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Recognition of a provision
A company recognizes a provision under IAS 37 when it has a present obligation (legal or constructive) as a result of a past event and when it is probable that an outflow of resources embodying economic benefits will be required to settle the obligation. In addition, the amount of the obligation would need to be reliably estimable. Under IAS 37, no provision is recognized for costs that need to be incurred to operate in the future. Only those obligations arising from past events existing independently of a company’s future actions are recognized as provisions.
The Committee concluded that the company does not recognize a provision when it makes the statement. At that time, the constructive obligation is not a present obligation as a result of a past event. The costs that the company will incur to reduce its annual greenhouse gas emissions and to offset the greenhouse gases it emits, are costs that it will need to incur to operate in the future. Therefore, the obligations for those costs do not exist independently of the company’s future actions.
As the company carries out its transition plan to reduce emissions, it will receive other resources (such as fixed assets and inventories) in exchange, and will be able to use these resources to manufacture products it can sell at a profit. Settling the constructive obligation (if any) to reduce the company’s annual greenhouse gas emissions will not require an outflow of resources embodying economic benefits. Therefore, in this situation, the criteria to recognize a provision are not met. However, when the company has emitted the greenhouse gases it has committed to offset, settling that obligation will require an outflow of resources embodying economic benefits through buying and retiring carbon credits. The company will not receive any resources embodying economic benefits in exchange. In this situation, a provision is recognized only when other criteria have been fulfilled after the emission.