
Vitória Menezes Sanhudo (master’s student in European Union Law at the School of Law of University of Minho)
The harmonisation of corporate sustainability disclosure criteria has become increasingly relevant as a guarantee of a level playing field among companies and for the efficiency of the Internal Market. In this context, Directive (EU) 2022/2464 (CSRD) amends previous provisions, aiming to promote a more standardised sustainability reporting obligation, using the double materiality principle (DMP). It is deemed as necessary to analyse the conceptual evolution of materiality, from its origin in accounting to double materiality (enshrined in the CSRD Directive), its enforcement in the Directive under consideration, to evaluate the benefits and challenges of this dual perspective from a theoretical approach and, subsequently, to assess it from a more practical viewpoint, taking into account conclusions that can already be drawn from its introduction in the CSRD Directive.
The research question is as follows: in what way does the evolution of materiality in sustainability reporting prove to be positive, particularly with the incorporation of the DMP in the CSRD?
The concept of materiality
For a complete understanding of the CSRD Directive and the DMP, firstly, it is crucial to establish the conceptual basis that underpins them: materiality as a legal principle. The concept of material information emerged in the field of accounting at the beginning of the 20th century, and its importance and scope have expanded over the years. In the EU, the Accounting Directive[1] is the central instrument for corporate financial reporting. Generally, all definitions formulated imply that information is material when its omission or misrepresentation can influence the economic decisions of the users that this concept aims to inform and benefit. Naturally, the definition of materiality varies according to the objective pursued by the reporting.[2]
Continue reading “The double materiality principle in the context of sustainability reporting – a positive development? (Some insights on the Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive 2022/2464 – CSRD)”








