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IFRS-S2: IFRS S2 - Climate-related Disclosures · 2024
Paragraph 10

Climate-related risks and opportunities

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 describe the climate-related risks and opportunities it has identified and how they may affect the business. In practice, the report should explain what matters most, where those matters arise, and whether they could influence strategy, operations, finances, or resilience over time. The focus is on giving a clear picture of the organisation’s climate-related exposure, not just listing generic issues.

Practically, the emphasis is usually on coverage across the organisation as a whole, rather than only highlighting a few flagship sites or isolated examples. A useful explanation will show whether the assessment spans the full business, key geographies, major assets, and relevant parts of the value chain, and whether the organisation has considered both risks and opportunities in a consistent way.

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
Horizon definitions The company’s own plain-language definitions for what it means by short, medium and long term, including the time spans used for each. Strategy or reporting policy note that sets the horizon bands; board-approved planning paper if used as the source. Strategy / sustainability reporting
Planning horizon link How the chosen reporting horizons connect to the organisation’s planning periods, so the reader can see which business planning window sits behind each horizon. Planning calendar, strategy deck, or risk framework showing the organisation’s planning periods and how they map to the reporting horizons. Strategy / risk
Risk or opportunity narrative A clear description of each item as a downside risk or an upside opportunity, using the organisation’s own wording and distinguishing the two where relevant. Risk register, opportunity log, or scenario analysis summary that labels each item and describes it in business terms. Risk management / sustainability
Risk category Whether each item is treated as a physical issue or a transition issue, using the organisation’s internal classification for the same event or driver. Risk taxonomy, climate risk register, or scenario analysis output showing the category assigned to each item. Risk management
Item horizon timing The time horizon assigned to each individual risk or opportunity item, using the same short, medium or long term definitions applied in the report. Risk register or opportunity tracker with a horizon field for each item, plus the definition note used to assign it. Risk management / sustainability
+ Show s2-10 sub-elements (LRA working checklist)

How to prepare it

1Set the reporting boundaries first: decide which risks and opportunities you will include, and make sure each one is tied to a specific time band used by the business.
2Agree the time bands in plain business terms: define what your organisation means by short, medium and long term, and show how those bands connect to your planning horizons.
3For every item you include, write a clear description and state whether it is a physical risk or a transition risk; keep the wording consistent across the register and the disclosure draft.
4Gather the supporting records for each item: internal papers, risk logs, planning documents, or other source material that shows the classification, the description, and the time band used.
5Build the disclosure from the evidence: prepare the narrative or figures so each item is matched to its own time horizon and the organisation’s defined short, medium or long term view.
6Before finalising, check the draft against the official source, note any exclusions or changes in approach, and confirm the wording still matches the underlying evidence.
Request the data

Request the climate risk and opportunity register inputs

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

What climate-related risks and opportunities has the business identified, how are they grouped into time bands, and how do those time bands connect to the organisation’s own planning horizons?

Use the organisation’s own labels first, then map them to the reporting categories. For example, if your business talks about planning windows, forecast periods, or strategic cycles, use those terms in the request and only translate them afterwards for the disclosure pack.

Weak request

Please provide the climate-related risks and opportunities disclosure data in line with the standard, including the entity’s definition of short, medium and long term and the link to planning horizons.

Why it fails: This is too close to framework language and does not tell the owner what to pull from their own systems. It also leaves the request vague about the business records, the internal labels, and the exact fields needed to make the information usable.

Better request

Please send the current climate risk and opportunity register for [period], using your own planning-window labels. For each item, include the plain-language description, whether it is a downside or upside item, the time band you use internally, how that band connects to your budget, forecast, or strategy cycle, and the source file or system. If you already have a register export, that is ideal.

Formal email template
Subject: Request for climate risk and opportunity inputs for [reporting period]\n\nHi [name/team],\n\nI’m pulling together the climate-related disclosure pack and need your input on the business’s climate risk and opportunity list for [reporting period].\n\nPlease send a table covering the items you own, using your normal internal wording first and then, where helpful, a mapping to the reporting labels. For each item, please include:\n- the description in plain business language\n- whether it is a downside risk or an upside opportunity\n- the time band you use internally\n- how that time band links to your planning window, forecast cycle, or strategy period\n- the business area, site, product, or asset affected\n- the source document or system\n- the date it was last reviewed\n\nIf you already have this in a register, workbook, or planning pack, a copy or export is fine. Please keep the wording aligned to how the business already talks about these items, and we can map it for the disclosure pack afterwards.\n\nPlease send by [date]. If anything is unclear, I’m happy to talk it through.\n\nThanks,\n[preparer name]
Short Teams / Slack version
Hi [name] — could you send over your climate risk/opportunity list for [period]? Please use your normal internal terms, and include the item description, whether it’s a downside or upside item, the time band, how that links to your planning horizon, and the source file/system. Thanks.
Industry examples
Manufacturing

Context. A plant network tracks weather exposure, energy price shifts, and carbon cost impacts in a risk register and annual planning pack.

