sporting Lisbon star. While it's also claimed they have already agreed a five-year contract with Gyokeres himself. Gyokeres has found himself trying to force a move away from Sporting this summer after claims that a gentleman's agreement to leave for a cut-price fee between him and the club has not been honoured. Sporting president Federico Varandas has claimed the club are happy to let Gyokeres leave for less than his release clause, but will stand firm when it comes to getting a fair price for the Portuguese league's top scorer. Citing the prices paid for some other players this summer, Varandas told O Jogo: "Sporting does not need to sell him, but we remain sensitive to the dreams of Viktor and any of our athletes. "After weeks of meetings, we are not asking for the release clause and will be reasonable regarding the price we ask for Viktor. Today, I believe there is a strong probability he will leave. 'We have been watching the market and I saw [Martin] Zubimendi, who is six months younger than Viktor, leave for €65million. "I saw Matheus Cunha and Bryan Mbeumo, both forwards but who, in my opinion, do not have Viktor's market value or quality, being negotiated for around €75million. "Given the demands we consider fair, I believe Viktor could leave – unless he has the worst agent in the world, which is hard for me to believe, because he is one of the best footballers in the world." Adding: "I'm not going to say what the price is, the player knows what it is. Arsenal Plot Big Double Transfer For Eberechi Eze and Hugo Ekitike! | Transfers Exposed "I can tell you that Viktor won't leave for €60million plus €10million he won't, he just won't." Meanwhile Fabrizio Romano has claimed that the club's stance has left Gyokeres feeling "betrayed and tired". It's been claimed that Gyokeres has informed Sporting that he won't be returning to the club and has no intention of playing for them again. Gyokeres scored 39 goals in 33 league appearances last season, more than any other player in Europe's top 10 leagues. Arsenal have also been linked with a move for Sesko, but advancements in the Gyokeres deal would likely spell an end to those talks. The Gunners today announced the arrival of Kepa Arrizabalaga from Chelsea on a £5m deal, with the Spanish goalkeeper set to play backup to first choice shot-stopper David Raya next season. While deals for Brentford 's Christian Norgaard and Real Sociedad's Martin Zubimendi are also thought to be on verge of completion. 3