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ESRS E5: Resource Use and Circular Economy · 2026-5010-final
Disclosure Requirement E5-4

Resource Inflows

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 main resources it brings into its business and how those inflows relate to its use of materials and other inputs. In practice, the report should help a reader understand what is being sourced, where it comes from, and how significant those inflows are for the organisation’s activities and value chain.

The practical focus is usually on coverage across the organisation’s relevant operations, not just a few flagship sites. A useful report will distinguish between major inflows and minor ones, show whether the picture is complete or partial, and make clear any important differences by business area, geography, or type of input.

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
Key input list List the main materials the business uses or depends on for this reporting period. Materials register, procurement master data, production BOMs, and supplier specifications. Procurement / Operations
Material overview Describe each material in plain terms so a reader can understand what it is. Product specifications, technical data sheets, and internal material descriptions. Operations / Product
Operational use Explain how each material is used in the business process or product flow. Process maps, manufacturing notes, and operations manuals. Operations
Criticality flag Record whether each material is treated as critical for the business. Risk assessments, supply continuity reviews, and strategic sourcing records. Risk / Procurement
Material type State the specific material type for each item, using the business’s agreed naming. Material master, technical specifications, and supplier declarations. Product / Procurement
Strategic status Capture how the business classifies the material strategically and what that classification means internally. Strategy papers, sourcing policy, and approved classification lists. Strategy / Procurement
Total material weight Capture the total weight for the reporting period in tonnes, using one consistent basis. Weighbridge records, inventory movements, and production or purchase summaries. Finance / Operations
Weight by item Show the weight for each material separately, in the same unit and period basis as the total. Material-level inventory reports, purchase logs, and production consumption records. Operations / Finance
Share of total State each material’s share of the overall weight, using the same total as the denominator. Calculation workbook linked to the total weight and item-level weights. Finance / Reporting
Secondary input weight Capture the weight of secondary materials separately, in tonnes, for the reporting period. Recycled input logs, waste-to-input records, and procurement data for secondary feedstock. Operations / Sustainability
Secondary input share State what portion of total input comes from secondary materials, using the same input total throughout. Calculation sheet tied to the total input figure and secondary input records. Finance / Sustainability
Material origin split Separate materials into technical and biological groups using the business’s own definitions. Material taxonomy, product specifications, and sustainability classification rules. Sustainability / Product
Intended use Describe the intended use of the material in the business or product. Product design documents, process specifications, and procurement requirements. Product / Operations
CRM register Compile the list of materials the business treats as critical raw materials. Approved critical materials list, sourcing risk register, and supplier dependency analysis. Procurement / Risk
Strategic materials list Identify which materials are considered strategic by the business and record them consistently. Strategy-approved material list, board papers, and sourcing plans. Strategy / Procurement
Source traceability Map each material back to its source or origin in the supply chain. Supplier declarations, chain-of-custody records, and purchase order data. Procurement / Supply Chain
+ Show E5-4 sub-elements (LRA working checklist)

How to prepare it

1Set the reporting boundary first. Decide which parts of the business, products, and supply chain are in scope for this disclosure, and keep that scope consistent across the list of materials, the weight figures, and any related notes.
2Define the material categories you will use. Separate the inputs into the relevant material groupings, identify which ones are critical or strategic where applicable, and record the business role each material plays so the classification is clear.
3Gather the source records behind each entry. Use procurement files, inventory records, bills of material, production data, or other internal evidence that supports the named materials, their descriptions, their weights, and any split between primary and secondary inputs.
4Build the disclosure table from the evidence. For each material, enter the name, description, operational role, any criticality flag, the material type, the strategic label, the total weight, the share of the total, and the amount and share of secondary input where relevant.
5Explain any exclusions, estimates, or changes in method. If a material, source, or calculation approach is left out or treated differently from prior periods, note why, what changed, and how that affects comparability.
6Check the final draft against the official source before sign-off. Confirm that every required field is covered, the figures add up logically, the wording matches the underlying evidence, and the completed disclosure still reflects the source requirements without drift.
Request the data

Request the materials inflow data from Procurement / Materials Management

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

What materials came into the business in the reporting period, how much of each was used, and which of them are classed as critical, strategic, or secondary inputs?

