Disclosure LibraryPractitioner guidance for every reporting disclosure
Home Disclosure Library IFRS / ISSB IFRS-S2 s2-29-a-iii
IFRS-S2: IFRS S2 - Climate-related Disclosures · 2024
Paragraphs 29–a–iii

GHG measurement approach, inputs and assumptions

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 the approach it uses to measure its greenhouse gas emissions, including the main inputs and assumptions behind those measurements. In practice, the focus is on showing how the numbers were built: what data was used, what estimation methods were applied, and where judgement or assumptions were needed to fill gaps or convert activity data into emissions figures.

The practical point is to make the measurement basis understandable and comparable, not just to present a final emissions total. An organisation should be clear about the scope of the approach across its operations, and whether the same method is used consistently or only for certain sites, business units or emission sources. The aim is to help users judge how robust and complete the reported emissions information is.

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
Year-on-year changes A clear note of what changed in the reported figure compared with the previous reporting year, including which parts of the calculation or coverage were updated. Prior-year submission, current-year working papers, and a change log showing the revised basis. Sustainability reporting / Finance
Boundary and consolidation basis The rule used to decide which entities, sites, or activities are included in the reported total, and how that inclusion rule is applied in practice. Group reporting policy, consolidation memo, organisational chart, and boundary mapping to the source data. Finance / Sustainability reporting
Calculation factors used The conversion or calculation factors applied to turn activity data into the reported result, including the source and version of each factor set. Factor library, supplier or database extracts, calculation workbook, and version control records. Sustainability reporting / Data analytics
Key inputs and assumptions The main source inputs, estimates, and judgement calls used in the calculation, with enough detail to show what was measured, estimated, or assumed. Source extracts, estimation notes, assumptions register, and calculation workbook comments. Sustainability reporting / Operational data owners
Drivers of change The specific operational or methodological reasons why the reported figure moved from the prior year, separated into real activity changes and calculation changes. Variance analysis, management commentary, and supporting operational records for the main drivers. Finance / Sustainability reporting
Scope 3 quality notes Any short note on the reliability of the value chain data where it matters, including known gaps, estimates, or weak source data that affect confidence in the result. Supplier data quality review, estimation log, gap analysis, and source-data assessment. Sustainability reporting / Supply chain
+ Show s2-29-a-iii sub-elements (LRA working checklist)

How to prepare it

1Set the reporting boundary first. Confirm which entities, operations, and activities sit inside the calculation perimeter, and record the approach you used to draw that line so the same basis can be applied consistently.
2Define what will count in the calculation. Agree the data items, methods, and any ordinary-language assumptions that will feed the result, including the emission factors you intend to use.
3Gather the supporting evidence for each input. Keep source records for activity data, factor selections, assumptions, and any quality notes needed where supply-chain information is less robust.
4Build the reported figures or narrative from the evidence. Make sure the final output reflects the chosen boundary, the selected factors, and the assumptions actually used in the calculation.
5Explain any year-on-year movement. Note what changed compared with the previous period, why it changed, and whether the change affects the way the numbers should be read.
6Check the draft against the source material before sign-off. Confirm the boundary approach, factor choices, assumptions, change explanations, and any relevant quality comments are all complete and consistent with the underlying records.
Request the data

Request the emissions calculation pack from the carbon accounting owner

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

What calculation approach, inputs, assumptions, and year-on-year changes were used to produce the greenhouse gas figures for this reporting period?

Use your organisation’s own names for the team, systems, and calculation packs first, then map them to the reporting disclosure. Keep the ask in everyday internal language rather than framework wording, and check the source material before sign-off.

Weak request

Please provide the IFRS S2 GHG measurement approach, inputs and assumptions evidence for S2-29(a)(iii).

Why it fails: It uses framework language that many operational teams will not recognise, so the owner may not know which files or calculations to send. It also does not point to the practical artefacts needed to explain the numbers, such as the boundary, factors, assumptions, and year-on-year changes.

