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ESG, Investor Expectations and Corporate Governance for Serbian Companies

By Nemanja Curcic
– posted 3 hours ago

Investors and lenders operating in Serbia are no longer treating environmental, social and governance factors as a soft preference, they are building ESG investor expectations into corporate governance assessments for Serbian companies before committing capital. At NCR lawyers, we regularly advise boards and in-house counsel on the practical governance changes and disclosure steps needed to satisfy these demands without creating unnecessary cost or delay. This guide sets out the specific actions Serbian companies should take now: adopt board-level ESG oversight, prepare a minimal disclosure pack and align transactional documentation with the questions investors will ask. The commercial payoff is direct, companies that address these points early secure faster deal timelines, better lending terms and stronger negotiating positions.

Executive Summary, What This Means for Serbian Boards

Serbian boards that fail to demonstrate basic ESG governance risk losing access to capital, facing prolonged due diligence and accepting less favourable deal terms. The good news is that the most impactful changes are low-cost and fast to implement. In my experience, boards that commit to three governance actions, three disclosure quick-wins and two transactional preparations can close the gap with investor expectations within 90 days.

Three immediate board actions:

  • Assign ESG oversight. Designate an existing board member or committee as formally responsible for ESG matters and record the mandate in the board charter.
  • Update the risk register. Add environmental, social and governance risks as standing items, with quarterly review and documented discussion.
  • Adopt a short ESG policy. A two-to-three-page document covering environmental compliance, anti-bribery, labour standards and supplier expectations is sufficient to start.

Three disclosure quick-wins:

  • One-page KPI dashboard. Track energy consumption, employee turnover, workplace injury rates, waste volumes and board composition, refreshed quarterly.
  • Compliance confirmation letter. A brief board-signed statement confirming current compliance with environmental permits and labour laws.
  • Supplier code of conduct. A one-page document embedded in procurement terms covering anti-bribery, environmental basics and human rights.

Two transactional benefits:

  • Reduced due diligence timelines, investors spend less time requesting and chasing basic ESG documentation.
  • Stronger warranty and indemnity positions, sellers who can evidence ESG governance resist broad ESG-related indemnity carve-outs more effectively.

Investor and Lender Expectations in Serbia, What They Look For and Why

International investors and development finance institutions entering Serbia evaluate ESG through four lenses: regulatory risk, reputational exposure, supply-chain continuity and alignment with their own portfolio-level ESG commitments. From what I am seeing in practice, even domestic lenders are now incorporating basic ESG checklists into credit assessments, particularly for exposures above EUR 5 million.

The core concern for investors is not whether a company has a glossy sustainability report, it is whether the company can demonstrate that someone at board level is accountable for ESG risks and that basic policies and data exist. Investor expectations in Serbia now typically include evidence of the following:

  • Governance structure. Board or committee mandate covering ESG; documented meeting minutes showing ESG items discussed.
  • Policy documentation. Written environmental policy, anti-bribery and corruption policy, health and safety policy, and a supplier or procurement code.
  • KPI data. Quantitative indicators tracked over at least two reporting periods, energy, water, waste, employee metrics and safety incidents.
  • Regulatory compliance. Confirmation that all required environmental permits are current, that filings are up to date with the Serbian Business Registers Agency (APR), and that beneficial ownership information is registered.
  • Assurance readiness. A willingness to submit to limited or reasonable assurance over ESG data, even if not yet formally obtained.

The Western Balkans ESG Foundation has noted the rapid growth in ESG-linked investment across the region, underscoring that the trend is structural rather than cyclical. Companies that present this evidence proactively, rather than waiting to be asked, signal maturity and reduce deal friction.

Due Diligence Requests from Investors and Banks

A typical ESG due diligence request list from an international investor or development bank entering Serbia includes the following items:

  1. Board charter or terms of reference mentioning ESG oversight
  2. Written ESG or sustainability policy (even a short-form version)
  3. Environmental permits and recent inspection reports
  4. Health and safety records and incident logs
  5. Employee data, headcount, turnover, diversity, collective bargaining status
  6. Anti-bribery and corruption policy, including gifts and entertainment register
  7. Supplier code of conduct or equivalent procurement standards
  8. Beneficial ownership register extract from APR
  9. Any prior ESG audit, assessment or rating
  10. Community complaints register or stakeholder engagement records

In my experience, companies that can produce items one through eight within 48 hours of a request dramatically improve investor confidence and accelerate deal timetables.

