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Associate · Wilson Sonsini · M&A & Securities Practice
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32 drills sourced from real legal developments — regulations, enforcement actions, and deals that actually happened. Sorted by relevance to your weak areas.
SEC Climate Disclosure Rules: What Your PE-Backed Client Needs to Know
Meridian operates data centers in Texas, Virginia, and Frankfurt (EU). They have approximately 1,200 employees across the US, UK, and Germany. Their PE sponsor is planning a secondary offering concurrent with the IPO.
This scenario is based on the SEC's actual Enhanced Climate Disclosure Rules adopted March 6, 2024. The client is fictional; the legal development is real.
The SEC adopted final rules requiring registrants to disclose climate-related risks that have materially affected or are reasonably likely to materially affect their business strategy, results of operations, or financial condition. Key provisions include:
- Scope 1 & 2 GHG emissions disclosure required for large accelerated filers beginning FY2025
- Scope 3 emissions requirement was eliminated from the final rule (a significant change from the proposed rule)
- Material climate-related risks and their quantified financial impacts
- Climate-related governance — board oversight and management's role
- Attestation requirements for large accelerated filers (limited assurance initially)
- Safe harbor for forward-looking climate disclosures
The rules apply on a phased basis depending on filer category. For IPO candidates, the relevant thresholds are:
- Large Accelerated Filer (LAF): Public float ≥ $700M — most stringent requirements, FY2025 compliance
- Accelerated Filer: Float $75M–$700M — similar requirements, one-year delayed phase-in
- Non-Accelerated Filer / SRC: Float < $75M — limited requirements, later phase-in
- New IPO registrants are generally not subject to the rules until after their first full fiscal year as a reporting company
- However, S-1 disclosures must address known material climate risks under existing MD&A rules
- PE-backed companies preparing for IPO should begin data collection 12–18 months in advance
The SEC's Climate and ESG Task Force (ESGTF) has been active since 2021. Key enforcement patterns relevant to IPO candidates:
- Goldman Sachs ESG Fund (2022): $4M civil penalty for misleading ESG investment criteria disclosures
- Vale S.A. (2023): $55M settlement for misrepresenting safety processes (analogous governance risk)
- Scope creep risk: Companies that make voluntary ESG claims in marketing materials face scrutiny under anti-fraud provisions, even before mandatory rules apply
- EU CSRD exposure: Meridian's Frankfurt operations trigger EU Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive obligations for FY2026 — a separate but intersecting compliance track
- Internal ESG data inconsistencies between investor presentations and S-1 disclosures have been a recurring SEC comment letter focus
You identified 5 of 6 key areas
Strong identification — you caught the core issues
Your Analysis
Expert Analysis
Correct identification. This is the core issue. Meridian's S-1 must address all known material climate risks under existing MD&A requirements (Items 101, 103, and 303), even before the new climate disclosure rules formally apply to them as a new registrant. The threshold question is materiality — which requires a legal judgment, not just a data audit. You should be running a climate materiality assessment with the CFO team now, 12–18 months ahead of IPO.
Well identified. Thoma Bravo will have ESG reporting obligations to its LPs (many of which are public pension funds with their own ESG mandates). Any inconsistency between what Meridian discloses in the S-1 and what Thoma Bravo has been reporting to its LPs creates a direct exposure risk. Additionally, Meridian's Frankfurt operations already trigger EU CSRD reporting for FY2026 — an obligation that exists independently of SEC rules. This dual-track compliance exposure is often missed by US-focused associates.
Good catch. The SEC's new rules require disclosure of board-level oversight of climate risks. For a pre-IPO company, this means Meridian needs to establish (or formalize) board committee structures for climate/ESG oversight before the S-1 is filed. This is a governance design question — does the Audit Committee own it? A dedicated ESG/Risk committee? This needs to be resolved now, not during the roadshow. The PE sponsor's designees on the board add complexity (related party and independence considerations).
Correct. The PE sponsor's concurrent secondary offering creates a layered disclosure obligation. Thoma Bravo's sell-down will be scrutinized: if climate risks are material and undisclosed, the secondary offering creates a separate liability exposure for the selling stockholders. The S-1 and any preliminary prospectus must be complete. Lockup agreements, registration rights, and the timing of the secondary should all be revisited in light of the disclosure requirements now being finalized.
Strong cross-border awareness. The Frankfurt operations trigger the EU Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive (CSRD) and the European Sustainability Reporting Standards (ESRS). This is a separate and more demanding reporting framework than the SEC rules — it requires full Scope 1, 2, AND 3 emissions data, plus detailed social and governance reporting. Meridian needs a unified data infrastructure that satisfies both SEC and EU requirements simultaneously. This is not just an EU operations problem — it affects what data Meridian can make globally consistent claims about.
This is the most commonly missed cross-domain issue. The Inflation Reduction Act (IRA) created significant tax incentives tied to clean energy investments, carbon sequestration, and clean fuel production — including for data center operators. Meridian's data centers in Texas and Virginia may qualify for Section 48E (clean electricity investment credit) or Section 45Y (production tax credit) if they procure renewable energy. A PE-backed company approaching IPO should be evaluating these credits as part of their capital efficiency story — they can materially affect Meridian's effective tax rate and valuation narrative. Failure to capture available IRA credits is both a missed opportunity and a due diligence gap future investors will identify.
Total Drill Score
Key area to develop: Tax cross-domain awareness. When advising PE-backed companies on compliance obligations, always run a concurrent analysis of available IRA and state tax credits. Associates who catch this earn 15–20% higher scores on multi-domain drills. Recommended: complete "IRA Tax Credits for Technology Companies" (Foundational, 8 min).
Your Progress
Tracking judgment development over time · Last updated today
| Drill | Practice Area | Difficulty | Date | Score |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| SEC Climate Disclosure Rules | Securities | Intermediate | Mar 18, 2026 | 79 |
| CFIUS Review Triggers: TikTok Precedent | M&A | Advanced | Mar 24, 2026 | 87 |
| Non-Compete Ban: SaaS Workforce | Employment | Foundational | Mar 22, 2026 | 74 |
| AI-Generated Content: Copyright Exposure | IP | Intermediate | Mar 20, 2026 | 61 |
| Data Broker Regulations: GDPR Meets State Laws | Privacy/Data | Advanced | Mar 15, 2026 | 58 |
| Hart-Scott-Rodino: When Does It Apply? | Antitrust | Foundational | Mar 12, 2026 | 81 |
| Section 16 Short-Swing Profits: PE Funds | Securities | Intermediate | Mar 9, 2026 | 76 |
| Trade Secret Protection: Remote Teams | IP | Foundational | Mar 5, 2026 | 65 |
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Wilson Sonsini Goodrich & Rosati · Associate Development Program · Q1 2026