Better request

Please send the latest emissions calculation pack for [reporting period], including the boundary used, the source file or system extract, the factor set and version, the main inputs and assumptions, any changes since [prior period], and the reason for those changes. If you track indirect-emissions data quality, include those notes too.

Formal email template
Subject: Request for the emissions calculation pack for [reporting period]\n\nHi [name/team],\n\nWe are preparing the sustainability reporting pack and need the calculation support behind the greenhouse gas figures for [reporting period].\n\nPlease send the latest version of your emissions calculation pack, including:\n- the boundary used for the inventory and any exclusions\n- the source file or system extract used to calculate the figures\n- the emission factor set and version/date\n- the main inputs and assumptions used in the calculations\n- any changes made since [prior period]\n- the reason for those changes\n- any notes on data quality for indirect emissions, where relevant\n\nIf it is easier, you can return this in your usual template or workbook. Please also include the period covered, the owner of the file, and the date it was last updated.\n\nThis is a possible LRA training template only; please adapt it to your organisation’s own terms and check the source material before sign-off.\n\nThanks,\n[preparer name]
Short Teams / Slack version
Hi [name/team] — could you share the latest emissions calculation pack for [reporting period]? Please include the boundary, source file/system, factor set/version, key inputs and assumptions, any changes since [prior period], the reason for those changes, and any data-quality notes for indirect emissions if relevant. Use your usual format if easier. Thanks.
Industry examples
Manufacturing

Context. A plant-based group with fuel, electricity, refrigerants, and freight data held across site logs and a carbon workbook.

Adapted request. Please share the latest carbon workbook for [reporting period] covering the plant boundary, site list, fuel and power inputs, refrigerant assumptions, freight estimates, factor library version, and any changes since [prior period]. Include the reason for any restatements or methodology updates.

Example response. Attached: carbon workbook v4.2; boundary note; site list; factor library v2025.1; assumptions tab; change log showing one new warehouse added and one freight proxy replaced; reason: improved meter coverage and updated logistics data.

Financial services

Context. A services group with office energy, business travel, purchased goods, and supplier estimates managed by sustainability and finance.

Adapted request. Please send the emissions calculation pack for [reporting period] used for the office and travel inventory, including the group boundary, source extracts, factor set, assumptions for supplier and travel estimates, and any changes from [prior period]. Add notes on any indirect-emissions data gaps or proxies.

Example response. Attached: inventory model; boundary memo; travel extract; office energy file; factor register v3; assumptions log; change note showing a switch from estimated to booked travel data for one region; data-quality note: supplier spend-based estimates still used for one category.

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 the basis used to prepare the figures, including how the reporting boundary was defined, which inputs and assumptions were applied, and what conversion factors were used.

Context note

Describe what the numbers represent in practice, including the effect of the chosen boundary, the main calculation inputs, and any quality limits that shape how the figures should be read.

Fluctuation statement

Set out the main reasons the figures changed from the previous year, distinguishing between real operational movement, changes in the reporting boundary, and updates to data or assumptions.

Content index entry
s2-29-a-iii GHG measurement approach, inputs and assumptions — [location / page] / [notes]
Download Centre