Regulatory Landscape in Serbia and Relevant International Standards

Serbia does not yet have a single, comprehensive ESG reporting statute equivalent to the EU Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive. However, several domestic laws and institutional requirements already create ESG-adjacent obligations, and EU accession alignment is progressively tightening the framework. Serbian companies must comply with environmental laws covering waste management, air and water protection, and emissions, obligations that the EU accession process is steadily reinforcing.

Key domestic obligations with ESG relevance include:

  • Annual financial statement filings with APR. All companies registered in Serbia must file annual financial statements with the APR. For large companies, these filings include a management report that may address non-financial matters.
  • Beneficial ownership register. Companies must register and maintain up-to-date beneficial ownership data with the APR.
  • Securities Commission disclosure. Listed companies and issuers on the Belgrade Stock Exchange are subject to continuous disclosure obligations supervised by the Securities Commission of the Republic of Serbia, which increasingly expects governance-related transparency.
  • Environmental permits and reporting. Operators in regulated sectors must hold environmental permits and report emissions data to relevant ministries.
  • Labour law compliance. Serbian labour legislation requires documented employment contracts, workplace safety assessments and occupational health records.

Who Enforces and Where to File

Enforcement of ESG-related obligations in Serbia is distributed across several bodies. The APR handles company filings and beneficial ownership. The Securities Commission oversees issuer disclosure and market conduct. The Ministry of Environmental Protection supervises environmental permits and inspections. Labour inspectorates enforce employment and safety standards. For companies with cross-border operations, all of these touchpoints become relevant simultaneously during investor due diligence.

How CSRD and ESRS Affect Serbian Companies

The EU’s Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive and the European Sustainability Reporting Standards, developed by EFRAG, create obligations that reach Serbian companies through two channels. First, Serbian subsidiaries of EU parent companies may be consolidated into group-level CSRD reports, requiring them to supply standardised ESG data upstream. Second, the CSRD’s third-country undertaking provisions may apply directly to Serbian companies generating significant net turnover in the EU.

As the Chambers Corporate Governance 2025 guide for Serbia notes, ESG regulations have mandated that Serbian companies seeking access to the European market comply with these evolving standards. Even where direct CSRD obligations do not yet apply, EU buyers and lenders routinely impose equivalent data requirements through contract and loan terms. In my view, Serbian companies with any EU commercial exposure should treat ESRS-aligned disclosure as a practical necessity rather than a future compliance item.

ESG Investor Expectations, Governance Changes Serbian Boards Should Adopt

Boards that integrate ESG into existing governance structures, rather than creating parallel reporting streams, achieve compliance at lower cost and with less organisational disruption. The following changes address the most common gaps I encounter when advising Serbian companies on investor-readiness.

Board-level ESG mandate. Assign explicit ESG oversight responsibility to the supervisory board, an existing audit or risk committee, or a newly designated sustainability committee. The mandate should be recorded in the board charter or committee terms of reference and should specify the scope of oversight, reporting frequency and authority to commission external assessments.

Standing agenda item. Add ESG as a quarterly standing item on board meeting agendas. Minute the discussion, including any decisions taken, risks identified and management actions assigned. Investors reviewing board minutes look for evidence of substantive engagement, not just a tick-box reference.

Risk register integration. Expand the company’s risk register to include ESG categories, environmental liability, regulatory change, supply-chain disruption, workforce retention, reputational risk and governance gaps. Assign risk owners and review triggers.

Director duties awareness. Ensure all directors understand that ESG oversight falls within their existing fiduciary duties under Serbian corporate law. Board responsibilities for ESG in Serbia are not a separate legal obligation, they are an extension of the duty to act in the company’s best interest with due care.

Remuneration alignment. Where executive remuneration includes variable components, consider linking a portion to measurable ESG targets, safety incident rates, emissions reduction or governance milestones. This signals to investors that management incentives are aligned with sustainability outcomes.

Practical Templates for Charters and Minutes

Sample board resolution language:

“The Board resolves to assign oversight of environmental, social and governance matters to [the Audit Committee / a designated Board member], with a mandate to review ESG risks quarterly, approve the company’s ESG policy, and report to the full Board on compliance status, material incidents and recommended actions. This mandate is effective immediately and shall be reflected in the updated Board Charter.”

