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United States Chamber of Commerce sues SEC over climate risk disclosure rules

The U.S. Chamber of Commerce stated on Thursday it has actually filed a claim against the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission's brand-new guidelines that need public business to report climaterelated dangers.

Business lobbying group joins a list of entities challenging the securities regulator over guidelines intended to standardize climate-related company disclosures about greenhouse gas emissions, weather-related risks and how they are preparing for the shift to a low-carbon economy.

The last guideline makes substantively harmful changes to 50 years of business governance precedent that will have ramifications well beyond this single guideline, stated Tom Quaadman, executive vice president, U.S. Chamber of Commerce Center for Capital Markets Competitiveness.

The Commission undertakes rulemaking constant with its authorities and laws governing the administrative procedure and will vigorously protect the final climate threat disclosure rules in court, a SEC spokesperson said.

The guidelines completed previously this month were substantially watered down but drew a mixed action.

A major ecological group Sierra Club and Sierra Club Structure filed a claim on Wednesday in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit, arguing that the SEC arbitrarily stripped the final variation of the rules.

On the other hand, Republican-led states and market groups have currently submitted several suits seeking to block the rules, but the Sierra Club's case is the first to argue they are too weak.