TheCorporate Sustainability Reporting Directive (CSRD)replaced theNon-Financial Reporting Directive (NFRD)to address itslimitationsin scope and reporting requirements. Below are the explanations for each option:
A. False– The NFRDdid notrequire all companies in the EU to include a non-financial statement. Instead, itapplied only to large public-interest entitieswith 500 or more employees.
B. True– The NFRD applied tolarge public-interest entities, includinglisted companies, banks, and insurance firms with more than 500 employees​.
C. False– The NFRDdid not mandate external assurancefor sustainability information. TheCSRD introduced mandatory assuranceat the EU level​.
D. False– The CSRDdid not replace the NFRD; rather, itexpanded and strengthened reporting requirements. TheNFRD was replaced by the CSRD, but not the other way around​.
E. True– TheCSRD was introduced to improve the scope and depth of sustainability reportingcompared to the NFRD. Itexpanded the number of entities required to report, standardized disclosures via ESRS, and introduced third-party assurance requirements​.
Key Differences Between CSRD and NFRDFeature
NFRD (Old Directive)
CSRD (New Directive)
Scope
Large public-interest entities (500+ employees)
All large companies + listed SMEs
Assurance
Not required
Mandatory external assurance
Disclosure Requirements
Limited sustainability disclosures
Comprehensive ESRS-based reporting
Reporting Standards
No standardized framework
ESRS-based mandatory framework
Application Date
In force since 2018
Applies from 2024 onwards
CSRD Directive (EU) 2022/2464– Assurance & Reporting Provisions​.
ESRS Compilation Explanations January - November 2024​.
Official References: