Is your UAE business prepared for mandatory ESG reporting? With Dubai's ambitious Net Zero 2050 strategy and increasing regulatory focus on sustainability, ESG (Environmental, Social, Governance) reporting is transitioning from voluntary best practice to mandatory compliance for many UAE companies. Listed companies, financial institutions, and large corporations now face ESG disclosure requirementsand the scope continues expanding.
As sustainability reporting specialists with 37 years UAE experience, we've helped 200+ companies implement ESG reporting frameworks. This guide covers ESG reporting requirements, applicable frameworks (GRI, SASB, TCFD), compliance deadlines, audit requirements, and implementation strategies.
What is ESG Reporting?
ESG Reporting is the disclosure of a company's environmental, social, and governance performance and impacts.
Three Pillars:
E - Environmental:
- Carbon emissions & climate impact
- Energy consumption & efficiency
- Water usage & conservation
- Waste management & circular economy
- Pollution & environmental protection
- Biodiversity & ecosystem impact
S - Social:
- Employee health, safety & wellbeing
- Diversity, equity & inclusion
- Labor practices & human rights
- Community engagement & impact
- Customer satisfaction & data privacy
- Supply chain responsibility
G - Governance:
- Board composition & independence
- Executive compensation
- Business ethics & anti-corruption
- Risk management
- Regulatory compliance
- Stakeholder engagement
UAE ESG Regulatory Landscape
Current Requirements
Mandatory ESG Disclosure (UAE):
1. Securities & Commodities Authority (SCA)
- Applies to: All UAE listed companies
- Effective: 2019 (enhanced 2021)
- Framework: SCA ESG Disclosure Guide
- Frequency: Annual
2. Dubai Financial Services Authority (DFSA)
- Applies to: DIFC-regulated firms
- Effective: 2022
- Framework: DFSA ESG disclosure rules
- Frequency: Annual
3. Abu Dhabi Securities Exchange (ADX)
- Applies to: ADX-listed companies
- Effective: 2020
- Framework: ADX ESG Guidance
- Frequency: Annual (ESG report alongside financial statements)
4. Dubai International Financial Centre (DIFC)
- Applies to: DIFC companies (specific sectors)
- Effective: 2022
- Framework: TCFD-aligned disclosure
Voluntary Frameworks (Widely Adopted)
GRI Standards (Global Reporting Initiative)
- Most widely used globally
- Comprehensive materiality-based reporting
- 300+ UAE companies use GRI
SASB Standards (Sustainability Accounting Standards Board)
- Industry-specific metrics
- Investor-focused
- Growing UAE adoption
TCFD (Task Force on Climate-related Financial Disclosures)
- Climate risk focus
- Governance, strategy, risk, metrics
- Mandatory for DIFC financial firms
UN Global Compact
- 10 principles (human rights, labor, environment, anti-corruption)
- 100+ UAE signatories
Who Must Comply?
Mandatory ESG Reporting
Required for:
- All UAE listed companies (DFM, ADX, Nasdaq Dubai)
- DIFC-regulated financial firms
- ADX-listed companies (separate ESG report)
- Large state-owned enterprises
- Companies in regulated sectors (banking, insurance)
Strongly Recommended For
Should Consider:
- Large private companies (>AED 100M revenue)
- Companies with international investors
- Export-oriented businesses
- Companies in high-impact sectors (energy, manufacturing, construction)
- Family businesses planning succession/sale
Stakeholder-Driven Requirements
Even if not legally required, ESG reporting needed for:
- Bank financing (ESG-linked loans increasing)
- Investor relations (PE/VC funds require ESG due diligence)
- Customer requirements (B2B clients, especially international)
- Supply chain inclusion (large corporations requiring supplier ESG)
- Tender requirements (government projects increasingly require ESG)
ESG Reporting Frameworks for UAE Companies
GRI Standards (Most Common)
Best for: Companies wanting comprehensive sustainability reporting
Structure:
- Universal Standards (apply to all)
- Topic-specific Standards (select relevant topics)
Key GRI Disclosures:
- GRI 2: General Disclosures (organizational profile, governance)
- GRI 3: Material Topics
- GRI 200 Series: Economic
- GRI 300 Series: Environmental
- GRI 400 Series: Social
UAE Context: ~300 UAE companies publish GRI reports. Good for companies with diverse stakeholders.
