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As regulators abandon ‘bare minimum’ corporate climate reporting, a backstop lurks

TORONTO - In the future, seeing the carbon emissions of a company may not be much harder than finding out how many calories are in a chocolate bar, but that day looks further out than it did just a few months ago.

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As regulators abandon 'bare minimum' corporate climate reporting, a backstop lurks

A flare stack lights the sky along refinery row in Edmonton Alta, on Friday December 28, 2018. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Jason Franson


TORONTO - In the future, seeing the carbon emissions of a company may not be much harder than finding out how many calories are in a chocolate bar, but that day looks further out than it did just a few months ago.

Last year saw big steps toward better corporate climate transparency: a U.S. regulator required it, the Trudeau government committed to follow through on more, and a Canadian task force released guidelines on what those disclosures should look like.

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