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Article

8 May 2025

Author:
31 legal academics

EU: Legal academics express concern about the Weakening of Article 22 CSDDD on Climate Transition Plans

"Legal Scholars Concerned about the Weakening of Article 22 CSDDD on Climate Transition Plans", 8 May 2025

We are a group of legal scholars writing to express our concern regarding an amendment in the ‘Omnibus Simplification Package’ (Omnibus) proposed by the European Commission, which would significantly weaken Article 22 of the Corporate Sustainability Due Diligence Directive (CSDDD). The proposed amendment would weaken Article 22 by removing the obligation for Climate Transition Plans to be ‘put into effect’.

We strongly advise against this proposed weakening of Article 22. Our concerns, which we explain in more detail below, are fourfold: (1) states’ legal obligation to regulate corporate greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions would not be met; (2) the internal market would fragment and litigation risk would increase; (3) disclosure without follow-through may increase companies’ liability exposure ; and (4) without guiding regulations, corporate climate transitions will be more disorderly and costly.

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In conclusion, cogent and strong transition plan requirements as outlined in Article 22, combined with clear implementation guidance, are essential to set a harmonised, level playing field which provides clarity and certainty for large European businesses, avert the anticipated exposure to enhanced litigation risk and legal uncertainty, and reduce the scope and need for judicial intervention across different Member States.

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The full letter is available for download at the top of the page.

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