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ESRS E4: Biodiversity and Ecosystems · 2026-5010-final
Disclosure Requirement E4-4

Targets

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 EFRAG source.

Dr Ross Kurinko, Sustainability Reporting Trainer
Reviewed by Dr Ross Kurinko · Sustainability Reporting Trainer LRA educational guidance · Not issued or endorsed by EFRAG
To prepare this disclosure
Disclosure focus

This disclosure asks an organisation to explain the biodiversity and ecosystems targets it has set, or plans to set, and how those targets are meant to drive action. In practice, the report should make clear what each target is trying to achieve, the baseline or starting point used, the time horizon, and how progress will be tracked. It should also show whether the target is linked to the organisation’s material biodiversity impacts, dependencies, risks or opportunities, rather than being a general sustainability ambition.

The practical focus is on whether the targets are meaningful and usable for management, not just aspirational statements. Readers should be able to see the scope of coverage, for example whether targets apply across the whole business, specific regions, key sites, supply chains or only selected flagship locations. The disclosure should help a user judge how comprehensive the target-setting is, how it is prioritised, and whether it is capable of being monitored and compared over time.

This LRA educational guidance supports disclosure preparation. For the exact requirements, always refer to the official EFRAG 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
Target values State the specific target figure or end-state the organisation has set, using the same measure and unit it uses internally. Approved target document, strategy paper, or board paper showing the agreed target and metric. Sustainability / strategy
Target coverage Describe exactly which parts of the business, activities, locations, or entities the target applies to, and any exclusions. Target methodology note, boundary paper, or internal scope memo that defines the covered population or operations. Sustainability / reporting
Starting point Record the reference year or starting value the target is measured against, with the same basis used in the target calculation. Baseline calculation file, prior-year performance pack, or approved target-setting worksheet. Sustainability / finance
Target date Capture the planned year or date by which the target is meant to be achieved, and any milestone dates if the plan uses them. Target roadmap, transition plan, or board-approved timetable showing the delivery date. Sustainability / strategy
Offset use Confirm whether the target relies on offsets, and record a clear yes/no answer based on the approved target approach. Target policy, carbon plan, or board paper stating whether offsets are included in the target design. Sustainability / climate
Offsets in target Explain how offsets are intended to support the target, such as whether they are part of the pathway, a backstop, or not counted toward delivery. Target-setting memo, transition plan, or governance paper describing the role assigned to offsets. Sustainability / climate
+ Show E4-4 sub-elements (LRA working checklist)

How to prepare it

1Set the boundary for the target first. Decide which parts of the business, value chain, sites, activities, or other relevant areas are included, and make that scope clear in the draft.
2Define the target itself in business terms. State what outcome is being aimed at, and make sure the wording is specific enough to distinguish it from other sustainability aims.
3Pin down the starting point. Identify the reference figure or reference condition used as the baseline, and keep the source and date trail clear so the figure can be checked later.
4Fix the timing. Record the intended end point or milestone dates, and show how the target period is laid out so the timeline is easy to follow.
5Check any use of offsets and explain their function. If offsets are used, note that fact and describe how they are expected to contribute to reaching the target, using a consistent internal logic.
6Compile the final disclosure and review it against the source material. Bring together the scope, target, baseline, timeline, offset position, and role in achievement, then document any exclusions or changes and confirm the wording matches the official source before filing.
Request the data

Request the target details and supporting evidence

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

What environmental targets has the business set, and what are the baseline, scope, timing, and offset treatment behind each one?

Use your organisation’s own language for these goals first, then map them to the reporting disclosure. For example, if your teams talk about nature, biodiversity, habitats, land, or restoration plans, use those terms in the request and only translate them afterwards for reporting. This is a possible LRA training template; adapt it to your organisation and check the source material before sign-off.

Weak request

Please provide the ESRS E4:E4-4 target information, including scope, baseline, timeline, and offset role.

Why it fails: This uses framework language that many operational teams will not recognise, so it is easy to answer incompletely or send the wrong evidence. It also does not say what internal records to pull, who should own the response, or how to present multiple targets in a usable way.

Better request

Please send the current nature-related goal details your team holds for [reporting period]. For each goal, include the name you use internally, the starting point, the sites or activities covered, the due date or milestone, whether any offsets or credits are used, how those are treated in progress tracking, and the source file or system extract.

