This disclosure asks an organisation to explain how it identifies, manages and reports pollution-related matters across the business, not just at a few visible locations. In practice, it is about showing where pollution risks and impacts arise in relation to air, water, soil and microplastics, and how the organisation responds through policies, controls, monitoring and actions.
The practical focus is on coverage and completeness: whether the reporting captures the full footprint of relevant operations, sites, activities and value chain touchpoints, rather than only flagship facilities. It should help a reader understand which parts of the organisation are included, where the main pollution issues sit, and how the organisation prioritises prevention, reduction and remediation.
This LRA educational guidance supports disclosure preparation. For the exact requirements, always refer to the official EFRAG 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 pollution and spill data from EHS / site operations
Translate the disclosure into an internal business question — then adapt it to your organisation's own language.
Use your organisation’s own labels first, then map them to the reporting disclosure. For example, ask for site emissions, discharge logs, spill records, waste-water records, or process-loss records if those are the terms your teams already use. Keep the request in operational language and only translate into the reporting wording when you prepare the final pack.
Please provide the ESRS E2:E2-4 data for pollution, including emissions to air, water and soil, pollutant types, accidental releases, microplastics produced, used and released, secondary microplastics, and transfers to treatment.
Why it fails: This uses framework wording that many operational teams will not recognise, so the owner may not know which logs, registers, or systems to search. It also bundles several different evidence types without saying how to pull them from day-to-day records.
Please send the environmental incident, discharge, and release records for [reporting period] for [sites / business units]. We need any air releases, water discharges, soil contamination events, spill records, pollutant lists, microplastic-related materials, and any transfers to treatment, with the source file or system, quantity, unit, and short explanation for each line.
Notes that turn data into a disclosure
LRA training templates — adapt them to your organisation, and check the official source before sign-off.
State which substances and microplastic flows were included, explain how you defined each category in practice, and note the units, boundaries and basis used to compile the figures.
Explain what the reported emissions, accidental releases and microplastic figures indicate about the company’s environmental footprint, including which pathways or materials are most significant.
If the figures moved materially from the prior period, point to the operational, sourcing, process or incident-related reasons that best explain the change.
Preparation tools & forms
Professional preparation tools for E2-4 — 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 summarise the main substances we sent to air, water and land during the year, naming the pollutant groups involved and noting one small accidental spill to soil that was contained on site. - Air: 12.4 tonnes in total, including 7.1 tonnes of nitrogen oxides, 3.0 tonnes of volatile organic compounds and 2.3 tonnes of sulphur oxides. - Water: 4.8 tonnes in total, made up of 2.6 tonnes of suspended solids, 1.4 tonnes of chemical oxygen demand load and 0.8 tonnes of ammonia compounds. - Soil: 1.2 tonnes in total, all from the contained spill noted above; no other land-based discharge was recorded. - Microplastics: we produced 0.9 kg, used 1.6 kg in our process aids, and released 0.2 kg; the released amount came from wear in polymer-coated equipment and filter media. - Secondary microplastics: these arose mainly from abrasion of conveyor belts and packaging film; they are described here as a by-product of normal handling and transport, and their life-cycle effect is linked to product use, maintenance and end-of-life handling.
Illustrative only; figures are synthetic and internally consistent. The narrative covers releases to air, water and soil, the pollutant groups involved, one accidental release, microplastics produced/used/released, and the origin and life-cycle context of secondary microplastics.
Our year-end summary shows the main pollutant loads we sent to air and water, a small land release from an incident, and the microplastic figures linked to our operations. - Air: 6.0 tonnes overall, comprising 2.5 tonnes of particulate matter, 1.9 tonnes of nitrogen oxides and 1.6 tonnes of non-methane organic compounds. - Water: 2.7 tonnes overall, including 1.1 tonnes of suspended solids, 0.9 tonnes of phosphorus compounds and 0.7 tonnes of cleaning-agent residues. - Soil: 0.4 tonnes in total, all from one accidental release during tank maintenance; the event was isolated and remediated. - Microplastics: 0.3 kg produced, 2.1 kg used, and 0.1 kg released; the released fraction came from trimming losses and abrasion of plastic liners. - Secondary microplastics: these were generated mainly by cutting, friction and weathering of packaging materials; in plain terms, they are a by-product of how our products are made, handled, used and eventually discarded.
Illustrative only; figures are synthetic and internally consistent. The narrative covers emissions to air, water and soil, pollutant types, an accidental release, microplastics produced/used/released, and the sources, description and product-life-cycle impact of secondary microplastics.
How companies report E2-4 in practice
Real reports where this topic is disclosed. These are report practice, not exact disclosure templates to copy.

Scenarios to work through
A plant has a small solvent leak that reached a drainage channel and then a nearby stream. The operations team also logged routine stack emissions from the same site, and the reporting team is unsure whether to separate the incident from the normal discharge inventory.
A factory uses a polymer additive that can break down into tiny plastic fragments during production and later in product use. The team can list the additive, but it is unclear whether the report should also explain where the fragments come from and how the product’s life cycle contributes to them.
A site sends wastewater sludge to an external treatment facility, while another stream goes to a different destination for recovery. The preparer has volumes for both streams, but the internal records do not yet show which destination each load went to.
A laboratory monitors several substances, but only some are tracked because of legal limits, while others are watched under internal thresholds. The team is unsure whether the disclosure should mention the list of substances, the trigger levels used, and which parts of the business are covered by monitoring.
Related framework references
How this disclosure maps across the major reporting frameworks.
Questions this page answers
Start with the plain-language explainer, then work through the step-by-step preparation section and the datapoints list. The page is designed to help you turn source data into a draft narrative and content-index line, not to replace your own reporting judgement.
The page lists the datapoints to prepare, including air, water and soil emission narratives, pollutant types and lists, accidental release details, microplastics fields, reporting threshold, monitoring coverage, and transfer/treatment information. Use that list to check what is already available and what still needs to be requested from data owners.
Use the page’s preparation steps and datapoints to define what is in scope, what measures you will use, and how you will describe monitoring coverage and reporting thresholds. The page is meant to help you document a consistent approach rather than give you a fixed methodology.
The page is useful for assigning ownership because it breaks the disclosure into specific data items that can be routed to the right people, such as environmental, operations, or data owners. Use the workbook to track who provides each input and who signs off the final draft.
The page includes an evidence pack with five items to support assurance readiness, alongside six assurance claims to verify. Build your pack around the source records, calculations, and narrative support that back each claim and keep it easy to trace.
The page has a section on common reporting gaps and mistakes, which is useful for checking whether anything is missing before sign-off. Use it to spot issues such as incomplete narratives, missing measures, or weak support for the figures you plan to disclose.
The Download Centre includes a Prep & Assurance workbook in .xlsx format that you can use to organise the datapoints, evidence, and assurance checks. It is intended to help you move from raw inputs to a cleaner draft and a more complete audit trail.
The Download Centre also provides a printable Library Card in .pdf format, which is useful as a quick reference while you prepare the disclosure. It can help you keep the key datapoints, checks, and drafting prompts in view during review meetings.
Yes, as a drafting aid only. The page includes synthetic illustrative example disclosures, including a quantitative table, so you can see how the information may be presented without treating it as a real-company model.
Use the draft-output section, which gives visualisation ideas, narrative starters, and a content-index line. That section is there to help you convert prepared data into a readable draft that is easier to review and finalise.
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