Adapted request. Please share the climate risk and opportunity entries for [period] from the plant risk register and annual plan. Use the site’s own time-band labels, and include the description, whether it is a downside or upside item, the link to the planning cycle, the affected plant or process, and the source workbook.

Example response. A site workbook lists 12 items: 7 downside items and 5 upside items. Time bands are labelled near / mid / long and map to 1–2 years, 3–5 years, and 5+ years in the planning pack. Each item includes the affected plant, source tab, and last review date.

Financial services

Context. A lender tracks climate exposures in enterprise risk, product strategy, and portfolio planning documents.

Adapted request. Please provide the climate-related risk and opportunity list for [period] from the enterprise risk log and strategy materials. Use your internal labels for the time bands, and include the plain-language description, whether each item is a downside or upside item, how it links to the planning cycle, the business line affected, and the source document.

Example response. The team returns a register export with 9 items: 6 downside items and 3 upside items. Time bands are described as current plan, next plan, and longer-range outlook, with a note showing how each maps to the firm’s forecast and strategy cycle. The file also identifies the business line owner and source document for each item.

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

Explain how the organisation defines its short, medium and long planning windows, how those windows connect to its wider planning approach, and how each risk or opportunity was assigned to a time band.

Context note

Set out what the figures show about which issues are expected to matter sooner or later, and how the mix of physical and transition matters changes across the different planning windows.

Fluctuation statement

If the pattern shifts from one period to another, note whether that is because the organisation changed its planning assumptions, identified new issues, or reassessed when particular risks or opportunities are likely to arise.

Content index entry
s2-10 Climate-related risks and opportunities — [location / page] / [notes]
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Preparation tools & forms

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Assurance readiness

For each claim, check the evidence

ClaimRiskEvidence to check
We set out our own working definitions for the three planning periods and used them consistently across the disclosure.The periods may be vague, inconsistent, or chosen after the fact to suit the narrative.Approved internal policy or methodology note defining the three periods; version history showing when the definitions were set; cross-check that the same definitions are used throughout the report and supporting papers.
We explained how those time periods connect to the way management plans and makes decisions.The link to strategy may be asserted without a real connection to planning, budgeting, or decision-making cycles.Strategy, budget, and planning documents showing the organisation’s planning horizons; board or management papers that reference the same periods; drafting notes showing how the link was described in the report.
We described the climate matters we considered material to the business, rather than listing generic issues.The disclosure may omit relevant matters or include items that are too broad, boilerplate, or not actually assessed.Risk register, opportunity log, workshop outputs, and assessment papers showing how items were identified and screened; evidence of management review and sign-off on the final list.
For each climate risk we named, we stated whether it was a direct event-driven exposure or a change-driven exposure.Risks may be misclassified, left unlabelled, or grouped in a way that hides the underlying nature of the exposure.Risk taxonomy or classification guidance; working papers showing how each risk was tagged; reviewer comments or challenge notes confirming the classification was checked before publication.
For each climate risk and opportunity we included the period in which we expect the effect to show up.The timing may be missing, inconsistent, or based on unsupported judgement.Item-by-item assessment sheet with the assigned period for each matter; source assumptions used to support timing; evidence of internal review to confirm the periods align with the organisation’s own definitions.

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 request goes to the sustainability team alone, even though the horizon split, risk/opportunity descriptions and item timing usually sit with planning, risk and business owners.
Framework language first
People ask for the data using disclosure labels instead of the organisation’s own terms, so teams cannot tell which internal report, register or plan to pull from.
No boundary set
The team starts collecting without agreeing which business units, sites, ventures or activities are in scope, so the final set is incomplete or double-counted.
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Where judgement is often needed

Set the horizon labels once and keep them stable
Choose a clear internal cut-off for short, medium and long periods, explain how it links to your planning view, and if you change the cut-offs after a deal or strategy reset, say what changed and why.
Align each risk or opportunity to the business plan it actually affects
Where different teams use different planning windows, map each item to the plan or forecast it most directly influences and explain any judgement where the timing does not line up neatly.
Describe each item in the language used by the operating team, then translate it consistently
If the same issue is named differently across countries or business units, pick one organisation-wide description, note the local variants if they matter, and explain the basis for the chosen label.
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Examples

Illustrative examples

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

Illustrative (synthetic) example — Electricity generation and supply

We set our planning view as: short term = the next 12 months, medium term = years 2–5, and long term = years 6–15. That same timetable is used to explain each item below, so the timing of the issue and our planning window are aligned. - **Physical risk:** hotter summers and lower river flows could reduce output at two sites in the short term; we estimate a 3% fall in available generation in that period, with no medium- or long-term effect assumed in this example. - **Transition risk:** a faster move to tighter carbon rules could raise compliance and retrofit costs in years 2–5; in this synthetic case, the expected cash outflow is £18m in the medium term and £7m in the long term, with no short-term cost assumed.