Formal email template
Subject: Request for target details and evidence for [reporting period]\n\nHi [name/team],\n\nI’m pulling together the sustainability reporting pack and need the details behind the environmental goals currently in use. Please send the information for each relevant target covering:\n- the target name your team uses\n- the starting point used for comparison\n- the business area, sites, or activities covered\n- the date or milestone by which the goal is meant to be reached\n- whether any offsets or credits are used\n- how those offsets or credits are treated when showing progress\n\nPlease also include the source file, system, or report extract, plus the owner and approver for each item. If you have more than one target, a simple table is fine.\n\nThis is a possible LRA training template; please adapt it to your organisation’s language and check the source material before sign-off.\n\nThanks,\n[preparer name]
Short Teams / Slack version
Hi [name/team] — could you share the current environmental target details for [reporting period]? Please include the target name you use, starting point, scope, end date/milestone, any offsets or credits, how they’re treated in progress reporting, and the source file/system. A simple table is fine. This is a possible LRA training template; adapt it to your organisation and check the source material before sign-off.
Industry examples
Manufacturing

Context. A plant team tracks habitat restoration around factory land and nearby managed areas.

Adapted request. Please share the current habitat restoration goal details for [reporting period]. For each goal, include the site boundary, starting survey result, target completion date, whether any biodiversity credits are used, how they are counted in progress, and the source map or tracker.

Example response. Target name: Plant 3 habitat uplift plan; Scope: factory land and 2 km buffer area; Baseline: 2023 ecological survey; Timeline: 31 Dec 2028; Offsets used: No; Offset treatment: Not applicable; Source: GIS map v4 and ecology tracker.

Property / Real Estate

Context. A property portfolio team manages green space and nature enhancement across leased and owned buildings.

Adapted request. Please send the portfolio nature goal details for [reporting period]. For each goal, include the portfolio boundary, baseline condition, target date, whether any offset purchases are included, and how they are treated when reporting progress.

Example response. Target name: Portfolio biodiversity uplift plan; Scope: 18 owned sites and 6 managed leases; Baseline: 2024 site condition review; Timeline: phased milestones in 2026 and 2030; Offsets used: Yes; Offset treatment: Used only for residual impacts after on-site actions; Source: Portfolio tracker and consultant report.

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

We have set out each goal using the starting level, the intended finish date, the part of the business it applies to, and whether offsetting is part of how the goal will be met.

Context note

These figures show the organisation’s planned end points for each goal, where they begin from, when they are meant to be reached, and whether any offsetting is expected to support delivery.

Fluctuation statement

If the target set changes from one period to the next, explain whether this is due to a revised starting point, a different scope, a new end date, or a change in the planned role of offsets.

Content index entry
E4-4 Targets — [location / page] / [notes]
Download Centre

Preparation tools & forms

Professional preparation tools for E4-4 — 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.

Free · Community members
Go deeper · E4-4
Learn to prepare this disclosure end-to-end

This guide covers one Disclosure Requirement. The ESRS / CSRD Reporting course walks the full European workflow — double materiality, datapoints, evidence and assurance — with exercises on your own data.

Available as Guided Flex, Live Cohort, 1:1 Expert Mentorship or Corporate Programme.

Assurance readiness

For each claim, check the evidence

ClaimRiskEvidence to check
We have checked whether any offsetting was part of how the target was set, and we can show where that decision was recorded.An assurer will test whether the team has clearly identified if offsets were used at all, and whether that judgement is supported by internal records rather than assumed or implied.Target-setting papers, approval notes, methodology documents, and any board or management papers showing whether offsets were included in the target design.
Where offsets were part of the target design, we can explain the role they played in shaping the target and how that was documented.An assurer will probe whether the explanation is specific, consistent with the underlying methodology, and not a vague statement added after the fact.Target methodology, calculation files, decision memos, and supporting rationale showing how offsets influenced the target formulation.
For each target, we have identified the starting point used to measure progress, including the reference year or the qualitative starting position where that is what was used.An assurer will check whether the baseline is clearly defined, consistently applied, and traceable to source data or a documented qualitative assessment.Baseline schedules, source datasets, prior-period reports, management sign-off, and any papers explaining the chosen starting point.
For each target, we have set out the intended end point and any staged checkpoints we used to track progress along the way.An assurer will test whether the end date or period is explicit and whether any interim steps are real milestones rather than informal aspirations.Target tracker, project plans, milestone registers, and approved reporting packs showing the end date and interim checkpoints.
For each target, we have stated the intended level to be reached, together with the unit or basis used to express it where that was defined.An assurer will examine whether the target level is measurable or clearly described, and whether the unit, percentage basis, or absolute basis is applied consistently.Target sheets, KPI definitions, calculation workings, and reporting templates showing the stated level and measurement basis.
We have documented the scientific or technical reasoning behind the target, including how it links to recognised ecological thresholds and any wider global biodiversity goals we chose to reference.An assurer will probe whether the stated rationale is supported by credible technical evidence and whether the claimed links are more than broad narrative statements.Scientific references, expert advice, internal technical papers, and approval records explaining the basis for the target and its external alignment.

