Home » From Policy to Practice: Navigating the FCA’s 2026 ESG Enforcement Regime
The FCA’s publication of its Good and Poor Practice review for SDR implementation [1], alongside the ongoing consultation on incorporating UK SRS into the UK Listing Rules [2], sends a clear message: the UK has moved from policy development to regulatory application.
For Boards, C-Suite executives, and Sustainability Leads, the time for “getting ready” has passed. The priority now is ensuring your governance frameworks -and the data underpinning them can withstand regulatory scrutiny.
In February 2026, the FCA released detailed findings on how firms are applying the SDR regime. This document serves as a critical benchmark for all organisations, not just those in the financial sector.
The regulator has explicitly flagged “surrogate data” and “marketing-led narratives” as Poor Practice. To avoid regulatory intervention, organisations must now demonstrate:
Sustainability‑related compliance in the UK is tightening significantly in 2026, and its impact now reaches far beyond the financial sector. While the FCA’s Sustainability Disclosure Requirements (SDR) apply primarily to asset managers, distributors, and FCA‑authorised firms making sustainability‑related claims, the regulatory landscape for corporate issuers is also evolving.
Alongside SDR’s rollout in the financial sector, the UK government has finalised UK Sustainability Reporting Standards (UK SRS S1 and S2)—based on the International Sustainability Standards Board (ISSB) framework—following consultations conducted between June and September 2025. These standards are now available for voluntary use across all entities.
The government and the FCA are jointly assessing whether certain UK entities, including listed companies, should be required to report against these standards. The FCA is currently consulting on amendments to the UK Listing Rules to reflect this potential shift, with the consultation open until 20 March 2026.
For corporate issuers, this marks a significant step change: sustainability reporting is moving toward becoming a core element of listing obligations, rather than an optional or peripheral disclosure.
While private companies are on a different regulatory timeline, the commercial reality is that they are already being pulled into the sustainability reporting ecosystem through the “supply‑chain effect.
The “grace period” for ambiguous green claims is effectively over. The risk profile for non-compliance has evolved from simple reputational damage to tangible commercial threats:
As the FCA moves ESG transparency from guidance to enforcement, organisations are being judged not just on what they disclose, but on how those disclosures are governed.
Bridgehouse supports boards and senior management teams in putting the right governance, oversight, and controls around sustainability‑related disclosures.
We help ensure responsibilities are clear, decision‑making is properly structured, and ESG reporting is embedded into existing board processes, corporate reporting cycles, and company secretarial frameworks.
Our focus is on governance and implementation. Where specialist expertise is required—for example in areas such as sustainability, environmental matters, or independent assurance—we work alongside clients’ appointed advisers to ensure all inputs are appropriately governed, coordinated, and evidenced at board level.
As regulatory scrutiny increases, strong governance is becoming a critical line of defence, giving boards confidence that ESG disclosures are robust, defensible, and regulator‑ready.
The publication of the FCA’s Good and Poor Practice guidance is more than a routine regulatory update, it is a clear signal that UK regulators now expect sustainability‑related information to meet the same standards of accuracy, governance oversight, and evidential rigour as financial disclosures.
Whether you are a financial services firm preparing for full SDR supervision, a listed company anticipating UK SRS‑aligned reporting under the evolving Listing Rules, or a private organisation responding to increasing data requests from customers, lenders, and investors, the expectation is consistent: robust governance, reliable data, and transparent reporting.
Contact Bridgehouse today for a confidential discussion about your reporting readiness. We can help you ensure your organisation is compliant, competitive, and future-proofed.
Sources: [1] FCA (Feb 2026). Review of Good and Poor Practice in SDR implementation. [2] FCA (Jan 2026). Consultation Paper CP26/5: UK SRS-aligned disclosure rules for UK listings. [3] Travers Smith (Jan 2026). The FCA fires the starting gun on UK Sustainability Reporting.
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