Use your organisation’s own names for material groups, stock codes, sourcing categories, and planning terms first; then map them to the reporting fields. Keep the ask in business language the owner already uses, and check the source guidance before sign-off.

Weak request

Please provide the ESRS E5:E5-4 resource inflows data, including all required datapoints and the relevant classifications.

Why it fails: It uses framework language instead of the owner’s day-to-day terms, so the recipient has to translate the ask before they can act. It also does not say which systems, sites, material groups, or conversion rules to use, so the output is likely to be incomplete or inconsistent.

Better request

Please send the materials intake extract for [period] for [sites/business units], using your normal material codes and planning categories. Include each material’s description, what it is used for in operations, whether it is flagged as critical or strategic, total quantity, any secondary or recovered quantity, and the source system plus any conversion notes.

Formal email template
Subject: Request for materials inflow data for [reporting period]

Dear [name],

I am preparing the sustainability reporting pack and would appreciate your help with the materials inflow data for [reporting period].

Please could you share a table covering [business units / sites] with the following, using your own internal material names and codes where possible:
- material name / code
- short description of the material and how it is used in operations
- whether it is treated internally as critical or strategic
- total quantity received or used in the period, with unit
- quantity from secondary / recovered sources, if tracked
- any source mapping or notes needed to explain the classification

Please also include the extract date, source system, and any assumptions or conversion factors used.

A possible LRA training template is attached below for reference. Please adapt this to your organisation’s terms and check the source guidance before sign-off.

Many thanks,
[preparer name]
[team]
[contact details]
Short Teams / Slack version
Hi [name] — could you send over the materials inflow extract for [period] for [sites/business units]? Please use your usual material names/codes and include: what the material is used for, whether it is flagged as critical/strategic, total quantity, any secondary/recovered quantity, source system, and any conversion notes. Please adapt to your organisation’s terms and check the source guidance before sign-off. Thanks.
Industry examples
Food manufacturing

Context. The business tracks flour, sugar, oils, packaging, and cleaning chemicals in ERP and warehouse systems.

Adapted request. Please share the materials intake report for [period] for the bakery and packing sites. Use your usual item codes and category names, and include each input’s description, operational use, whether it is treated as critical or strategic, total tonnes received or consumed, any recycled-content packaging quantity, and the source system plus conversion factors.

Example response. The owner returns a table with flour, sugar, vegetable oil, carton board, and cleaning chemicals; each line shows description, use in production or packing, critical/strategic flag, total tonnes, secondary/recovered tonnes for carton board, and notes on the ERP extract and unit conversions.

Electronics assembly

Context. The business manages metals, circuit-board inputs, batteries, and packaging through procurement and inventory systems.

Adapted request. Please provide the inbound materials file for [period] covering the assembly plants and central stores. Please use your standard commodity groups and stock codes, and include the material description, how it is used in the build process, whether it is marked critical or strategic, total weight in tonnes, any secondary material content, and any source mapping for the listed strategic materials.

Example response. The owner supplies a table with copper, aluminium, lithium battery cells, resin boards, and packaging; each row includes the operational use, criticality flag, strategic class, total tonnes, secondary input tonnes where tracked, and a note linking the item code to the commodity group.

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 that the figures are based on the organisation’s identified material list, with each item described by its operational role, criticality flag, type and strategic status, and that totals and shares are calculated from the reported weights of all listed materials, including any secondary inputs where relevant.

Context note

State what the numbers show about the organisation’s material dependence: which inputs are most important to operations, how much of the total they represent, and whether the mix is dominated by primary materials or supported by secondary sources.

Fluctuation statement

If the mix changes from one period to the next, point to shifts in the weight of individual materials, changes in the balance between primary and secondary inputs, or reclassification of materials as critical or strategic, and explain the operational reason behind the movement.