SASB Standards
Best for: Investor-focused companies
Structure:
- 77 industry-specific standards
- Financially material metrics
- Comparable across companies
UAE Relevant Sectors:
- Real Estate (REITs, developers)
- Oil & Gas
- Financials (banks, insurance)
- Consumer Goods
- Healthcare
Advantage: Industry-specific = easier benchmarking
TCFD Framework
Best for: Climate-focused disclosure
Four Pillars:
- Governance: Climate oversight
- Strategy: Climate risks/opportunities
- Risk Management: Climate risk processes
- Metrics & Targets: GHG emissions, climate targets
UAE Mandatory: DIFC financial firms (banks, insurers)
Trend: Becoming global standard for climate disclosure
Integrated Reporting <IR>
Best for: Mature companies wanting value creation story
Focus: How company creates value over time (financial + non-financial capitals)
Six Capitals:
- Financial
- Manufactured
- Intellectual
- Human
- Social & Relationship
- Natural
UAE Adoption: Limited but growing (some banks, large corporates)
ESG Reporting Process
Phase 1: Materiality Assessment (4-6 weeks)
Step 1: Identify ESG Issues
- List all potential ESG topics relevant to industry
- Consider: Industry standards, peer reports, regulations
Step 2: Stakeholder Engagement
- Survey/interview: Employees, customers, investors, suppliers, community
- Understand their ESG priorities
- Document feedback
Step 3: Materiality Matrix
- Plot issues on two axes:
- X-axis: Importance to stakeholders
- Y-axis: Impact on business
- Identify material topics (high on both axes)
Output: 8-15 material ESG topics to report on
Dubai Example: Real estate developer materiality:
- Material: Energy efficiency, worker safety, sustainable materials, community impact
- Less material: Biodiversity, water (limited impact in Dubai context)
Phase 2: Data Collection (8-12 weeks)
Environmental Data:
- Energy consumption (kWh, fuel usage)
- GHG emissions (Scope 1, 2, 3)
- Water consumption (m³)
- Waste generated (tons, by type)
Social Data:
- Employee demographics (gender, nationality, age)
- Turnover rates
- Training hours
- Health & safety (incidents, lost-time injury rate)
- Diversity metrics
Governance Data:
- Board composition (independence, diversity)
- Policies (ethics, anti-corruption, human rights)
- Compliance training hours
- Whistleblower reports
Challenges:
- Data often not centralized
- Multiple departments involved (HR, facilities, finance, operations)
- Legacy systems may not track ESG metrics
Solutions:
- ESG software platforms (Enablon, Diligent, Workiva)
- Data collection templates
- Assign ESG data owners per department
Phase 3: Report Drafting (4-6 weeks)
Standard ESG Report Structure:
1. CEO Message (1-2 pages)
- Leadership commitment to ESG
- Highlights of year's ESG performance
2. About the Company (2-3 pages)
- Business overview
- Sustainability strategy
- Materiality assessment results
3. Governance (3-5 pages)
- Board composition
- ESG oversight structure
- Policies & procedures
- Ethics & compliance
4. Environmental Performance (5-10 pages)
- Energy & emissions
- Water & waste
- Environmental initiatives
- Targets & progress
5. Social Performance (5-10 pages)
- Employee wellbeing
- Diversity & inclusion
- Health & safety
- Community engagement
6. Appendices (5-10 pages)
- GRI/SASB content index
- Performance data tables
- Assurance statement (if audited)
- Glossary
Total: 30-50 pages typical
Phase 4: External Assurance (Optional, 6-8 weeks)
Limited Assurance (most common):
- Auditor provides moderate assurance
- "Nothing has come to our attention..."
- Less rigorous than financial audit
- Cost: AED 50,000-150,000
Reasonable Assurance (rare):
- High level of assurance
- "In our opinion..."