This example shows how a reporter can define its own time bands, link them to planning, and then describe each climate-related issue by type and timing.

Illustrative (synthetic) example — Food processing and distribution

Our planning horizons are defined internally as: short term = 0–12 months, medium term = 13–36 months, and long term = 37–84 months, and we use those same bands when discussing climate-related matters in our plans. In this example, the timing of each matter is shown against those bands so readers can see when the effect is expected to arise. - **Transition risk:** a shift in customer demand toward lower-emission products could leave some legacy lines underused in the medium term; we assume a 9% drop in volume for those lines in that period, with no short- or long-term impact in this illustration. - **Opportunity:** investment in more efficient cold-chain equipment could cut energy use and improve margins in the long term; in this synthetic case, annual electricity use falls by 12% in years 4–7, while the short and medium periods are unchanged.

This example shows that the same horizon definitions can be used to describe both downside and upside climate-related matters, with each item tied to the period in which it is expected to matter.

Company reportsReal published reports
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How companies report s2-10

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
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SITC International Holdings Company Limited’s 2025 Environmental, Social and Governance Report provides some contextual references to short, medium, and long-term time horizons related to its strategy for managing sustainability and climate-related risks and opportunities (pp.189, 192, 194). However, the report does not clearly define these time horizons or explicitly link them to specific planning horizons, with relevant mentions being unclear or partial (pp.192, 193). Additionally, there is no clear disclosure on the entity’s definition of short, medium, and long term, nor on the types of physical or transition risks considered (no pages).
Enel Chile S.A.
Electric Utilities / IPP / Energy Traders · Chile · 2025
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Enel Chile’s 2025 Integrated Annual Report covers the link to planning horizons by identifying three horizons for managing sustainability-related risks and opportunities and for strategic planning (p.101). The report also addresses risk types related to physical and transition risks, noting the impact of energy transition and climate change on the Group’s activities (p.174). However, the entity’s clear definition of short, medium, and long-term time horizons remains unclear, with only partial context provided, and there is no explicit disclosure of time horizons by specific risk or opportunity items.
MTR Corporation
Ground Transportation — Railroads · Hong Kong · 2025
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MTR Corporation’s Sustainability Report 2025 references short-, medium-, and long-term horizons to guide progress across focus areas under its environmental and social objectives, with some contextual mentions on pages 20 and 84 regarding timeframes for climate risks and project planning (p.20, p.84). The report also discusses long-term value creation through biodiversity integration and early-stage ecological impact planning (p.92, p.94). However, it lacks a clear, explicit definition of these time horizons, a detailed link to planning horizons, and a comprehensive description of risk opportunities or specific risk types, leaving some aspects unclear or not found.
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Scenarios to work through

A manufacturer has set three planning windows for its climate work: 0–2 years, 3–5 years and 6–15 years. It has identified a flood-related disruption risk at one site and a lower-carbon product opportunity, but the draft note only says both are 'long term'.

QHow should the team decide what to disclose for each item so the time framing is clear and tied to the organisation’s own planning windows?
Reveal model answer →

A retailer has a heat-stress risk for warehouse staff and a chance to cut energy costs through rooftop solar. The draft groups both under 'transition risk' because they are both climate-related.

QWhat classification should the preparer make for each item, and how should the reasoning be presented?
Reveal model answer →

A utility has identified a drought-related supply issue affecting one region and a policy-driven cost increase affecting another. The first is expected to affect operations in the next 18 months, while the second is expected to matter over the next seven years, but the draft uses one combined description and one shared timing label.

QHow should the preparer present these items so the reader can see the separate nature and timing of each matter?
Reveal model answer →

A food producer has a water-availability risk and a packaging redesign opportunity. The draft says both are 'climate risks', gives no explanation of the business effect, and leaves the timing to a footnote that does not match the main narrative.

QWhat should the preparer do to make the disclosure usable and aligned with the rest of the report?
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Framework references

Related framework references

How this disclosure maps across the major reporting frameworks.

IFRS / ISSB
s2-10
within IFRS-S2: IFRS S2 - Climate-related Disclosures
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Primary
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FAQ

Questions this page answers

How do I prepare disclosure s2-10 in practice using this page?+
What data do I need to collect for s2-10?+
How should I set the horizon definitions for s2-10?+
Who should own the s2-10 data and narrative in my team?+
What should go into the evidence pack for s2-10 assurance?+
What are the common mistakes to avoid when drafting s2-10?+
How do I use the Prep & Assurance workbook for s2-10?+
What can I take from the synthetic example disclosures for s2-10?+
How do I turn the s2-10 data into a draft disclosure?+
Can I reuse the same s2-10 data for ESRS E1 climate change reporting?+
What does the risk category field mean in s2-10 and how should I fill it in?+
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