Preparation tools & forms

Professional preparation tools for s2-29-a-iii — 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 kept the coverage figure on the same basis as last year, and where we changed the basis we explained the effect clearly.Assurer may test whether the year-on-year comparison is genuinely like-for-like, or whether a basis change has been hidden in the narrative.Prior-year calculation file; current-year methodology note; reconciliation showing the effect of any basis change; draft-to-final review comments; sign-off confirming the comparison basis used.
We set out the practical method we used to build the figure, including the boundary we applied to the disclosed operations.Assurer may probe whether the reported perimeter matches the entity’s chosen reporting boundary and whether any exclusions were deliberate and consistent.Boundary memo; consolidation or operational control papers; list of included and excluded entities/sites; methodology paper; management approval of the boundary choice.
We explained why we used this approach, rather than another available method, for the disclosed figure.Assurer may challenge whether the chosen approach was selected for convenience or to improve the result, rather than because it was the most suitable basis.Method selection paper; options appraisal; internal emails or committee papers showing the rationale; approval records; consistency check against prior reporting decisions.
We described the data inputs and assumptions that fed into the calculation, so the reader can see what drove the result.Assurer may look for missing assumptions, undocumented estimates, or inputs that were applied inconsistently across parts of the calculation.Calculation workbook; assumption log; source data extracts; data dictionary; review notes showing each key input was traced and approved.
Where we changed the calculation basis, we explained what changed and why the update was made.Assurer may test whether the explanation is complete, whether the change was intentional, and whether it has been applied consistently across the reporting period.Change log; version history; revised methodology note; approval of the revised basis; comparison of old and new outputs showing the impact of the change.
For the supply-chain part of the figure, we noted the quality of the underlying data and how much came from detailed activity records or independently checked sources.Assurer may question whether lower-quality estimates were presented as stronger evidence, or whether the mix of data types was properly disclosed.Supplier data pack; activity-based input schedule; third-party verification statements where available; data quality assessment; summary of estimated versus directly sourced inputs.

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, wrong language
The team asks a technical lead in framework terms instead of the person who actually runs the emissions data, so the answer comes back in the wrong business language and cannot be used cleanly.
Boundary left undefined
People start collecting figures before agreeing which parts of the business sit inside the reporting perimeter, so different teams pull different populations and the dataset cannot be reconciled.
Period basis not fixed
One team uses the latest month available while another uses the reporting year cut-off, so the inputs are built on different timing bases and do not line up.
+ Show 7 more

Where judgement is often needed

Acquisitions and disposals during the year
State whether you bring in or remove emissions from businesses bought or sold part-way through the period, and explain the cut-off date and any restatement used so the year-on-year comparison is understandable.
Different country definitions for the same activity
If local records classify the same fuel, site, or workforce group differently across countries, choose one organisation-wide basis, explain the mapping rule, and note where local data had to be translated.
People or sites close to the reporting line
For assets, teams, or contractors that sit near your chosen boundary, explain the rule used to include or exclude them and why that rule gives the clearest picture of the business you are measuring.
+ Show 6 more
Examples

Illustrative examples

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

Illustrative (synthetic) example — Manufacturing

We explain that our current-year figures cover the same group of operations as last year, using the same control-based boundary unless a site has been bought or sold. For the year, we updated several conversion rates and activity inputs, which changed the reported total; the main driver was a switch to more recent supplier-specific factors for purchased electricity and freight, while a small part of the movement came from revised fuel-use estimates. - Our scope 3 figures are still partly estimate-based for a few upstream categories, so we flag those areas as lower confidence and note where primary supplier data is not yet available. - The numbers below are prepared on a like-for-like basis, and the year-on-year movement reflects both the revised factors and the updated assumptions used in the calculation model.

This example shows how to describe the reporting boundary, the main calculation inputs, the reason the current year differs from the prior year, and any quality caveats for indirect value-chain data without using a tabular format.

Illustrative (synthetic) example — Retail

We report on the basis of the stores, warehouses and central functions we control during the year, so the comparison with the prior period excludes locations that were franchised out mid-year. The increase in the current period mainly reflects higher customer delivery activity and a fuller set of supplier data, while the calculation also uses updated grid factors and refreshed travel assumptions. - For indirect value-chain emissions, we still rely on spend-based estimates for some categories where supplier activity data is incomplete, and we mark those areas as less precise than the rest of the inventory. - Overall, the movement from last year is explained by the changed operating footprint, the revised factors used in the model, and the better coverage of data from logistics partners.

This example shows a different reporter describing the same kind of information in plain language: what is included in the boundary, what changed from the prior year, which factors and assumptions were used, why the figures moved, and where value-chain data remains less robust.