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 team asks the wrong business lead for the target details, so the numbers come from someone who does not control the plan or the evidence.
Framework language only
People ask for the data using reporting jargon instead of the organisation’s own terms, and the source team cannot match it to their records.
No clear boundary
The collection note does not say which sites, entities, or activities are included, so different teams send figures for different populations.
+ Show 5 more

Where judgement is often needed

Set the target boundary after a buy-in or sale
Choose a clear cut-off for adding or removing sites, teams or activities after acquisitions or disposals, explain whether the target line was reset or kept as first set, and make the same approach visible in the baseline and timeline.
Handle country-by-country definitions with one internal rule
Where local laws or operating practices use different meanings for the same nature-related item, pick one group-wide interpretation for the target and say how local variations were mapped into it.
Decide who sits just inside or just outside the target population
State the inclusion rule for borderline cases such as joint ventures, leased assets, contractors, seasonal workers or small locations, and explain any exclusions that materially affect the target scope.
+ Show 5 more
Examples

Illustrative examples

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

Illustrative (synthetic) example — food processing

We set a 2030 goal to cut water withdrawals in our own operations by **30%** versus a 2024 starting point, covering **100%** of our direct sites and **0%** of the target being met through offsets. - Our starting level was **10,000 megalitres** in 2024, and the target is **7,000 megalitres** by 2030. - The target applies to all **25** of our manufacturing and packing sites, which together account for **100%** of the scope. - We do **not** rely on offsetting to reach this goal; progress is expected to come from operational reductions only.

Illustrative only: shows a target expressed as a percentage reduction from a named base year, the operational boundary covered, and that no offsetting is used in meeting the goal.

Illustrative (synthetic) example — consumer electronics assembly

We aim to reduce electricity use in our owned assembly plants by **20%** from a **2023** base, with the goal set for **2028** and no offsetting counted toward delivery. - The starting point was **50,000 MWh** in 2023, and the target level is **40,000 MWh** in 2028. - The plan covers **8** plants out of **8** in our direct manufacturing footprint, so the coverage is **100%**. - We are **not** using offsets; the full improvement is expected from efficiency measures and process changes within the business.

Illustrative only: shows a target with a baseline, end date, full operational coverage, and a clear statement that offsets are excluded from target delivery.

Company reportsReal published reports
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How companies report E4-4 in practice

Real reports where this topic is disclosed. These are report practice, not exact disclosure templates to copy.

