Disclosure LibraryPractitioner guidance for every reporting disclosure
Home Disclosure Library IFRS / ISSB IFRS-S1 s1-33
IFRS-S1: IFRS S1 - General Requirements for Disclosure of Sustainability-related Financial Information · 2024
Paragraph 33

Strategy and decision-making

Practical guidance for preparing this disclosure. Use this card to identify datapoints, verify claims and organise supporting evidence. For exact requirements, always refer to the official IFRS source.

Dr Ross Kurinko, Sustainability Reporting Trainer
Reviewed by Dr Ross Kurinko · Sustainability Reporting Trainer LRA educational guidance · Not issued or endorsed by IFRS
To prepare this disclosure
Disclosure focus

This disclosure asks an organisation to explain how sustainability-related matters are built into strategy and day-to-day decision-making. In practice, it is about showing whether leaders consider these matters when setting direction, making choices, and allocating resources, rather than treating them as a separate or occasional topic.

The practical focus is on the organisation’s real decision-making process across the business, not just on a few flagship sites or isolated examples. The report should make clear where sustainability-related considerations are applied, how consistently they are used across operations, and how they influence strategic choices and management actions.

This LRA educational guidance supports disclosure preparation. For the exact requirements, always refer to the official IFRS source.

Before you start

A quick mental checklist before you prepare this disclosure — tick each as you settle it.

Preparation

Key datapoints to prepare

Datapoint What to capture Evidence hint Owner
Current response steps Record the actions being taken now in response to the issue, including what is underway at the reporting date and the main operational steps being carried out. Current action logs, incident trackers, response plans, meeting notes, or task lists showing live activity. Responsible function or issue lead coordinating the response
Next response steps Set out the actions that are planned for later, including the next measures intended and the sequence or timing where known. Forward action plan, project plan, remediation roadmap, or approved follow-up schedule. Responsible function or issue lead with planning oversight
Follow-up progress Describe how far work has moved on from earlier plans, including what has been completed, what is still open, and any changes from the original plan. Prior action plan, status updates, closure notes, and progress reports showing completed and outstanding items. Responsible function tracking delivery against the earlier plan
Progress evidence metrics Provide the supporting proof of progress using both numbers and narrative detail, so the reported improvement is backed by measurable results and explanatory context. KPI dashboards, monitoring reports, case notes, before-and-after measures, and narrative updates from the delivery team. Reporting owner with input from the operational team and data owner
Decision trade-offs Explain the competing factors weighed when choices were made, including what was prioritised, what was accepted as a downside, and why the final decision was taken. Decision papers, committee minutes, option appraisals, and approval notes showing the alternatives considered and the rationale. Decision-maker or governance lead responsible for the choice
+ Show s1-33 sub-elements (LRA working checklist)

How to prepare it

1Set the reporting boundary first: decide which response actions sit inside this disclosure, and separate what is already being done from what is only planned.
2Define the content for each item in plain business terms, so you can distinguish current actions, future actions, progress since the last plan, the evidence of that progress, and the compromises weighed in decision-making.
3Gather support for each point from the underlying records, such as internal papers, trackers, approvals, metrics, or narrative notes that show what was done and what was intended.
4Prepare the disclosure content by pairing each required item with the right form of information: a factual description where the item is narrative, and figures or other measurable detail where the item calls for progress evidence.
5Record any gaps, exclusions, or changes in approach, including where a prior plan has shifted, so the reader can see how the current position differs from earlier expectations.
6Check the draft against the official source before sign-off, confirming that every required item is covered, the wording matches the underlying evidence, and nothing material has been left out or misstated.
Request the data

Request the strategy and decision evidence pack

Translate the disclosure into an internal business question — then adapt it to your organisation's own language.

What actions are being taken now, what is planned next, what progress has been made against earlier plans, what evidence shows that progress, and what trade-offs were weighed when decisions were made?

Use your organisation’s own wording first, then map it to the disclosure labels. For example, if you talk about programmes, initiatives, priorities, or management actions internally, keep those terms in the request and only translate them afterwards for reporting. This is a possible LRA training template; adapt it to your organisation and check the source material before sign-off.

Weak request

Please provide the IFRS S1 strategy and decision-making evidence required for disclosure ifrs-s1::s1-33.