Content index entry
E5-4 Resource Inflows — [location / page] / [notes]
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Preparation tools & forms

Professional preparation tools for E5-4 — 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 · E5-4
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 identified the materials that matter most to the business and wrote a short note on what each one is used for and why it matters in our operations.The list may be incomplete, or a material may be described too vaguely to show why it was treated as important.Material inventory or bill-of-materials extracts; procurement and production records; internal mapping showing why each item was treated as key; working papers linking each listed material to its operational use.
For the materials we named, we checked whether any contained substances that fall into the relevant EU critical or strategic categories and recorded the classification we relied on.A material may have been misclassified, or the underlying substance content may not support the stated category.Supplier declarations; technical specifications; composition data; classification cross-checks against the cited EU annexes; reviewer sign-off on the classification basis.
We totalled the weight of the materials included in the figure using the same cut-off and unit basis across the dataset.The total may be overstated, understated, or built from mixed units or inconsistent boundaries.Calculation workbook; source data extracts; unit conversion checks; boundary notes; reconciliation from line items to the reported total.
We broke the figure down material by material, using either weight or a share of the total, and kept the method consistent for the whole table.The split may not add up to the total, or percentages may be based on an inconsistent denominator.Detailed schedule of each material; formula checks; rounding policy; reconciliation showing the parts sum to the reported total; evidence of the denominator used for any percentages.
Where we included recycled or other secondary inputs, we measured them on the same basis as the main materials and expressed them as weight or as a share of the total.Secondary inputs may be double-counted, measured on a different basis, or reported against the wrong total.Recycled-content certificates; supplier attestations; mass-balance or traceability records; calculation sheets showing the basis used; checks preventing overlap with primary inputs.
When we described the materials, we separated process-based materials from living-origin materials so the wording matched the type of input involved.The narrative may blur different material types, leading to a misleading description of what was actually used.Material taxonomy or classification note; product and process descriptions; reviewer comments confirming the distinction was applied consistently; final drafting check against source records.

Evidence pack to prepare

Common reporting gaps

Figures are stated without the supporting narrative, or narrative without figures.Scope is inconsistent between the text and the numbers.The reporting boundary is left undefined.Material changes since the previous period are not disclosed.Estimates and measured values are not distinguished.Source records for the figures are not identified.
Common gaps

Mistakes to avoid when collecting the data

Wrong owner
The request goes to a team that only sees purchases or stock records, so the person who can explain the material and its use in the business is never asked.
Framework language used too early
The collector asks for answers in reporting jargon instead of the organisation’s own names for materials, uses and classifications, which makes the source data hard to find.
Scope left vague
No one states which sites, entities or product lines are in scope, so different teams pull different sets of inflows and the final file cannot be reconciled.
+ Show 5 more

Where judgement is often needed

Acquisitions and disposals during the year
Set a clear cut-off for businesses bought or sold in the period, explain whether you include them from the transaction date or for the full year, and keep the same basis across the material list, tonnage totals and percentage splits.
Different country labels for the same input
Where local naming or customs differ, map each item to one internal material category, explain the mapping rule, and disclose any country-specific exceptions so readers can see how like-for-like totals were built.
Borderline items that sit near the reporting perimeter
Decide in advance whether shared services, outsourced processing, temporary sites or other near-scope activities are counted, describe the rule used, and note any exclusions that could change the totals materially.
+ Show 7 more
Examples

Illustrative examples

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

Illustrative (synthetic) example — industrial machinery

We set out the main materials we rely on, showing which ones are classed as critical, how they support our operations, and whether each is treated as strategic. We also split the quantities between primary and recovered inputs, and distinguish technical from biological material uses.

Synthetic example for training only; figures are internally consistent and illustrative.

Illustrative material input mix for our group (tonnes)
Metals1200300
Plastics450150
Minerals9000
Biological fibres0100
Illustrative (synthetic) example — consumer electronics assembly

We list the key substances and feedstocks used in our products and operations, note their business role, and identify which ones we treat as critical or strategically important. We also show the split between new and secondary inputs, plus the share of technical and biological material use.

Synthetic example for training only; figures are internally consistent and illustrative.

