This disclosure asks an organisation to explain which material sustainability impacts, risks and opportunities matter most to its business model and strategy, and how those matters connect to the way the organisation creates, delivers and preserves value. In practice, it is about showing the link between what is material and the organisation’s strategic choices, rather than listing issues in isolation.
The practical focus is on whether the organisation has considered its full business, not just a few headline sites or activities. It should describe how the material matters are reflected across operations, value chain and decision-making, and where there are differences in relevance by geography, business line or site type. The aim is to show the breadth of coverage and the real strategic implications, in a way that is clear and specific to the organisation.
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 the strategy-and-financial impact evidence
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 categories. For example, if you talk about business drivers, investment cases, budget pressures, forecast assumptions, or balance sheet items internally, keep that language in the request and only translate it later for reporting.
Please provide the ESRS 2:SBM-3 evidence for material impacts, risks and opportunities, including interaction with strategy and business model, financial effects, resilience, and any non-quantified items.
Why it fails: It uses framework language that many internal owners will not recognise, so they may not know which pack, model, or decision paper to send. It also does not point to the business issue, the source file, the planning basis, or the specific financial outputs needed.
Please send the latest internal pack for [internal issue name] that shows how it affects the business model or plan, what response is underway or planned, and any revenue, cost, asset, liability, or cash impacts. Include the scenario or planning basis, the time view used, and any items that were not quantified with the reason and the line items likely affected.
Notes that turn data into a disclosure
LRA training templates — adapt them to your organisation, and check the official source before sign-off.
Set out how the figures were prepared, including what each measure covers, the basis used for any estimates or scenarios, the time periods applied, and the reason where an effect is described without a number.
Explain what the reported amounts and descriptions mean for the business, linking the interaction, the response taken, the expected financial effects, and the parts of the accounts that may be affected.
If the numbers or expectations change, point to shifts in the underlying issue, the response plan, the time horizon, or the planning assumptions used to estimate the effect.
Preparation tools & forms
Professional preparation tools for SBM-3 — 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 explain that a shift in customer demand toward lower-emission products is already changing how we sell, design and source components, so the board and its committees have approved a product redesign programme and a supplier-screening plan for the next two years. In this scenario, we expect a €120 million revenue effect, €18 million of extra operating spend, a €9 million balance-sheet effect and a €6 million cash effect, with the main lines likely touched being revenue, cost of sales, inventories, trade payables and operating cash flow. - Our forward view is based on a three-scenario planning exercise covering the next 12, 24 and 60 months, using internal demand forecasts and transition assumptions; we expect the largest changes in the medium term, with a smaller effect in the short term and a more material shift by year five. - We have not put numbers on some parts of the effect because the timing and size are still too uncertain; those unquantified items are described qualitatively as possible margin pressure, higher working-capital needs and occasional asset write-down risk, and they may affect revenue, operating profit, inventories, receivables and cash flow. - We judge the business model to be resilient because the planned redesign, supplier changes and pricing actions should allow us to keep serving core customers even if the transition is slower or faster than expected.
Synthetic, illustrative only; figures are internally consistent and intended to show how a reporter might describe the interaction, response, quantified effects, unquantified effects and resilience in plain language.
We describe how hotter summers and water constraints are already influencing sourcing, production scheduling and product mix, and our management team has set a response plan covering water efficiency, recipe reformulation and selective price changes. On the basis of a climate-stress test and internal planning assumptions, we expect a €75 million revenue effect, €11 million of added costs, a €4 million asset and liability effect and a €3 million cash effect, with the most likely affected lines being sales, production costs, property and equipment, provisions and operating cash flow. - Our outlook uses a two-path planning basis over the short, medium and longer term, and we expect the financial effect to build gradually rather than arrive all at once. - We have left some items unquantified because the evidence is not yet strong enough to support a reliable estimate; qualitatively, those items could mean lower volumes in peak periods, higher utility and logistics spend, and possible impairment pressure on certain sites, affecting sales, operating expenses, fixed assets, provisions and cash generation. - Even so, we consider the group reasonably robust because the response plan gives us options to shift sourcing, adjust production and protect supply to key customers if conditions worsen.
Synthetic, illustrative only; figures are internally consistent and intended to show a second plausible reporter with a different sector and a different pattern of effects.
How companies report SBM-3 in practice
Real reports where this topic is disclosed. These are report practice, not exact disclosure templates to copy.

Scenarios to work through
A manufacturer has identified a major transition risk from tighter product standards. The board has approved a shift toward lower-emission product lines, but the finance team has not yet linked that shift to any forecast changes.
A services group expects a new customer requirement to reduce revenue in one region over the next two years, while also increasing compliance spend and contract assets. Management has a rough estimate for revenue and costs, but not for the balance sheet effect.
A retailer has run an internal planning exercise using three climate pathways and a five-year budget cycle. The exercise shows that one pathway would materially affect store refurbishment timing, but the team is unsure whether to present the analysis as a resilience assessment or as a general planning input.
A mining group has identified a long-term water-stress risk that could affect production, but the impact is too uncertain to quantify reliably today. The team can describe likely operational effects and knows the issue may affect impairment testing and provisions.
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 draft-output section. The page is designed to help you turn source data into a draft narrative, table and content-index line rather than to act as an official standard.
The page lists the datapoints to prepare, including the interaction with strategy, the strategic and planned response, financial effects, assessment periods, planning basis and any qualitative explanation where figures are not available. Use that list as your collection checklist before drafting.
Use the page’s assessment-period and planning-basis datapoints, together with the resilience assessment and assessment method items, to define what period you are covering and how you reached the result. Keep the approach consistent with the evidence you can show in the pack.
The page is set up for use by a sustainability or ESG manager, HR or data owner, and an assurance reviewer, so ownership should sit with the people who can explain the data and provide evidence. Assign clear responsibility for each datapoint and for the final narrative before you draft.
The page includes a five-item evidence pack for assurance readiness, alongside six assurance claims to verify. Use those items to assemble the documents and support that show how the disclosure was prepared and what it is based on.
The page lists common reporting gaps and mistakes, so it is intended to help you spot missing data, weak explanations and unsupported claims before submission. Check the gaps list against your draft and evidence pack to reduce rework.
Use the synthetic examples as a model for structure, level of detail and how the quantitative table is presented. They are illustrative only, so adapt the format to your own facts and keep any numbers internally consistent.
The page includes a datapoint for why something is not quantified and a qualitative financial effect item, so you can explain the position rather than leaving a blank. Use the narrative starters in the draft-output section to turn that explanation into a clear draft.
The Download Centre provides a Prep & Assurance workbook in .xlsx format and a printable Library Card in .pdf format. Use the workbook to organise preparation and assurance checks, and the card as a quick reference while drafting.
It links to real published reports at the pages where the topic is disclosed, so you can see how others have presented similar information. Use it as a practical reference point, not as a template or official mapping.
The page’s draft-output section gives visualisation ideas, narrative starters and a content-index line to help you package the information for review. Use those elements to move from raw data to a readable draft that an internal reviewer can challenge.
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