ÖBB Holding / Rail Cargo Group
Ground Transportation — Railroads · Austria · 2024
Open report →
ÖBB Holding / Rail Cargo Group’s 2024 Annual Report provides some related context on climate change mitigation targets, indicating a taxonomy-eligible target level of 74.5% to 95.8% for climate change mitigation, but no clear disclosure on climate change adaptation (p.101). The report mentions specific biodiversity-related targets, such as creating 30 biodiversity islands by 2030 and constructing three wildlife crossing aids by 2035 within the ÖBB Infrastruktur sub-group (p.142). However, there is no clear or quotable evidence directly addressing the full disclosure requirements, and several narrative items are not found or remain unclear throughout the report.
Sanoma Oyj
Education Services · Finland · 2025
Open report →
Sanoma Oyj’s 2025 Annual Report includes clear targets to use only fossil-free electricity and to ensure all energy used by 2030 is fossil-free or renewable, as stated on page 17. The company also aims to reduce absolute Scope 1 and 2 greenhouse gas emissions by 42% by 2030 from a 2021 base year (p.17). However, while there is related context on emissions targets on page 95, the disclosure is not fully clear, and specific details on biodiversity actions and targets are referenced but not explicitly detailed in the report (pp.79, 99).
Coca-Cola HBC AG
Food and Beverage Processing · Switzerland · 2024
Open report →
Coca-Cola HBC AG’s Sustainability Statement 2024 includes a clear biodiversity-related target, aiming to make a net positive impact on biodiversity in critical areas of its operations and supply chain by 2040, as stated on page 10. The report also references various targets and baseline data related to emissions and other sustainability goals on pages 50, 73, 78, and 132, though these do not specifically address biodiversity. Notably, there is no further detailed or quotable evidence on biodiversity metrics, progress, or specific actions beyond the stated target, leaving the extent of disclosure on implementation and outcomes unclear.
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Check your understanding

Scenarios to work through

A group has set a biodiversity goal for its owned sites and wants to publish it in the sustainability report. The draft says the aim is to restore habitat by 2030, but it does not yet say what parts of the business are covered or what starting point was used.

QWhat details need to be pinned down before the target can be presented clearly?
Reveal model answer →

A company plans to report a nature target for its direct operations, but the draft team is unsure whether to include leased sites, joint ventures and the upstream supply chain. Different teams are using different assumptions, so the numbers do not line up.

QHow should the scope be handled so the target is not misleading?
Reveal model answer →

A preparer is drafting a target to reduce land-use pressure, but the only figure available is the current year’s estimate. The team has not kept a record of the earlier measurement that the target was originally built from, and one business unit wants to replace it with a newer estimate because it looks better.

QWhat should the preparer do about the starting point for the target?
Reveal model answer →

A board-approved biodiversity plan says the company will reach a set outcome by 2035. The draft also mentions that some of the expected improvement will come from habitat credits bought from third parties, but the team is unsure how to describe that role in the report.

QHow should the use of credits or similar instruments be explained when describing target achievement?
Reveal model answer →
Framework references

Related framework references

How this disclosure maps across the major reporting frameworks.

ESRS
E4-4
within ESRS E4: Biodiversity and Ecosystems
Open official source →
Primary
Related & explore
Go deeper · E4-4
Learn to prepare this disclosure end-to-end

This guide covers one Disclosure Requirement. The ESRS / CSRD Reporting course walks the full European workflow — double materiality, datapoints, evidence and assurance — with exercises on your own data.

Available as Guided Flex, Live Cohort, 1:1 Expert Mentorship or Corporate Programme.

FAQ

Questions this page answers

What do I need to gather for E4-4 before I start drafting the disclosure?+
How do I use the E4-4 step-by-step preparation section in practice?+
What should I ask the data owner for when preparing E4-4 target data?+
How do I decide the scope and methodology for E4-4 target reporting?+
Who should own the E4-4 disclosure work in a sustainability reporting process?+
What evidence do I need to make E4-4 assurance-ready?+
How do the E4-4 assurance claims help me check my draft?+
What are the common mistakes in E4-4 reporting that I should avoid?+
How can I use the E4-4 workbook and printable Library Card?+
How do I turn the E4-4 page into a draft disclosure?+
Can I use the synthetic example disclosures on the E4-4 page as a template?+
More questions this page can help with
E4-4 target values target coverage starting point target date offset use offsets in target: what data fields should I collect?How do I build an evidence pack for E4-4 biodiversity and ecosystems target disclosures?What should be in the E4-4 Prep & Assurance workbook before assurance review?How do I check my E4-4 disclosure against the six assurance claims?What are the most common E4-4 reporting gaps and how do I avoid them?How do I write the narrative for an E4-4 disclosure using the page’s narrative starters?What is the best way to assign ownership for E4-4 target data across ESG, HR and data owners?How do I use the E4-4 content-index line in a draft report?Where can I find real company examples for E4-4 biodiversity and ecosystems reporting?How do I make sure my E4-4 target disclosure is consistent across the data table and narrative?What should an assurance reviewer look for in an E4-4 draft disclosure?How do I use the printable E4-4 Library Card during drafting and review?
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