Illustrative material input mix for our company (tonnes)
Metals1800200
Plastics700100
Glass and ceramics50050
Biobased materials0150
Company reportsReal published reports
Compare side by side →Get it free

How companies report E5-4 in practice

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

Bakkafrost P/F
Food Production — Animal Source · Faroe Islands · 2025
Open report →
Bakkafrost P/F’s Integrated Annual Report 2025 provides a numeric value for the total weight of key materials sourced, specifying marine raw materials at 383,998 tonnes and agricultural materials at 327,068 tonnes on page 128. The report also mentions the total weight of packaging materials as 6,227 tonnes on the same page. However, there is no quotable narrative evidence found in the report regarding processes to identify and assess material climate-related or biodiversity impacts, risks, or opportunities, nor detailed descriptions of supplier engagement or sustainability policies beyond brief mentions on pages 73, 74, and 106.
Ferrovial SE
Construction and Engineering · Netherlands · 2024
Open report →
Ferrovial SE's 2024 Integrated Annual Report provides a specific quantitative disclosure on materials purchased by weight or volume, reporting 77,909 tonnes of bitumen purchased by Ferrovial Construction, representing 100% of that segment's bitumen use (p.306). The report also mentions efforts to increase the use of secondary, sustainable, and renewable resources, though this is presented as related context rather than a clear disclosure (p.112). There is no clear information on the use or significance of biological materials, with only an unclear note that they are not significant in Ferrovial’s purchases (p.306), and no other quotable evidence was found in the report regarding this disclosure.
Italgas S.p.A.
Gas Utilities · Italy · 2025
Open report →
Italgas S.p.A.'s 2025 Integrated Annual Report provides some related context on procured materials and their categorisation, noting total material inputs of 8,139 tonnes divided into metals, plastics, electronic materials, and others (p.93, p.144). However, the report does not clearly disclose specific data points related to this disclosure, with several narrative items not found or unclear. Overall, while there is some information on material procurement and value chain context, a clear and comprehensive disclosure on this topic is not evident in the report.
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Check your understanding

Scenarios to work through

A manufacturer uses aluminium, copper and recycled plastic in its products. The reporting team has the purchase records, but the operations team has not yet explained how each input supports production or whether any of them should be treated as strategically important.

QHow should the team decide what to include for each input before the disclosure is signed off?
Reveal model answer →

A food producer has mixed plant-based ingredients with packaging materials in one procurement file. The sustainability team is unsure whether to present all of them together or separate the biological inputs from the non-biological ones.

QWhat judgement should be made about grouping the inputs for reporting?
Reveal model answer →

A company has calculated that it used 1,200 tonnes of materials in total during the year. Of that, 300 tonnes were recycled feedstock and 900 tonnes were newly extracted materials, but the draft note only shows the recycled figure and its percentage.

QWhat should the preparer check before finalising the note?
Reveal model answer →

A business buys some components directly from suppliers and also uses recovered material from its own production scrap. The draft disclosure mentions the recovered material, but it does not say how much of the overall input it represents or how it fits into the wider material mix.

QWhat should the preparer do when deciding whether the secondary material information is complete enough?
Reveal model answer →
Framework references

Related framework references

How this disclosure maps across the major reporting frameworks.

ESRS
E5-4
within ESRS E5: Resource Use and Circular Economy
Open official source →
Primary
Related & explore
Go deeper · E5-4
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

How do I use the E5-4 page to prepare a draft disclosure on resource use and circular economy?+
What data do I need to collect for E5-4 before I can draft the disclosure?+
How should I set the scope and methodology for the E5-4 disclosure using this page?+
Who should own the E5-4 data collection and sign-off process?+
What evidence pack do I need to make E5-4 assurance-ready?+
What are the six assurance claims in the E5-4 page and how do I use them?+
What are the common reporting gaps or mistakes to avoid in E5-4?+
How do I use the Prep & Assurance workbook for E5-4?+
What is the printable Library Card PDF for E5-4 used for?+
How do I turn the E5-4 data into a draft narrative and content index line?+
More questions this page can help with
E5-4 disclosure: what should I check before I start collecting the material weight and secondary input data?How do I use the E5-4 source traceability field to support assurance?What does the E5-4 material origin split help me show in the draft?How do I decide whether a material should be marked as critical or strategic in the E5-4 workbook?What should I include in the CRM register for the E5-4 disclosure?How do I build an evidence pack for E5-4 from the workbook and source documents?What are the best visualisation ideas for an E5-4 circular economy disclosure draft?How can I use the 'From company reports' table on the E5-4 page without treating it as a template?What is the difference between total material weight and weight by item in the E5-4 datapoints list?How do I use the synthetic illustrative example on the E5-4 page safely in my own draft?
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