Home Regulations Hub European Sustainability Reporting Standards (ESRS)
Contents
- What is the ESRS?
- Key features
- Changes on previous iterations
- Reporting timeline
- How to prepare
- Contact us
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What is the ESRS?
The Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive (CSRD) marks a landmark shift in requirements for companies to report sustainability-related information about their operations, alongside financial information and aims to promote sustainable development through transparency by advancing the scope and quality of corporate sustainability reporting. The CSRD is implemented in practice through the EU European Sustainability Reporting Standards (ESRS); enabling stakeholders to gain improved and comparable insights into the business practices of obligated companies.
In essence, the ESRS is a set of reporting standards that are used to meet the requirements of the EU CSRD. So, whilst the CSRD sets out reporting requirements and obligations, the ESRS provide the framework and methodology for reporting.
The adoption of the CSRD in 2022, and subsequently, the European Sustainability Reporting Standards ESRS in 2023 has continued to show the EU’s ambition to put sustainability reporting at the same level as financial reporting.
What are the key features of the final ESRS?
Two cross-cutting ESRSs and ten topic-specific ESRSs (5 environmental, 4 social and 1 on governance) will require disclosure on governance, strategy, and impact, risk and opportunity management. The cross-cutting ESRS, ESRS 1 and 2 are mandatory to report on for all obligated companies, whereas the topical standards are only mandatory to report on where material. This is determined through a Double Materiality Assessment, which will support stakeholders in understanding the organisation’s impacts on people and the environment as well as the material financial impacts of sustainability matters on the organisation.
Guide | Double Materiality Reporting: The Next Frontier in ESG
Anthesis’ double materiality guide provides a comprehensive overview of the emerging regulatory landscape surrounding double materiality, as well as it’s value and how to conduct a materiality assessment.
Group | Number | Subject |
Cross-cutting | ESRS 1 | General Requirements |
Cross-cutting | ESRS 2 | General Disclosures |
Environment | ESRS E1 | Climate |
Environment | ESRS E2 | Pollution |
Environment | ESRS E3 | Water and marine resources |
Environment | ESRS E4 | Biodiversity and ecosystems |
Environment | ESRS E5 | Resource use and circular economy |
Social | ESRS S1 | Own workforce |
Social | ESRS S2 | Workers in the value chain |
Social | ESRS S3 | Affected communities |
Social | ESRS S4 | Consumers and end users |
Governance | ESRS G1 | Business conduct |
Additional sector-specific requirements will be developed for adoption in 2026.
There are four reporting areas and three reporting layers that are part of the disclosures.
Four reporting areas:
- Governance: aims to provide stakeholders with insights into a company’s commitment to sustainable practices.
- Strategy: aims to provide a clear understanding of the governance mechanisms, controls, and procedures established for monitoring and managing sustainability aspects.
- Impact: aims to report on the procedures used to identify critical sustainability impacts, risks, and opportunities.
- Metrics and targets: aims to provide insight into performance indicators used by the company to assess critical sustainability issues.
Three reporting layers:
- Sector-agnostic disclosures
- Sector-specific disclosures
- Entity-specific disclosures
Changes compared to previous iterations on ESRS
After the standards were first released, they went through a 15-month public consultation process. The basic principles (e.g., double materiality) were retained however, the structure was changed to align more closely with the Task Force on Climate-related Financial Disclosures (TCFD).
Key changes include:
- Providing more flexibility in deciding what information to disclose in reports. All disclosures except ESRS 2 are now subject to the materiality assessment. However, companies will need to provide a detailed explanation to support stakeholders to understand why the company has not disclosed the information.
- Relief measures introduced to support companies in implementing data collection and reporting systems. Companies are now not required to disclose the expected financial impacts of environmental risks in their first year of reporting. For the following two years, companies may provide qualitative disclosures of these impacts but are not required to provide specific numbers.
- An increase in the number of voluntary data points due to the difficulty and cost for companies to provide them.
What is the reporting timeline?
How can your organisation prepare?
The CSRD and ESRS represent a critical step forward in the EU’s journey toward a more sustainable business landscape. By harmonising reporting practices and elevating the quality of disclosed information, these initiatives empower stakeholders to make informed decisions, drive positive change, and contribute to a more equitable, sustainable future. As companies align with these frameworks, they not only comply with regulatory requirements but also position themselves as leaders in sustainability, capable of navigating the complex terrain of ESG considerations with confidence and purpose.
Frame
1) Set the context: A range of regulations may apply based on your business context, and each carries it own timelines and requirements
- ESG regulatory landscape evaluation
- Product and value chain regulatory scan
- Initial team education on requirements
Analytics
2) Understand what matters: Most current ESG regulations require analysis and reporting based on a type of materiality, up to and including CSRD-compliant double materiality.
- Double materiality assessment
- Impact materiality assessment
- Financial materiality assessment
- Risk assessments
3) Identify gaps: Each regulation contains functional and content metrics, requiring in-depth, current state gap analysis.
- Readiness assessments
Solutions
4) Plan for change: Closing compliance gaps typically means program, governance, and / or disclosure changes on a specific timeline, requiring a custom roadmap and stakeholder alignment.
- Implementation plans
Implementation
5) Build capabilities: Depending on the regulation, you may need to implement expert-supported projects, such as developing a climate transition plan, to meet your compliance obligations.
- Executive education
- ESG governance
- ESG data management
- Transition planning
- Scope 1, 2 and 3 GHG inventory
- Scenario analysis
6) Report with confidence: Each regulation has specific requirements for assuring and reporting your data, and the higher stakes of financial reporting mean current voluntary reporting should be designed for consistency.
- Voluntary and management standards alignment
- ESG reporting and assurance support
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