This disclosure asks an organisation to explain the main ways it sends resources out of its business through its own activities and value chain, rather than only describing what it uses internally. In practice, that means identifying the significant outflows linked to products, services, packaging, materials, waste, by-products, or other resource-related outputs that matter for understanding how the business affects resource use and circularity.
The practical focus is on completeness and relevance across the organisation, not just on a few flagship sites or isolated initiatives. Reporters should think about where the material outflows arise, how broadly they are covered across operations, and whether the information reflects the organisation’s significant activities as a whole, including any important differences between sites, business lines, or geographies.
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 waste, product and packaging outflow data from Operations
Translate the disclosure into an internal business question — then adapt it to your organisation's own language.
Use your own site, waste and product terms first, then map them to the reporting fields below. If your teams use different labels for scrap, offcuts, returns, packaging, by-products, treatment routes or waste contractors, keep those internal terms in the request and only translate them at the end. This is a possible LRA training template; adapt it to your organisation and check the source material before sign-off.
Please provide the ESRS E5:E5-5 resource outflows data for the period, including all datapoints and evidence expectations.
Why it fails: This uses framework language that many operational teams will not recognise, so the owner may not know which systems, records or categories to pull from. It also does not say whether the request is about products, packaging, waste, treatment routes or source evidence, so the response is likely to be incomplete or hard to trace.
Please send the site waste, packaging and product-outflow pack for [period] from [site/business unit]. Include your own category names for materials and waste streams, plus the source file, measurement method, assumptions and any gaps. We need the figures for service life, warranty, use count, repair information, recyclable content, packaging recyclability, waste totals, reuse/recycling/recovery, disposal routes, unknown destination and any radioactive waste.
Notes that turn data into a disclosure
LRA training templates — adapt them to your organisation, and check the official source before sign-off.
Describe the basis used to define each product attribute, waste stream, and circularity measure, including how the figures were compiled, what period they cover, and any assumptions used to classify materials, packaging, and treatment routes.
Explain what the figures say about how long the product is expected to last, how easy it is to maintain and repair, how much of it and its packaging can be recycled, and how much waste is created and then kept in use through reuse, recycling, or other recovery.
If any measure changes materially, link the movement to operational or design changes such as different product specifications, altered repair support, shifts in material mix, packaging design updates, or changes in waste handling routes.
Preparation tools & forms
Professional preparation tools for E5-5 — 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 describe how our products are built for longer use, easier servicing and better end-of-life handling. The figures below show one internally consistent way to present product durability, repair support, recycled input and waste outcomes for the reporting period.
Illustrative only. This example shows how a company could summarise product design features and waste flows in a compact quantitative format, while keeping the figures internally consistent.
: we present a second, different reporting pattern for a separate business line. The numbers below show a consistent split across product durability, repair support, recycled content, packaging and waste treatment.
Illustrative only. This example uses a different sector and a different mix of figures, while still covering the same disclosure points in a compact stacked table.
How companies report E5-5 in practice
Real reports where this topic is disclosed. These are report practice, not exact disclosure templates to copy.

Scenarios to work through
A product team has launched a new appliance line, but the draft report only says the units are 'durable' and 'easy to fix'. The file also contains a supplier note on expected service life, a separate warranty summary, and an internal estimate of how many use cycles the product should withstand.
A repairable electronics range is being described in the draft as 'highly repairable', but the underlying evidence is mixed: one document gives a repair score, another lists spare-part lead times, and a third gives average turnaround for repairs. The team is unsure whether the narrative alone is enough.
A packaging redesign has reduced plastic use, and the sustainability team wants to say the pack is 'mostly recyclable'. The technical file, however, separates the recycled content in the product from the recyclability of the packaging materials, and the figures are not the same.
The waste register shows 1,200 tonnes of waste for the year. Of that, 720 tonnes went to reuse, recycling or another recovery route, 360 tonnes went to disposal, and 120 tonnes had no confirmed destination yet; the register also splits the total into hazardous and non-hazardous streams.
Related framework references
How this disclosure maps across the major reporting frameworks.
Questions this page answers
Use it as a practical prep page: it explains the disclosure in plain language, lists the datapoints to gather, and gives a step-by-step way to get from source data to a draft. It is designed to help you organise ownership, evidence and assurance readiness rather than act as an official standard.
The page gives a detailed datapoint list covering product durability and repair, recycled content and recyclability, and waste and disposal information. Use that list to check what you already have, what needs to be requested from data owners, and where gaps may remain.
The page’s datapoint list separates product-related items, packaging/recyclability items, and waste-stream items, which helps you keep the scope clear. Use the step-by-step preparation section and the measurement approach fields to define what is in scope before you start drafting.
The page is set up for practitioner use, so it is meant to help you assign ownership across ESG, HR or other data owners and then collect the right evidence from each source. Use the workbook and evidence-pack structure to track who provides each datapoint and what proof supports it.
The page includes an evidence pack with five items and six assurance claims to verify, so you can build a file that supports the numbers and the methodology. Use those sections to make sure each key claim has a clear risk point and a matching evidence trail.
The page includes a section on common reporting gaps and mistakes, which is there to help you spot missing data, weak methodology and inconsistent reporting before submission. It is useful as a final check against the datapoint list and the assurance claims.
The workbook is intended to help you organise the datapoints, preparation steps and assurance checks in one place. Use it alongside the page’s draft-output section to move from raw data to a structured draft narrative and supporting table.
The examples are synthetic and are there to show how the disclosure can be presented, including a quantitative table where relevant. You can use them as a formatting and completeness check, but you should replace every figure and statement with your own internally consistent data.
The page includes narrative starters and a content-index line to help you shape the final write-up. Use those prompts to turn the datapoints into a concise explanation of scope, method and results, while keeping the wording grounded in your own evidence.
The page has a 'From company reports' table that links to real published reports where the topic is disclosed. Use it as a reference point for how others present similar information, not as a template for your own requirements.
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