This disclosure asks an organisation to explain how it identifies and manages substances of concern in its activities, products and services, and what it is doing to reduce related risks and impacts. In practice, the report should make clear which substances are relevant, where they are used or present, and how the organisation tracks them through its own operations and, where relevant, its value chain.
The practical focus is breadth and consistency, not just a few highlighted sites or products. Readers should be able to see whether the organisation’s approach covers the full business, how it decides what is in scope, and whether the information reflects a systematic review rather than isolated examples.
This LRA educational guidance supports disclosure preparation. For the exact requirements, always refer to the official EFRAG source.
A quick mental checklist before you prepare this disclosure — tick each as you settle it.
Key datapoints to prepare
How to prepare it
Request the substances-in-products data from EHS / Product Stewardship
Translate the disclosure into an internal business question — then adapt it to your organisation's own language.
Use your organisation’s own names for product groups, material families, supplier records, and hazard lists first; then map them to the reporting categories in the pack. This is a training template only, so adapt the wording to how your teams actually track substances, components, and product lines, and check the source material before sign-off.
Please provide the ESRS E2:E2-5 data for substances of concern / SVHC, including all required datapoints and any related evidence.
Why it fails: It uses framework language that many operational teams will not recognise, so the owner may not know which system, file, or business process to search. It also does not say whether the request is about purchased inputs, manufactured items, sold products, releases, or the internal naming used by the team, so the response is likely to be incomplete or hard to map.
Please send the substances-in-products extract for [reporting period] covering [business boundary]. Use your normal product, material, part, and substance names, and add a short mapping to our reporting labels. Include the item ID, substance name, quantity or weight, unit, concentration basis, affected product or component, hazard mapping, and any assumptions, gaps, or exclusions.
Notes that turn data into a disclosure
LRA training templates — adapt them to your organisation, and check the official source before sign-off.
Start by stating how the figures were compiled, what each quantity covers, the unit basis used, and how substances were grouped, classified and matched to the relevant products or components.
Explain what the numbers mean in practice by linking the amounts procured, made, sold, used and released to the business activities they reflect, and by noting which substances and hazard groupings are most material.
If any figure moved materially, describe the operational reason for the change, such as shifts in production, sourcing, sales, use patterns or release points, and note whether the change affected the substance mix or hazard profile.
Preparation tools & forms
Professional preparation tools for E2-5 — free with an LRA Community membership. Register once (it's free) and every download unlocks, together with the Disclosure Library, templates and the LRA AI-assistant.
For each claim, check the evidence
Evidence pack to prepare
Common reporting gaps
Mistakes to avoid when collecting the data
Where judgement is often needed
Illustrative examples
Synthetic, written by LRA — not from a company report, not text from any standard.
: we report the main substances we handle, how much passes through our operations, and where any releases occur, with the figures split by substance where relevant. We also show the substances of concern, their concentration above the stated cut-off, and the product or component areas they affect.
Illustrative only; figures are synthetic and internally consistent. This example shows how a chemicals reporter could present the requested substance-flow and hazard information in a compact quantitative format.
: we summarise the substances we bring in, make into products, sell, use in our own processes, and release, with a separate split for the named substances of concern. We also show the hazard groupings and the mass reported in tonnes and kilograms, using internally consistent figures.
Illustrative only; figures are synthetic and internally consistent. This example shows how an electronics assembler could present the requested substance-flow, concentration, and hazard-class information in a compact quantitative format.
How companies report E2-5 in practice
Real reports where this topic is disclosed. These are report practice, not exact disclosure templates to copy.

Scenarios to work through
A manufacturer buys 2.4 tonnes of a cleaning additive that is flagged internally as a substance of concern. In the same year, it uses 1.8 tonnes in production and 0.6 tonnes leaves the site in finished goods and waste streams.
A product line contains a component with 0.12% of a listed hazardous ingredient by weight, but the ingredient is only present in one of three sub-assemblies. The team is unsure whether to name the substance and identify the affected parts.
A site uses 14 tonnes of a process chemical during the year, but only 0.3 tonnes are emitted to air and water combined. The environmental team has the release data, while procurement holds the purchase records and production holds the batch logs.
A company has three concern substances in its portfolio. One is bought in 5 tonnes, another is made on site in 800 kilograms, and a third is sold in finished goods but never handled as a raw input; the reporting team is unsure whether to present all of them in one line or split them by substance.
Related framework references
How this disclosure maps across the major reporting frameworks.
Questions this page answers
The page says to prepare a defined set of datapoints, including purchased, made, sold, released, used and emitted weight, plus substance names, concentration, impacted items, hazard categories, a classification crosswalk, and tonnes/kilograms reported. Use that list as your starting checklist before drafting.
Use it as a practical workflow to move from scoping and data gathering to a draft disclosure. The page is designed to help you prepare the disclosure, not just describe it.
The page is aimed at sustainability/ESG managers, HR or data owners, and assurance reviewers, so ownership should sit with the people who can source, validate, and explain the underlying data. The page does not assign roles for you, so you need to map ownership internally.
The page includes an evidence pack with five items to support assurance readiness. Use those items to show how the data was sourced, checked, and turned into the disclosure.
The page says there are five assurance claims to verify, each with a claim, risk, and evidence angle. Use them to test whether the disclosure is supported by traceable evidence before sign-off.
The page lists common reporting gaps and mistakes so you can spot weak points before finalising the disclosure. Use that section as a pre-submission quality check against missing data, inconsistent units, or unclear scope.
The page has a draft-output section with visualisation ideas, narrative starters, and a content-index line. Use those to convert the underlying data into a first-pass narrative and table structure.
Yes, the page includes synthetic illustrative examples, including a quantitative data table, to show how the disclosure can look in practice. Treat them as examples only and make sure your own figures stay internally consistent.
The page tells you to prepare a classification crosswalk as part of the datapoints, but it does not define the mapping for you. In practice, use it to connect your internal categories to the way you will report the data.
The page flags both tonnes reported and kilograms reported as datapoints to prepare, so you need to keep units clear and consistent. Use the workbook to organise the figures and avoid mixing units without explanation.
The workbook is there to help you prepare the disclosure and get assurance-ready. Use it to organise the datapoints, track evidence, and work through the preparation steps.
The printable Library Card is a companion download for quick reference while you prepare the disclosure. It is useful for checking the key datapoints, assurance points, and draft-output prompts without reopening the full page.
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