Emission trading scheme and Financial reporting: Difference between pages

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''Environmental policy''.
1.  


(ETS).  
Financial reporting is traditionally external.


An administrative approach used to control pollution by providing economic incentives for achieving reductions in the emissions of pollutants.
It is concerned with collating and providing information to external stakeholders, the financial markets and the public.


For example, the European Union Emissions Trading Scheme (EU ETS) is a mandatory cap and trade scheme that requires Europe's heavy industries and power generators, as the continent's major emitters of carbon dioxide, to monitor and report annually on their carbon dioxide emissions and to purchase and return an amount of emissions allowances to the government that represents each year's carbon dioxide output.
Contrasted with management accounting, which provides information for internal stakeholders.
 
 
External reporting is mandatory for all limited liability companies, regardless of who owns them.
 
However, smaller and privately owned companies do have relatively lighter (mandatory) reporting requirements.
 
All companies may choose to publish more than the minimum mandatory information.
 
 
2.
 
The term 'financial reporting' is also used by some organisations in a broader sense, to include internal reporting (as well as external).
 
 
Financial reporting is also known as ''financial accounting''.
 
 
:<span style="color:#4B0082">'''''The objective of financial reporting (International Financial Reporting Standards overview)'''''</span>
 
:The users of financial information need to assess:
 
:*Prospects for future net cash inflows to the reporting entity; and
:*Management's stewardship of the entity's economic resources.
 
 
:Accordingly, financial reporting seeks to provide information about:
 
:*The entity's economic resources (assets), claims against the entity (liabilities) and changes in those resources and claims; and
:*How efficiently and effectively management has discharged its responsibilities to use the entity's economic resources.




== See also ==
== See also ==
* [[Cap and trade]]
* [[Accounts]]
* [[Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism]]
* [[Annual report]]
* [[Carbon trading]]
* [[Assets]]
* [[Streamlined Energy and Carbon Reporting]]
* [[Closing exchange rate]]
* [[Conceptual framework]]
* [[Credit]]
* [[Entity]]
* [[Equity]]
* [[Finance]]
* [[Financial accounting]]
* [[Fiscal]]
* [[FP&A]]
* [[Incremental]]
* [[International Financial Reporting Standards]] (IFRS)
* [[Liabilities]]
* [[Limited liability company]]
* [[Management accounting]]
* [[Management efficiency ratio]]
* [[Primary statements]]
* [[Private company]]
* [[Small and Medium-sized Enterprises]]
* [[Stakeholder]]
* [[Stewardship]]
* [[Useful financial information]]


[[Category:Manage_risks]]
[[Category:Accounting,_tax_and_regulation]]

Revision as of 15:04, 31 December 2020

1.

Financial reporting is traditionally external.

It is concerned with collating and providing information to external stakeholders, the financial markets and the public.

Contrasted with management accounting, which provides information for internal stakeholders.


External reporting is mandatory for all limited liability companies, regardless of who owns them.

However, smaller and privately owned companies do have relatively lighter (mandatory) reporting requirements.

All companies may choose to publish more than the minimum mandatory information.


2.

The term 'financial reporting' is also used by some organisations in a broader sense, to include internal reporting (as well as external).


Financial reporting is also known as financial accounting.


The objective of financial reporting (International Financial Reporting Standards overview)
The users of financial information need to assess:
  • Prospects for future net cash inflows to the reporting entity; and
  • Management's stewardship of the entity's economic resources.


Accordingly, financial reporting seeks to provide information about:
  • The entity's economic resources (assets), claims against the entity (liabilities) and changes in those resources and claims; and
  • How efficiently and effectively management has discharged its responsibilities to use the entity's economic resources.


See also