Board meeting ESG checklist:

  • Review of ESG risk register, any new or escalated risks
  • Status of environmental permits and any inspection findings
  • Workplace safety incident report for the quarter
  • Update on ESG KPI dashboard, trends and anomalies
  • Supplier code compliance, any reported violations
  • Investor or lender ESG requests received since last meeting

Simple ESG Disclosure Steps and Templates That Reduce Transaction Friction

The single most effective step a Serbian company can take before engaging with investors or lenders is to assemble a minimal ESG disclosure pack. This is not a sustainability report, it is a focused collection of documents that answers the questions investors will ask in the first round of due diligence. In our experience at NCR lawyers, companies that have this pack ready shave weeks off transaction timelines.

Document Purpose Where to store / link
ESG policy (2–3 pages) Demonstrates board-level commitment and scope of ESG governance Company website, data room, board portal
One-page KPI dashboard Provides quantitative evidence of ESG performance over time Data room, quarterly board pack
Compliance confirmation letter Board-signed statement confirming current status of environmental permits and labour compliance Data room, lender compliance file
Environmental permits register Lists all permits held, expiry dates and most recent inspection outcomes Legal department register, data room
Supplier code of conduct Shows supply-chain ESG expectations are formalised Procurement system, company website
Basic materiality statement Identifies which ESG topics are most relevant to the company’s operations and sector Board pack, data room

Sample KPI dashboard fields (quarterly refresh):

  • Environmental: Total energy consumption (MWh), water usage (m³), waste generated (tonnes), hazardous waste disposed, CO₂ emissions (Scope 1 and 2 where data exists)
  • Social: Total headcount, voluntary turnover rate, gender ratio (management and workforce), workplace injuries (lost-time incidents), training hours per employee
  • Governance: Board composition (independent vs executive directors), number of board meetings held, ESG items on agenda (yes/no per meeting), anti-bribery training completion rate

Companies often assume this requires expensive consultants or new software. In practice, most of this data already exists within finance, HR and operations teams, it simply needs to be consolidated into a single, regularly updated document. The cost of doing this is negligible; the cost of not doing it is measured in delayed closings and higher risk premiums.

Transactional Readiness, M&A and Fundraising Checklist

When preparing for M&A or a fundraising round, Serbian companies should anticipate that ESG will feature prominently in buyer or investor due diligence. Based on recent transactions I have advised on, the following checklist covers the areas most likely to generate questions, negotiation points or deal friction.

Pre-transaction actions:

  • ESG representations and warranties. Draft or review standard ESG reps covering environmental compliance, permit validity, absence of material ESG litigation, anti-bribery compliance and accuracy of disclosed ESG data.
  • Indemnity exposure mapping. Identify potential ESG liabilities, contaminated land, pending environmental fines, labour disputes, unresolved workplace safety citations, and assess whether they require specific indemnities or price adjustments.
  • Warranty and indemnity insurance. Consider whether W&I insurance policies cover ESG-related claims and whether specific ESG exclusions apply. Increasingly, underwriters ask for ESG diligence reports before quoting.
  • Remediation plans. If ESG due diligence reveals issues, prepare a costed remediation plan with timelines. A credible remediation plan can prevent a deal-breaker from becoming a walkaway.
  • Diligence scope agreement. Agree with the buyer’s or investor’s advisers on the scope of ESG diligence early, environmental site assessments, labour audits, governance reviews, to avoid scope creep and surprise findings late in the process.

My advice to clients is to run an internal ESG pre-diligence exercise at least three months before any planned transaction. Discovering an issue internally is always preferable to having it surfaced by a buyer’s advisers.

Sector Considerations and Risk Focus

Investor ESG expectations vary by sector. Serbian companies in the following industries should focus their disclosure efforts on the highest-risk areas:

  • Energy. Emissions permits, carbon intensity data, transition plans, compliance with air quality and water discharge regulations, and community impact assessments near operational sites.
  • Manufacturing. Waste management practices, hazardous materials handling, workplace safety records, supply-chain labour standards, and water and energy efficiency metrics.
  • Pharmaceuticals. Product safety and pharmacovigilance records, clinical trial ethics, waste disposal for medical and chemical products, employee health monitoring, and anti-bribery compliance in commercial interactions with healthcare professionals. The Savez ekonomista Srbije has highlighted the growing importance of ESG principles in the Serbian pharmaceutical sector specifically.

