Demand for transparent, digital data has never been greater, driven by global climate reporting mandates and U.S. regulatory requirements introduced by the Financial Data Transparency Act (FDTA) — all calling for machine-readable (digital) data standards. The standardization and modernization of data collected to assess climate risk and understand business and government impact is of critical importance to the functioning of a modern economy. With increases in geopolitical, environmental, market, liquidity, counterparty, climate and political risk, the need for timely and comprehensive information is essential to navigate these risks.
Join Christine Kuglin, director of the Truth in Accounting project at the University of Denver, to learn more about the Financial Data Transparency Act at this one-day conference presented by XBRL US.