• Australia’s corporate sustainability reporting regime expands director and supplier obligations under the Corporations Act 2001, with spillover effects for SMEs.
  • ASIC and the Australian Accounting Standards Board have launched eight education modules to build climate reporting capability across supply chains.
  • Early guidance focuses on climate fundamentals and physical risk, ahead of emissions accounting and opportunity disclosures due in 2026.

Australia’s corporate regulator has begun laying the groundwork for the country’s new sustainability reporting regime, releasing the first set of educational materials aimed at smaller companies and report preparers navigating climate disclosure for the first time.

The Australian Securities and Investments Commission has published PDF versions of the first three modules in a planned eight-part learning series designed to explain the foundations of Australia’s sustainability reporting requirements. The materials arrive as companies across the economy assess how climate reporting obligations will affect not only listed entities but also the smaller firms embedded in their supply chains.

Sustainability reporting requirements are new for Australia and introduce fresh legal responsibilities for directors and reporting entities. While the rules are targeted at larger companies, ASIC has been clear that small and medium sized enterprises that support those entities may also be drawn into the reporting ecosystem.

Building the Climate Reporting Framework

The learning modules were developed in partnership with the Australian Accounting Standards Board, anchoring the content in the standards architecture that underpins Australia’s climate disclosure framework.

ASIC Commissioner Kate O’Rourke said the regulator was responding directly to industry concern. “We recognise many smaller companies may be concerned about what the sustainability reporting requirements mean for them. ASIC is committed to helping industry build the capability required to meet these important obligations,” she said.

ASIC Commissioner Kate O’Rourke

She added that the focus is not simply compliance, but risk literacy. “Our new educational materials are designed to help stakeholders identify the climate-related risks and opportunities that may impact them. These foundational steps are key to meeting the sustainability reporting requirements.

The regulator expects the resources to be used not only by smaller reporting entities and SME suppliers, but by any report preparer new to sustainability reporting, as well as other participants in the climate reporting ecosystem.

What the First Modules Cover

Module 1 introduces the structure of the materials and outlines the basics of Australia’s sustainability reporting requirements as set out in the Corporations Act 2001. It is designed to orient directors, finance teams, and advisors to the legal and governance context in which climate disclosures will sit.

Module 2 provides a primer on climate change, establishing common language and scientific grounding for report preparers. Module 3 focuses on climate-related physical risks, an area of growing importance for asset valuation, operational resilience, and insurance exposure across sectors.

Later modules will move beyond risk identification toward opportunity assessment and measurement. ASIC has confirmed that Modules 4 and 5 will be published by the end of the month, with Modules 6, 7, and 8 scheduled for release in the first quarter of 2026. Topics in the later series include climate-related opportunities and an introduction to emissions accounting.

RELATED ARTICLE: ASICS Unveils Lightest Ever CO2e Emissions Sneaker

Interactive Delivery and Industry Engagement

To broaden engagement, ASIC plans to offer all eight modules in an interactive format in the first quarter of 2026. This shift reflects recognition that climate reporting capability varies widely across the market, particularly among smaller firms with limited internal sustainability expertise.

The regulator will also run a series of workshops to support the educational rollout, with further details expected in early 2026. Together, the modules and workshops are intended to accelerate learning curves ahead of formal reporting cycles.

What Executives and Boards Should Take Away

For boards and executives, the release signals that sustainability reporting in Australia is no longer a future consideration but an operational reality that extends across corporate value chains. Smaller companies supplying reporting entities will need to understand climate risks, data requests, and disclosure expectations well before formal obligations apply to them directly.

For investors and lenders, the initiative points to a gradual uplift in the quality and consistency of climate-related information flowing through Australian markets, improving risk assessment and comparability over time.

Regionally, the move aligns Australia more closely with global climate disclosure frameworks that emphasize governance, risk management, and financial materiality. As regulators shift from rulemaking to implementation support, the focus is turning to execution. The success of Australia’s sustainability reporting regime will depend less on the rules themselves and more on how effectively companies of all sizes are equipped to meet them.

Follow ESG News on LinkedIn





The post ASIC Releases Sustainability Reporting Modules for Smaller Companies appeared first on ESG News.