Why it fails: This uses framework language rather than the organisation’s own terms, so the owner may not know which documents, meetings, or trackers to search. It also does not separate current actions, planned actions, progress, evidence, and trade-offs into a practical ask.

Better request

Please send the current programme actions, next planned steps, progress against earlier plans, supporting evidence, and the main trade-offs considered for [business area] in [reporting period]. Use your team’s normal terms and include links to the source papers, tracker, or dashboard.

Formal email template
Subject: Request for strategy and decision evidence pack for [reporting period]\n\nDear [name/team],\n\nI am preparing the sustainability reporting pack and would appreciate your help with the strategy and decision evidence for [business area / portfolio].\n\nPlease share, for [reporting period]:\n- the actions being taken now\n- the actions planned next\n- progress against earlier plans\n- any supporting evidence showing that progress\n- the main trade-offs considered when decisions were made\n\nPlease use your team’s own terms where possible, and include any links to source documents, dashboards, or meeting papers. If helpful, you can return the information in a short table with the fields below.\n\nThis is a possible LRA training template; please adapt it to your organisation and check the source material before sign-off.\n\nMany thanks,\n[preparer name]
Short Teams / Slack version
Hi [name], could you send over the strategy / decision evidence for [reporting period] for [business area]? I’m looking for: current actions, planned actions, progress on earlier plans, evidence of progress, and the main trade-offs behind key decisions. Please use your team’s own wording and add links to source docs if you have them. Thanks — [preparer name]
Industry examples
Manufacturing

Context. A plant leadership team tracks decarbonisation and operational resilience through a monthly improvement board.

Adapted request. Please share the current actions, next planned actions, progress against earlier plant improvement plans, evidence of progress, and the main trade-offs considered for [reporting period] across the plant improvement programme.

Example response. Current actions: boiler efficiency work and compressed air leak repairs. Planned actions: heat recovery trial and maintenance schedule changes. Progress: 3 of 5 site actions closed. Evidence: monthly plant dashboard and project tracker. Trade-offs: short shutdown windows versus faster delivery.

Financial services

Context. A risk and transformation team manages climate-related controls and client-facing product changes through committee papers and a delivery tracker.

Adapted request. Please provide the current workstream actions, next steps, progress against earlier delivery plans, evidence of progress, and the main trade-offs considered for [reporting period] for the climate and product change programme.

Example response. Current actions: policy updates and client communication changes. Planned actions: system changes and staff training. Progress: 8 of 10 milestones completed. Evidence: committee paper, delivery tracker, and training log. Trade-offs: implementation speed versus control testing time.

Draft your disclosure

Notes that turn data into a disclosure

LRA training templates — adapt them to your organisation, and check the official source before sign-off.

Method note

Define the scope of the response information you have gathered, explain how you distinguished actions already underway from those still being prepared, and state the basis used to judge progress and the evidence relied on.

Context note

Explain what the response data indicates about how the organisation is managing the issue, including what has been done, what remains planned, how far earlier intentions have been delivered, and what the evidence suggests about effectiveness.

Fluctuation statement

If the pattern has changed over time, describe the main reasons for that movement, such as shifts in priorities, updated evidence, or revised balancing of competing considerations.

Content index entry
s1-33 Strategy and decision-making — [location / page] / [notes]
Download Centre

Preparation tools & forms

Professional preparation tools for s1-33 — 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.

Free · Community members
Assurance readiness

For each claim, check the evidence

ClaimRiskEvidence to check
We prepared the coverage figure using the same boundary rules we applied in our internal reporting, and we checked that the included activities matched the period and entities we said were in scope.An assurer may test whether the coverage basis was chosen consistently, whether any entities or activities were left out without explanation, and whether the period used matches the published figure.Boundary memo, consolidation or scope schedule, list of included entities/activities, period-end cut-off notes, working papers showing how the figure was assembled, and sign-off from the report owner.
For the disclosed actions, we separated what is already underway from what is only planned, so readers can see which items are current and which are future-facing.An assurer may probe whether the distinction between live actions and planned actions is clear, whether items have been placed in the right bucket, and whether the wording overstates readiness or certainty.Action tracker, project plans, implementation status reports, management updates, and evidence of review of the final wording against source documents.
Where we refer to progress against earlier commitments, we compared the latest position with the prior published plan and used both numbers and narrative to explain movement.An assurer may check whether the comparison point is the correct prior period, whether the progress statement is supported by underlying records, and whether the narrative matches the figures.Prior-year report or plan, current-year progress schedule, KPI workings, variance analysis, meeting minutes explaining changes, and evidence that the narrative was reconciled to the numbers.
We kept supporting evidence for the progress statement, including both measured outputs and explanatory notes, so the reader can see what changed and why.An assurer may test whether the evidence is complete, whether the quantitative and qualitative parts are consistent with each other, and whether the explanation is backed by source records.Source data extracts, calculation files, dashboards, project reports, interview notes or management commentary, and a clear audit trail from source evidence to the published text.
Before publication, we reviewed whether any material choices in the strategy discussion involved balancing one sustainability issue against another, and if none were identified we said so on that basis.An assurer may ask whether the team properly considered possible balancing decisions, whether the conclusion of 'none' is supportable, and whether the final wording reflects the actual decision process.Decision papers, board or committee papers, option appraisals, risk and opportunity assessments, meeting minutes, and approval evidence showing the final statement was reviewed before issue.

