This disclosure asks an organisation to explain the processes it uses to identify, assess and manage climate-related opportunities. In practice, that means describing how opportunity work is built into decision-making, who is involved, what information is used, and how the organisation keeps track of opportunities over time. The focus is on the actual management process, not just a list of hoped-for benefits.
The practical question is whether this applies only to a few headline projects or is embedded across the business. A useful explanation would show the scope of coverage across operations, business units, geographies and stages of the value chain, and make clear whether the process is used consistently or only for selected sites or initiatives.
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 climate opportunity process evidence from Strategy
Translate the disclosure into an internal business question — then adapt it to your organisation's own language.
Use your organisation’s own names for the relevant process, planning forum, review cycle and scenario work first, then map them back to the disclosure points. Keep the request in business language that the owner already uses, and check the official source before sign-off.
Please provide the climate-opportunity process disclosure evidence for IFRS S2 25(b), including the identification process, prioritisation criteria, scenario use, monitoring and review, and linkage to strategic planning.
Why it fails: This uses framework language that many business owners will not recognise, so it is harder for them to find the right material quickly. It also sounds like a compliance checklist rather than a request for the organisation’s own planning and review evidence.
Please send the latest strategy and planning materials for [reporting period] that show how your team spots climate-related opportunities, decides which ones matter most, checks progress, and uses scenario work where relevant. If your team uses different names for these steps, use those names and add a short note so we can map them back.
Notes that turn data into a disclosure
LRA training templates — adapt them to your organisation, and check the official source before sign-off.
We describe the basis used to identify, screen and rank climate-related opportunities, including how the process links into strategic planning, what criteria are applied, how often it is reviewed and where scenario analysis is used.
This tells readers how the organisation turns climate-related opportunity signals into business decisions, showing whether the approach is embedded in planning and how consistently it is applied.
If the process changed during the period, explain whether that was due to a refresh of planning inputs, a revised set of ranking criteria, a different review cadence or a broader use of scenario analysis.
Preparation tools & forms
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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 fold climate-related opportunities into our medium-term business plan, so the same assumptions used for capital allocation also shape our growth targets and operating budgets. - Each quarter, management checks progress against the plan, updates the risk-and-opportunity register, and escalates material changes to the board and its committees. - We scan for opportunities through market analysis, customer demand signals, technology reviews, and policy tracking; we then rank them using expected margin uplift, implementation cost, timing, and fit with our decarbonisation pathway. - For major choices, we test two climate futures over a 10-year horizon and use the results to compare investment timing, asset resilience, and product mix; in the latest review, 6 of 9 identified opportunities were prioritised for action, representing 67% of the pipeline.
This example shows how a reporter can explain where opportunity work sits in planning, how it is checked over time, how opportunities are found, what criteria are used to sort them, and how scenario analysis informs decisions.
Our opportunity work is built into the annual strategy cycle, so findings from climate review feed directly into product development, sourcing choices, and five-year financial planning. - We review the portfolio twice a year, comparing delivery against milestones and refreshing the list of opportunities when market conditions, regulation, or weather patterns shift. - Opportunity ideas come from supplier workshops, customer research, site-level efficiency studies, and external trend scanning; we score them by revenue potential, supply-chain resilience, ease of execution, and alignment with our transition plan. - Before approving larger initiatives, we model three climate pathways and compare outcomes for demand, input costs, and logistics; in the current cycle, 8 of 12 opportunities were taken forward, or 67%, with the remainder deferred for later review.
This example illustrates a different sectoral context while still covering the same five points: connection to strategy, ongoing oversight, how opportunities are sourced, how they are ranked, and how scenarios support choices.
How companies report s2-25-b
Real reports where this topic is disclosed. These are report practice, not exact disclosure templates to copy.

Scenarios to work through
A manufacturer has a climate-opportunity register, but the finance team says it is only a sustainability file and never feeds into the three-year plan. The operations director wants to keep it separate because the business plan is already signed off.
A retailer reviews its opportunity pipeline once a year for the annual report, but the commercial team also updates it after major market shifts and new policy signals. The draft disclosure only mentions the year-end review.
An energy company has a spreadsheet of possible climate-related upside cases, but the team cannot explain how items first enter the list or who decides whether a new idea is worth tracking. The draft text says only that opportunities are ‘considered as they arise’.
A food producer ranks climate opportunities using expected margin uplift, implementation effort, and fit with existing capital plans. The sustainability team also ran a scenario exercise, but the draft disclosure does not say how those scenarios affected the ranking.
Related framework references
How this disclosure maps across the major reporting frameworks.
Questions this page answers
Start with the plain-language explainer and the step-by-step preparation section, then use the datapoints, example disclosures and draft-output prompts to turn your notes into a first draft. The page is designed as practitioner guidance, so it helps you move from scoping to wording without treating it as an official source.
The page points you to five datapoints to prepare: strategy linkage, tracking and review, opportunity spotting process, ranking rules and scenario analysis use. Use those as your collection checklist so you can gather the right inputs before drafting.
Use the page’s step-by-step preparation section together with the datapoints list to decide what sits in scope and how each item will be described. The page is meant to help you define a consistent approach before you write the disclosure.
The page is useful for assigning ownership because it breaks the disclosure into specific datapoints and an evidence pack. In practice, that lets a sustainability, HR or data owner see which parts they need to provide and which parts need review.
The page includes an evidence pack with five items and also lists six assurance claims to verify. Use both together so your pack supports the claim, the risk being addressed and the evidence you can show to a reviewer.
The page has a section on common reporting gaps and mistakes, which is there to help you spot weak drafting, missing data or unclear methodology before sign-off. It is best used as a pre-submission check rather than a compliance checklist.
The Download Centre includes a Prep & Assurance workbook in .xlsx format, which is intended to help you organise preparation and assurance work. Use it alongside the page content to capture inputs, evidence and draft wording in one place.
The Download Centre also provides a printable Library Card in PDF format, which is a handy reference version of the page. It is useful when you want a quick view of the disclosure guidance without working in the workbook.
Yes, but only as a synthetic illustration. The page’s example disclosures are there to show how the narrative and any quantitative table can be structured, so you should adapt them to your own data and keep the numbers internally consistent.
Use the draft-output section, which gives visualisation ideas, narrative starters and a content-index line. That section is designed to help you convert the prepared datapoints into a readable draft and a simple index entry.
The page says the closest ESRS correspondence is ESRS E1 (Climate Change), so that reference can help you orient your work. Treat it as a cross-framework pointer and reuse data where appropriate, but do not assume the requirements are identical.
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