Cyprus transposed the Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive (CSRD) into its national law in July 2025. The CSRD requires all large companies to publish regular reports on their environmental and social impact activities. The directive defines a common reporting framework for non-financial data, which aims to ensure that businesses report reliable and comparable sustainability information.
Seven member states are still transposing the CSRD, having missed the 6 July 2024 transposition deadline. The Commission has issued formal infringement notice letters to 17 member states for their failure to transpose the CSRD fully.

The Commission decided to postpone the application of the CSRD by one year for large enterprises, parents of large enterprises and SMEs with securities listed in the EU. The CSRD amendment was implemented through the Omnibus I ("stop-the-clock") directive, which member states must transpose into their national legislation by 31 December 2025.
Several member states have transposed the “stop-the-clock” directive since Cullen’s July update, in addition to France which did so in April.
Cullen International’s updated benchmark tracks the progress made by the 27 EU member states in transposing the CSRD and the related “stop-the-clock” directive.
For more information on the benchmark and Cullen's complete CSRD coverage, please click on “Access the full content” - or on “Request Access”, in case you are not subscribed to our Sustainability service.
more news
29 May 26
How are EU member states transposing NIS2?
Our latest benchmark tracks the progress of the Directive on measures for a high common level of cybersecurity across the EU (NIS2) transposition in the 27 EU member states.
28 May 26
Open RAN adoption remains limited to select markets
Our latest global trends benchmark on the adoption of open radio access network (open RAN) architecture covers commercial deployments, policy support and the emerging AI-RAN trend.
27 May 26
Inconsistent reporting hampers assessment of postal sector’s environmental performance
Our new report, from Cullen International’s recently launched Transport & Delivery Sustainability service, details how postal service providers currently report on their environmental performance.