This disclosure asks an organisation to explain how climate-related risks and opportunities may affect the way its business model works and how value is created across the value chain. In practice, the report should help a reader understand where climate matters most for the organisation’s activities, relationships and dependencies, rather than treating climate as a stand-alone topic.
The practical focus is on breadth and relevance: the explanation should cover the parts of the business and value chain that are actually affected, not just the most visible sites or flagship operations. A useful response shows where impacts are expected, how they connect to operations and upstream or downstream activities, and whether the organisation has considered the full scope of its business model when identifying those effects.
This LRA educational guidance supports disclosure preparation. For the exact requirements, always refer to the official IFRS 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 operational impact evidence from site and asset owners
Translate the disclosure into an internal business question — then adapt it to your organisation's own language.
Use your organisation’s own operational terms first, then map them to the disclosure. For example, ask for sites, plants, depots, fleets, product lines, service lines, suppliers or routes if those are the words your teams use. Keep the request practical and evidence-led; check the source disclosure wording before sign-off.
Please provide the climate-related business model and value chain impact disclosure evidence for the reporting period.
Why it fails: This is too close to framework language and does not tell the owner what operational information to pull. It leaves out the sites, assets, current versus expected changes, and the specific business areas or value chain parts that need to be named, so the response is likely to be incomplete or hard to use.
Please send the operational evidence for [period] covering the sites, assets, business units and supply chain areas you own that are already affected, or are expected to be affected, by climate-related change. For each item, include the location or asset name, what is happening now, what is expected later, how the business is being affected, which value chain segment is involved, and the source file or system. Use your own internal terms; we will map them after receipt.
Notes that turn data into a disclosure
LRA training templates — adapt them to your organisation, and check the official source before sign-off.
Explain how the figures were defined, which locations, assets and business segments were included, and whether the numbers reflect the current position, an expected future position, or both.
Set out what the concentrations mean for the business by linking the numbers to the parts of the model and value chain that are most exposed.
Describe any notable movement by pointing to changes in location, facility mix, asset type or affected business segment, and explain whether the shift is already visible or only expected.
Preparation tools & forms
Professional preparation tools for s2-13 — 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 describe where our exposure is most concentrated and how that profile is changing: 62% of our direct production capacity sits in one coastal region, 24% in a second region, and 14% elsewhere; by asset type, 58% is in large processing plants, 27% in storage and handling sites, and 15% in logistics hubs. The main pressure points are our feedstock sourcing, manufacturing, and outbound distribution, with the coastal sites most exposed to heat stress and storm disruption today, while we expect the inland plants to face a larger share of water-availability constraints over the next planning cycle. These shifts are already influencing our operating model through higher resilience spend, altered inventory buffers, and a gradual move toward more flexible sourcing and production scheduling.
This example shows how to explain where exposure is concentrated, which parts of the business are already affected, and how the pattern is expected to move over time, using internally consistent synthetic figures.
Our exposure is concentrated in a small number of assembly and component sites: 47% of output comes from one inland manufacturing cluster, 31% from a coastal cluster, and 22% from smaller satellite facilities; by asset type, 49% is in assembly lines, 33% in component testing and warehousing, and 18% in transport and service assets. At present, the coastal cluster is most affected by flood-related interruptions, while we expect the inland cluster to face more heat and power-supply pressure in future periods. As a result, our business model is shifting toward dual-sourcing, more localised inventory, and a greater share of design-for-resilience work, with the most affected value chain stages being component supply, final assembly, and distribution to customers.
This example demonstrates how to link concentration by location and asset type to both present and expected changes, then connect those changes to the parts of the value chain and operating model that are most affected.
How companies report S2-13 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 has two plants in one coastal region and a warehouse inland. The team has evidence that flood risk is already affecting the coastal sites, while a new supplier rule may affect only the warehouse next year.
A service group says its model is unchanged overall, but it has moved some work from one country to another and now relies more heavily on a single data centre. The reporting team is unsure whether that counts as a change to the way the business operates.
A retailer sources most products through three overseas suppliers, but only one supplier region is exposed to water stress. The team has data on the affected sourcing route, yet it has not mapped which downstream distribution steps could also be disrupted.
A mining group operates several sites across two countries. One site is already facing heat-related downtime, and another site is expected to face similar issues in the next few years; the group also wants to mention that some contractors may be affected indirectly.
Related framework references
How this disclosure maps across the major reporting frameworks.
Questions this page answers
The page says to prepare four main datapoints: location and asset hotspots, present and expected changes, business model effects, and affected chain stages. Use those as the starting checklist before you draft anything.
Use it as a working sequence to move from scoping and data collection into drafting, rather than treating the disclosure as a writing exercise first. The page is designed to help you prepare the disclosure, collect the right data, and turn that into a draft.
Ask for the location and asset hotspot information the page highlights, plus any supporting detail that shows where the relevant hotspots are and why they matter. The page frames this as one of the core datapoints to prepare for the disclosure.
Keep the request focused on the present and expected changes the page calls out, and make sure the evidence shows both current conditions and what is expected to change. The page is aimed at helping you collect the right data, not building a separate methodology from scratch.
The page includes an evidence pack with five items for assurance readiness, so you should retain the supporting material that backs the disclosure claims and the underlying data. Use the pack alongside the five assurance claims to verify.
The page says there are five assurance claims to verify, each with a claim, risk and evidence angle. Use them as a check that the disclosure is supported by evidence before it goes into a draft or assurance review.
The page lists common reporting gaps and mistakes, so use that section as a pre-submission quality check. It is there to help you spot missing data, weak evidence, or a draft that does not line up with the page’s preparation steps.
The Download Centre includes a Prep & Assurance workbook in .xlsx format, which is intended to support both preparation and assurance readiness. Use it to organise the datapoints, evidence, and review steps before drafting.
The Download Centre also provides a printable Library Card in PDF format, which is a practical companion to the page content. It can help you keep the disclosure checklist and key prompts to hand while you work through preparation and review.
Use the draft-output section, which includes visualisation ideas, narrative starters, and a content-index line. That section is designed to help you move from prepared data and evidence into a first draft.
The page says ESRS E1 is the closest correspondence, so the same underlying data may be reusable where it fits the topic. Check the page’s s2-13 datapoints and evidence needs rather than assuming the reporting outputs are identical.
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