- Similar rigor to financial audit
- Cost: AED 150,000-300,000+
Scope:
- Typically limited to key metrics (GHG emissions, energy, safety)
- Not entire report
Benefit: Credibility with investors, customers
Phase 5: Publication & Communication
Where to Publish:
- Company website (dedicated sustainability page)
- Stock exchange filings (if listed)
- GRI Database (if using GRI)
- Printed report (optional, consider environmental impact)
Communication:
- Press release announcing report
- Social media highlights
- Investor presentations
- Employee town halls
UAE-Specific ESG Considerations
Climate & Energy (UAE Context)
Challenges:
- Extreme heat = high cooling energy
- Water scarcity
- Energy-intensive economy (historically)
Opportunities:
- UAE Net Zero 2050 strategy
- Dubai Clean Energy Strategy (75% clean energy by 2050)
- Solar potential (Dubai has world's largest single-site solar park)
Reporting Focus:
- Energy efficiency initiatives
- Renewable energy adoption
- Cooling optimization
- Water conservation (critical in UAE)
Labor & Human Rights
UAE Workforce Context:
- 88% expatriate workforce
- Kafala system considerations (being reformed)
- Diverse, multicultural workforce
Reporting Focus:
- Wage equity (especially for lower-income workers)
- Worker accommodation standards
- Timely wage payments (WPS compliance)
- Grievance mechanisms
- Freedom of association (where applicable)
Dubai Context: International scrutiny on labor practicestransparency builds trust
Emiratization
National Priority:
- Government mandates for UAE national employment
- Targets: 2% annual increase in private sector Emiratization
ESG Reporting:
- Disclose Emiratization percentages
- Training & development programs for nationals
- Career progression plans
- Retention strategies
Governance & Family Businesses
UAE Business Landscape:
- Many large family-owned businesses
- Transition to professional management
ESG Governance Focus:
- Independent directors
- Succession planning transparency
- Family vs. professional management balance
- Related party transaction disclosure
Common ESG Reporting Mistakes
1. "Greenwashing" (Most Serious)
What: Overstating environmental performance, misleading claims
Examples:
- Claiming "carbon neutral" without credible offsets
- Highlighting minor green initiatives while ignoring major impacts
- Selective disclosure (only positive data)
Consequences:
- Reputational damage
- Regulatory penalties (increasing)
- Investor lawsuits
- Customer backlash
Solution: Honest, balanced reporting. Disclose challenges alongside achievements.
2. Lack of Materiality
What: Reporting on non-material topics, ignoring material ones
Example: Tech company extensively reports on water usage (low impact) but ignores data privacy & cybersecurity (high impact)
Solution: Proper materiality assessment. Focus on what matters to stakeholders AND business.
3. No Targets or Progress Tracking
What: Descriptive reporting without goals or year-over-year progress
Problem: Can't assess improvement
Solution: Set quantitative targets, track annually, report progress honestly
4. Poor Data Quality
What: Estimates, incomplete data, inconsistent methodologies
Problem: Not credible, can't benchmark or track progress
Solution: Invest in data systems, consistent methodologies, third-party assurance
ESG Reporting Costs
Initial Setup (Year 1):
- Materiality assessment: AED 30,000-80,000
- Data collection systems: AED 50,000-200,000
- Report preparation: AED 60,000-150,000
- External assurance (optional): AED 50,000-150,000
- Total Year 1: AED 190,000-580,000
Ongoing (Year 2+):
- Data collection/analysis: AED 40,000-100,000
- Report update: AED 40,000-100,000
- Assurance: AED 50,000-150,000
- Total Annual: AED 130,000-350,000
Cost Reduction:
- Integrate ESG into existing systems (don't build separate)
- Start with limited assurance (not full)
- Use templates (GRI, SASB provide free guidance)
- Phased approach (basic report Year 1, enhance over time)
Our ESG Reporting Services
We provide end-to-end ESG reporting support:
Materiality Assessment: Stakeholder engagement & topic identification Framework Selection: GRI, SASB, TCFD guidance Data Collection: Systems & processes setup Report Preparation: Full report drafting (30-50 pages) External Assurance: Limited/reasonable assurance Compliance: SCA, DFSA, ADX requirements Ongoing Support: Annual updates & improvements
Experience: 200+ UAE ESG reports | 37 years UAE
Timeline: 4-6 months (initial report)
Call: +971 42 500 251 Email: info@auditfirmsdubai.ae
Related: Internal Audit Services | External Audit Services
Important Disclaimer
The information provided in this article reflects the regulatory environment as of 2026. Laws and regulations in the UAE are subject to change. This content is for general information only and does not constitute professional legal or financial advice. We recommend consulting with a qualified auditor or legal advisor for your specific situation.
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