Next Steps, Implementation Roadmap for the Next 6–12 Months

The following roadmap prioritises actions by time horizon and cost, recognising that most Serbian companies are starting from a low base of formal ESG disclosure.

Months 1–3 (low cost, high impact):

  • Board resolution assigning ESG oversight, corporate secretary to draft
  • Adopt short-form ESG policy, legal team to prepare
  • Assemble minimal disclosure pack, finance, HR and operations to consolidate existing data
  • Register or update beneficial ownership at APR, compliance function

Months 4–6 (moderate effort):

  • Conduct basic materiality assessment, identify top five ESG topics for the company’s sector
  • Populate and publish first KPI dashboard, ESG data owner to refresh quarterly
  • Embed supplier code of conduct into procurement terms, legal and procurement teams

Months 7–12 (strategic investment):

  • Obtain limited assurance over key ESG metrics, engage an external auditor
  • Integrate ESG section into the annual management report filed at APR
  • Align reporting format with ESRS where the company has EU commercial exposure
  • Review remuneration policy for ESG target integration, board and HR

For companies looking to connect with corporate law specialists or legal advisers in Serbia, early engagement helps tailor the roadmap to the company’s specific sector, ownership structure and transaction pipeline.

How ESG Obligations Differ by Company Type in Serbia

Entity type Likely reporting / obligation signal Practical steps for compliance
Listed companies / issuers (Serbia) Higher disclosure expectations from the Securities Commission and investors; may face ESRS/CSRD spillover if the issuer is active on EU markets Board oversight, publish ESG policy, track KPIs, ensure filings with APR and stock exchange, prepare an assurance plan
Large non-listed companies (revenue / employee thresholds) Indirect obligations via supply chain and lenders; voluntary reporting increasingly expected Materiality assessment, one-page dashboard for lenders, supplier due diligence
SMEs / suppliers Mostly voluntary but increasingly requested by buyers and lenders Adopt core policies (anti-bribery, environmental basics), collect supply-chain data, use standard templates

Need Legal Advice?

For specialist advice on this topic, contact Nemanja Curcic at NCR lawyers.

Sources

  1. Serbian Business Registers Agency (APR)
  2. Securities Commission of the Republic of Serbia
  3. European Financial Reporting Advisory Group (EFRAG), ESRS
  4. Chambers Practice Guides, Corporate Governance 2025 (Serbia)
  5. Western Balkans ESG Foundation
  6. EU Commission, Corporate Sustainability Reporting (CSRD)
  7. Savez ekonomista Srbije, Implementing ESG Principles

FAQs

What ESG disclosures are required in Serbia?
Serbia does not have a standalone ESG reporting law. However, companies must file annual financial statements at the APR, maintain beneficial ownership records, hold valid environmental permits and comply with labour reporting obligations. Listed companies face additional disclosure duties under the Securities Commission.
Not directly in most cases. However, Serbian subsidiaries of EU parent companies may need to supply data for consolidated group reports. Serbian companies with significant EU turnover may eventually fall within the CSRD’s third-country provisions. EU buyers and lenders routinely impose equivalent requirements contractually.
Pass a board resolution assigning ESG responsibility to a specific committee or director, add ESG as a standing quarterly agenda item, and ensure meeting minutes record substantive discussion of ESG risks and actions.
Investors commonly request an ESG policy, board charter referencing ESG, environmental permits register, health and safety records, employee data, anti-bribery policy, supplier code of conduct and beneficial ownership confirmation from the APR.
The APR oversees company filings and beneficial ownership. The Securities Commission regulates issuer disclosure. The Ministry of Environmental Protection handles permits and inspections. Labour inspectorates enforce workplace safety and employment standards.
Costs vary widely depending on scope, sector and company size. Limited assurance over a focused set of KPIs for a mid-sized Serbian company typically ranges from EUR 10,000 to EUR 30,000. I recommend scoping the engagement tightly around investor-relevant metrics to control costs.
Assemble a minimal disclosure pack: ESG policy, one-page KPI dashboard, compliance confirmation letter and environmental permits register. These four documents address the most common first-round investor questions and can be prepared within weeks.
Prepare a costed remediation plan with clear timelines and responsibility assignments. Disclose the issue proactively with the remediation plan attached. A credible plan converts a potential deal-breaker into a manageable price adjustment or deferred completion condition.
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ESG, Investor Expectations and Corporate Governance for Serbian Companies

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