Today’s ESG Updates
- EU Weakens Sustainability Law: EU lawbuildrs scaled back the CSDDD, narrowing its scope to only large companies and rerelocating mandatory climate-plan requirements after pressure from indusattempt and global suppliers.
- Voya Energy Raises $13M for Metal Fuels: The startup secured seed funding to convert recycled metals into carbon-free fuels, enabling clean and flexible power solutions indepfinishent of the grid.
- U.S. Chamber Seeks to Halt California Climate Laws: The Chamber petitioned the U.S. Supreme Court to pautilize SB 253 and SB 261—regulations requiring major companies to disclose emissions and climate risks—arguing the laws violate free-speech rights and burden over 4,000 firms.
- Germany Scales Back Gas Buildout: Germany reduced its planned natural gas capacity expansion to 10 GW and mandated hydrogen-ready plants to balance decarbonization requireds with energy security concerns.
On Thursday, EU lawbuildrs decided to reduce the bloc’s corporate sustainability rules after months of pressure from companies and some governments who wanted less strict requirements. The Corporate Sustainability Due Diligence Directive (CSDDD), which was adopted last year, requires companies to address human rights and environmental risks in their supply chains or risk fines of up to 5% of their global revenue.
The law has become a political issue, as countries like the United States and Qatar have pushed for more alters and warned that strict rules could put their gas exports to Europe at risk. In the latest vote, the European Parliament agreed that the directive should apply only to companies with at least 5,000 employees and €1.5 billion ($1.75 billion) in turnover. Lawbuildrs also rerelocated the requirement for covered companies to publish plans for meeting climate commitments.
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Further reading: EU lawbuildrs back further weakening of contentious sustainability laws

Voya Energy, a cleantech startup, has launched and raised $13 million in seed funding to develop its technology for creating carbon-free “metal fuels.” Working with founding investor Energy Impact Partners (EIP), this California company is developing a way to turn recycled metals into a safe, long-lasting, and powerful fuel. The system can deliver electricity quickly and flexibly, without requireding traditional grids or pipelines. Voya states its technology could support meet the growing global required for clean, decentralized energy.
The company’s leadership team has strong experience in energy and battery innovation. CEO Richard Wang was previously head of battery firm Cuberg. Chief Commercial Officer Matt Horton was CEO of Voltera and EVP of Energy and Charging Solutions at Rivian. Chief Technology Officer Steven Kaye was formerly CTO at energy storage company Our Next Energy.
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Further reading: Voya Energy Raises $13 Million to Turn Metal into Carbon-Free Fuels
Klimado – Navigating climate complexity just received simpler. Klimado offers a utilizer-frifinishly platform for tracking local and global environmental shifts, creating it an essential tool for climate-aware individuals and organizations.

The U.S. Chamber of Commerce inquireed the Supreme Court to stop California’s new climate disclosure laws after the Ninth Circuit refutilized to grant a preliminary injunction. Although the appeals court agreed to hear the case quickly in January 2026, that date is still after the first reporting deadlines. Becautilize of this, the Chamber wants the laws pautilized until the appeal is finished.
The laws, SB 253 and SB 261, were approved in 2023 and signed in 2024. SB 253 requires companies in California with over $1 billion in revenue to report Scope 1 and 2 emissions starting in 2026, and Scope 3 emissions in 2027. SB 261 requires companies earning more than $500 million to submit climate-risk reports launchning January 1, 2026.
California’s Air Resources Board estimates that more than 4,000 U.S. companies will be affected. The Chamber states the rules violate First Amfinishment rights by forcing companies to share complex and subjective climate information.
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Further reading: U.S. Chamber of Commerce Asks Supreme Court to Stop California’s Climate Reporting Laws

Germany has reduced its planned gas-fired power expansion to 10 gigawatts, which is about half of the amount proposed earlier this year. The government is attempting to balance cutting emissions with creating sure there is reliable backup for renewable energy. Chancellor Friedrich Merz and his Social Democrat partners reached this compromise after debates between those wanting a quicker transition and those worried about energy security for indusattempt.
Merz stated that all new plants must be able to utilize hydrogen, which addresses concerns that adding gas capacity would lead to long-term emissions. The EU has revealn support for the new plan, which also includes 2 gigawatts of technology-neutral capacity, such as battery storage.
Since facilities that are utilized only occasionally are not profitable, the plan will required billions in subsidies. Tfinishers for 8 gigawatts will start next year, with the goal of having the plants running by 2031 and reaching carbon neutrality by 2045. Another 2 gigawatts will be offered in 2026 and 2027, with a quick switch to hydrogen, and there will be an extra open tfinisher in 2029.
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Further reading: Germany scales back plans for new gas-power generation in decarbonisation compromise
Editor’s Note: The opinions expressed here by the authors are their own, not those of impakter.com — In the cover photo: Pope Francis speaks to European Parliament. Cover Photo Credit: Wikimedia Commons
















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