Evidence pack to prepare

Common reporting gaps

The information is presented without a date or as-at point.The scope or boundary of the statement is left undefined.Key terms are used inconsistently across the report.Material changes since the previous period are not disclosed.Assertions are made without supporting detail or a source record.Boilerplate is used that does not actually answer what is asked.
Common gaps

Mistakes to avoid when collecting the data

Wrong owner
The team asks the board secretary or sustainability lead for operational evidence when the real source sits with the business manager, project owner, or finance contact who actually tracked the action.
Using framework language too early
People request information in disclosure terms instead of the organisation’s own labels, so teams cannot map the request cleanly to their working files or systems.
No clear boundary
The collector does not define which business units, projects, or response activities are in scope, so different teams send mixed sets of records that cannot be compared.
+ Show 6 more

Where judgement is often needed

Acquisitions and disposals during the reporting period
Set a clear cut-off for when a bought-in business or sold unit enters or leaves the reporting population, and explain any restatement or non-restatement of prior figures so the trend line is understandable.
Different local meanings for the same operational measure
Where country teams use different definitions for the same activity or risk, choose one group-wide basis or explain the mapping between local and central versions so readers can compare like with like.
Borderline sites, teams, or activities
Decide whether items just inside or just outside the reporting boundary are included, then disclose the rule used and any exclusions or inclusions that materially affect the picture.
+ Show 5 more
Examples

Illustrative examples

Synthetic, written by LRA — not from a company report, not text from any standard.

Illustrative (synthetic) example — Retail banking

We have put in place a mix of actions to manage the main sustainability-related risks and opportunities we identified, including tighter credit screening for higher-risk sectors, extra staff training, and a phased upgrade of our data controls. Compared with the prior plan, we have completed 8 of 10 scheduled control changes, cut manual data corrections from 120 to 45 per month, and lifted on-time completion of mandatory training from 78% to 94%; the remaining work is now scheduled for the next two quarters. - Looking ahead, we plan to extend the screening model to the full lending book, finish the last two control changes, and run a second round of scenario testing before year-end. - In deciding what to do first, we weighed faster risk reduction against cost, customer impact, and delivery capacity, and chose to sequence the work so the highest-risk areas were addressed first.

This example shows how to describe what has already been done, what is next, how delivery compares with the earlier plan, what evidence shows movement, and what trade-offs shaped the choices.

Illustrative (synthetic) example — Industrial manufacturing

Our group has already started the response package by replacing the most energy-intensive equipment on one production line, tightening supplier checks, and adding monthly management reviews to track delivery. Against the earlier plan, 6 of 9 planned equipment upgrades are complete, energy use on the upgraded line is down 12% versus the baseline, and supplier review coverage has risen from 60% to 89%; the three unfinished upgrades are now in procurement. - Next, we intend to finish the remaining upgrades, broaden the supplier checks to the rest of the site network, and test a backup sourcing option for critical inputs. - We chose this order after balancing emissions reduction, production continuity, and capital spend, so the quickest gains were taken first while larger changes were staged later.

This example illustrates a narrative update that covers current steps, future steps, comparison with the earlier plan, measurable and descriptive signs of progress, and the practical trade-offs behind the sequence.

Company reportsReal published reports
Compare side by side →Get it free

How companies report s1-33

Real reports where this topic is disclosed. These are report practice, not exact disclosure templates to copy.