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

How companies report s2-29-a-iii

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 a clear disclosure of its consolidation operational boundary approach based on operational control, with specific emissions data for Scope 1 reported on page 76. The report also includes information on inputs and assumptions used in data processes on page 196. However, the report does not clearly disclose changes versus prior years (A iii changes vs prior year) or scope 3 data quality notes, and the reasons for changes and emission factors are only partially addressed with unclear context on pages 195 and 81 respectively.
Enel Chile S.A.
Electric Utilities / IPP / Energy Traders · Chile · 2025
Open report →
Enel Chile S.A.'s 2025 Integrated Annual Report references the use of the Science Based Targets initiative (SBTi) models, specifically the Sectoral Decarbonization Approach (SDA) and Absolute Contraction Approach (ACA), both certified for a 1.5°C pathway (pp. 189, 191). The report provides a quantitative figure for greenhouse gas emissions associated with energy supplies, stating 3,548,316 tons CO2 equivalent, though detailed data quality notes for scope 3 emissions are unclear (p. 352). However, the report lacks explicit disclosures on changes versus the prior year, operational boundary consolidation, emission factors, inputs and assumptions, and reasons for changes, limiting clarity on methodological specifics.
Empresas CMPC S.A.
Forest and Paper Products · Chile · 2024
Open report →
Empresas CMPC S.A.'s Integrated Report 2024 provides some related context on scope 3 data quality notes on page 235, though it does not clearly disclose this datapoint. The report includes various sections on governance, material topics, and ESG indicators (pp. 236, 238), but no explicit information is found regarding changes versus prior year, consolidation operational boundary approach, emission factors, or reasons for changes. Inputs and assumptions are also not clearly disclosed, indicating gaps in detailed methodological transparency for this disclosure.
✓ 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 s2-29-a-iii?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 changed from using a market-based electricity factor to a location-based one for part of its footprint, and the emissions team also updated the boundary to include a newly controlled subsidiary from 1 July. The draft note currently says the numbers moved because of 'method updates' but does not separate the effects.

QHow should the team decide what to explain so a reader can see what changed in the current period and why the figures moved?
Reveal model answer →

A preparer has used a mix of supplier-specific activity data, spend-based estimates, and default factors for purchased goods and freight. The working papers are complete, but the draft disclosure only lists the final tonnes and does not explain the main data sources or the assumptions behind the estimates.

QWhat should be included in the narrative so the basis of the calculation is understandable to a reader?
Reveal model answer →

A company has changed its emissions factor set during the year because it moved to a newer database for stationary fuel and refrigerants. The draft note mentions the new database name, but it does not say whether the change affected the current-year result or whether the prior-year figure was restated.

QHow should the team handle the explanation of the factor change and its effect on comparability?
Reveal model answer →

For Scope 3, the team has estimated several categories using secondary data because supplier data were incomplete. The draft disclosure says only that 'data quality is acceptable', even though some categories rely on broad industry averages and others on more specific shipment records.

QWhat judgement should the preparer make about the level of detail to give on data quality for these indirect emissions estimates?
Reveal model answer →
Framework references

Related framework references

How this disclosure maps across the major reporting frameworks.

IFRS / ISSB
s2-29-a-iii
within IFRS-S2: IFRS S2 - Climate-related Disclosures
Open official source →
Primary
Related & explore
FAQ

Questions this page answers

How do I prepare disclosure s2-29-a-iii using the page’s step-by-step guidance?+
What data do I need for s2-29-a-iii before I start drafting?+
How should I set the boundary and consolidation basis for s2-29-a-iii?+
What calculation factors and assumptions should I capture for s2-29-a-iii?+
Who should own the data for s2-29-a-iii in my team?+
What should go into the evidence pack for s2-29-a-iii assurance readiness?+
What are the common mistakes to avoid when drafting s2-29-a-iii?+
How do I use the workbook and printable library card for s2-29-a-iii?+
Can I use the synthetic example disclosure on the s2-29-a-iii page as a draft template?+
How can I turn the s2-29-a-iii data into a first draft narrative?+
Is the data I prepare for s2-29-a-iii reusable for ESRS E1 (Climate Change)?+
More questions this page can help with