Written by Field Name
Report Date
5 min read
Written by Fair Supply
April 15, 2026
5 min read

The financial services sector is no longer a passive observer in the transition to a low-carbon economy it is a central driver. Through lending, investment, and capital allocation decisions, banks, asset managers, and superannuation funds influence emissions outcomes across the global economy.
As a result, regulators are rapidly increasing expectations for climate transparency. From 2025–2026, mandatory climate-related financial disclosures under frameworks such as the Australian Sustainability Reporting Standards and AASB S2 will apply to large financial institutions and super funds.
For these organisations, emissions reporting is fundamentally different from other sectors. The majority of emissions sit not within operations, but within investment and lending portfolios commonly referred to as “financed emissions.” This creates both a strategic challenge and a significant opportunity.
This article outlines the key requirements, challenges, and practical steps financial institutions must take to prepare for the 2026 reporting landscape.
Transparency is now a prerequisite for trust. Investors, regulators, and members expect financial institutions to clearly articulate how climate risk is embedded within their portfolios.
Failure to provide credible disclosures can lead to:
Climate reporting is becoming mandatory, not voluntary. Under frameworks such as Australian Sustainability Reporting Standards, financial institutions must disclose:
Climate change presents both physical and transition risks that directly impact asset valuations. Financial institutions must understand:
For superannuation funds in particular, climate risk is increasingly viewed as a fiduciary issue. Trustees are expected to act in the best financial interests of members, which includes managing long-term climate-related risks.
Reputation also plays a critical role. Institutions seen as lagging on climate transparency may face:
Unlike energy or industrial sectors, financial institutions generate relatively low operational emissions. Instead, their emissions profile is dominated by indirect exposures.
Financed emissions—those associated with loans, investments, and underwriting activitiesare typically the largest component of a financial institution’s carbon footprint.
These emissions arise from:
Superannuation funds and asset managers must account for emissions across diversified portfolios, including:
Direct property holdings contribute to Scope 1 and Scope 2 emissions through:
While smaller in scale, operational emissions still require reporting and include:
Scope 3 emissions also extend to service providers, including:
From 2026, financial institutions will be required to meet enhanced climate disclosure obligations under AASB S2.
Institutions must measure and disclose financed emissions across their portfolios. This includes:
Organisations must assess and disclose how climate scenarios impact their portfolios, including:
Boards and executive teams are expected to demonstrate:
Disclosures must align with frameworks such as the Greenhouse Gas Protocol, ensuring consistency and comparability across markets.
Financed emissions are inherently complex to measure. Challenges include:
Many investee companies—particularly in private markets—do not disclose emissions data. This creates:
Diversified portfolios introduce complexity in:
As frameworks such as Australian Sustainability Reporting Standards evolve, institutions face uncertainty in:
The first step is to understand where emissions sit within the portfolio. This involves:
Financial institutions must build structured approaches to data collection:
Robust climate risk assessment requires:
Manual processes are no longer sufficient. Institutions need:
As climate reporting requirements expand, financial institutions need solutions that go beyond basic data aggregation.
Fair Supply provides a purpose-built platform designed to address the unique challenges of financed emissions and portfolio reporting.
Fair Supply enables:
The platform provides:
Fair Supply integrates:
In addition to technology, Fair Supply offers:
Climate reporting is now a core component of governance for financial institutions and superannuation funds. With mandatory disclosures coming into effect from 2025–2026, organisations must act quickly to build robust, transparent, and auditable reporting capabilities.
The implications extend beyond compliance. Climate transparency directly impacts investor trust, capital allocation, and long-term performance.
Institutions that invest in high-quality data, integrated systems, and clear governance frameworks will be best positioned to navigate this transition.
Fair Supply enables this shift—providing the tools, data, and expertise required to deliver reliable, decision-useful climate disclosures in an increasingly complex regulatory environment.