SITC International Holdings Company Limited
Water Transportation · Hong Kong · 2025
Open report →
SITC International Holdings Company Limited’s 2025 Environmental, Social and Governance Report provides quantitative and qualitative evidence of progress against prior plans related to climate considerations on page 193, including details on resourcing activities and progress of previously disclosed plans. The report also references current response actions linked to climate-related considerations on page 197, though these disclosures are not clearly detailed. Notably, the report lacks clear information on planned response actions and provides only unclear context regarding trade-offs considered in decision-making (pages 192 and 197).
MTR Corporation
Ground Transportation — Railroads · Hong Kong · 2025
Open report →
MTR Corporation's Sustainability Report 2025 includes some contextual information on progress against prior plans, referring readers to the Environmental and Social Objectives section for details (p.88). The report mentions that current protective measures remain adequate under mid-21st century extreme weather projections and notes the existence of flood handling procedures and regular inspections of flood protection and drainage facilities (p.80, p.84-85). However, there is no clear disclosure of current or planned response actions, quantitative or qualitative progress evidence, or consideration of trade-offs in decision-making within the report.
Enel Chile S.A.
Electric Utilities / IPP / Energy Traders · Chile · 2025
Open report →
Enel Chile S.A.'s 2025 Integrated Annual Report includes references to sustainability-related governance, with the Directors Committee advising the Board on sustainability evaluation and decision-making, including environmental and social aspects (pp. 57, 59, 168). The report mentions action plans to improve ESG information and enhance ESG performance (p.120) and notes monitoring and reporting of actions defined in the CSV Plan (p.273). However, there is no clear disclosure of current or planned response actions, progress against prior plans, or quantitative and qualitative progress evidence, and the consideration of trade-offs in decisions is only mentioned unclearly (p.168).
✓ LRA AI Assistant · Human-in-the-loop
Dr Ross Kurinko
Ask Study Studio AI assistant about this disclosure
Get practical answers for your reporting context. Your first two answers are free — join LRA Community for free to continue without a limit.
TryHow do I prepare s1-33?What data do I need to collect?Where can I see a real-report example?What mistakes should I avoid?
2 free answers
Check your understanding

Scenarios to work through

A group has already started a programme to cut water use at two factories. In the current reporting cycle, the team has updated the board pack with what is being done now, what will happen next, and a short note on how last year’s plan is progressing.

QWhat should the preparer include so the disclosure shows both the live response and the next steps, rather than only one of them?
Reveal model answer →

A finance team says the prior year’s climate adaptation plan is “on track” because the project is still open. However, no one has gathered any figures, milestones, or other evidence to show what has actually changed since the last report.

QCan the preparer rely on a broad status label alone, or is more support needed to explain progress against the earlier plan?
Reveal model answer →

A company is deciding whether to invest in a cleaner production line or keep funding a faster expansion project. The board wants the report to explain why the cleaner option was chosen, but the draft only states the final decision and omits the competing considerations.

QWhat should the preparer add so the report shows the reasoning behind the choice?
Reveal model answer →

A sustainability lead has a draft section that lists last year’s emissions target, the current reduction actions, and a short note saying the target was missed. The draft does not say whether the team has any new actions planned or what evidence supports the progress statement.

QWhat is missing if the aim is to give a complete picture of the organisation’s response and progress?
Reveal model answer →
Framework references

Related framework references

How this disclosure maps across the major reporting frameworks.

IFRS / ISSB
s1-33
within IFRS-S1: IFRS S1 - General Requirements for Disclosure of Sustainability-related Financial Information
Open official source →
Primary
Related & explore
FAQ

Questions this page answers

How do I use the s1-33 page to turn the plain-language explainer into a first draft disclosure?+
What data do I need to collect for IFRS S1 s1-33 on this page?+
How should I set the scope and methodology for s1-33 using this guidance page?+
Who should own the s1-33 disclosure work and what should they provide?+
What should go into the evidence pack for s1-33 assurance readiness?+
What are the five assurance claims on the s1-33 page and how do I use them?+
What are the common reporting gaps or mistakes on the s1-33 page that I should avoid?+
How do I use the Prep & Assurance workbook and printable Library Card for s1-33?+
Can I use the synthetic example disclosure on the s1-33 page as a template for my own report?+
How does the s1-33 page relate to ESRS 2, and can I reuse the same data?+
More questions this page can help with