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IFRS S1: General Requirements for Disclosure of Sustainability-related Financial Information · 2024
Paragraphs 34–37

Current and anticipated financial effects

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 IFRS source.

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

This disclosure asks an organisation to explain how sustainability-related matters are affecting, or could affect, its financial position, performance and cash flows. In practice, the report should focus on the effects that are material to the business, not just general commentary on sustainability topics. It should show both what is happening now and what is reasonably expected to happen in the future, using clear links to the organisation’s financial reporting where possible.

The practical emphasis is on coverage across the organisation, not only on a few headline sites or projects. An organisation should think about the full scope of its operations, value chain and time horizon, then describe where the effects arise, how significant they are, and what assumptions or estimates sit behind them. The aim is to help readers understand the financial implications of sustainability-related risks and opportunities in a way that is decision-useful and comparable.

This LRA educational guidance supports disclosure preparation. For the exact requirements, always refer to the official IFRS 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
Current financial impact A plain summary of how the issue is affecting the entity now, covering the present impact on the statement of financial position, profit or loss, and cash movement. Evidence required: current management papers, finance team analysis, and any reconciliations to the latest reporting pack or ledger. Finance
Future profit and cash impact A forward-looking description of how the issue is expected to change profit or loss and cash movement in later periods. Evidence required: forecast models, budget updates, and scenario papers used by finance or planning teams. Finance / FP&A
Future balance sheet impact A forward-looking description of how the issue is expected to change assets, liabilities, or equity in later periods. Evidence required: balance sheet forecast, impairment or provisioning papers, and supporting schedules from finance. Finance
Planned asset actions Any intended buy, sell, or other disposal actions for investments or similar holdings, including what is planned and when. Evidence required: board papers, treasury or investment committee papers, and approved transaction plans. Treasury / Investments
Funding plan sources The expected sources of money to support the plan, including where the funding is intended to come from. Evidence required: financing plan, treasury forecasts, lender correspondence, and approved funding papers. Treasury / Finance
Material error risks A narrative description of the matters that could lead to a material correction in the next annual reporting period, including the main risk areas and why they matter. Evidence required: year-end close papers, audit committee papers, control issue logs, and management review notes. Finance / Risk / Audit Committee
Amount basis choice Whether the disclosure is given as one exact amount or as a range, using the chosen currency basis consistently. Evidence required: drafting note, calculation support, and the final disclosure version showing the selected presentation basis. Finance
+ Show s1-34-37 sub-elements (LRA working checklist)

How to prepare it

1Start by deciding which parts of the business the disclosure will cover, so the same boundary is used for every figure and narrative point.
2Set out what each item means in practice: the present effect on finances and cash, the changes you expect in future, the planned spending or asset moves, the intended funding route, and any risk that could lead to a material update in the next reporting year.
3Gather support for each point before drafting, including management papers, forecasts, budgets, approvals, financing plans, and any other records that show how the conclusion was reached.
4Prepare the disclosure using the required format for each item, giving either a single amount or a range where that is the chosen presentation, and make sure the numbers or narrative match the underlying evidence.
5Record any exclusions, assumptions, changes in method, or shifts in scope so a reviewer can see what was left out, what changed, and why the final disclosure still makes sense.
6Check the draft back against the official source and the supporting records to confirm nothing required has been missed, the wording still reflects the evidence, and the final version is consistent throughout.
Request the data

Request the financial impact inputs from Finance

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

What current and expected financial impacts, related plans, funding, and near-term adjustment risks should we capture for this reporting period?

Use your organisation’s own finance and planning language first, then map it to the reporting disclosure. For example, ask for budget, forecast, capex, opex, impairment, liquidity, or project pipeline terms that your teams already use, rather than framework wording.

Weak request

Please provide the IFRS-S1 current and anticipated financial effects information, including the current effect on financial position, performance and cash flows, expected changes to financial performance and cash flows, expected changes to financial position, investment/disposal plans, planned funding sources, risks with significant risk of material adjustment within the next annual reporting period, and whether to use a single amount or range.

Why it fails: It repeats framework language, bundles too many concepts into one sentence, and does not tell the owner what internal records to pull or how to present the information in their own working terms. That makes it harder to answer quickly and increases the chance of inconsistent responses.

Better request

Please send the finance and planning view for [business area] covering [period]: what has already affected results, cash, or balance sheet items; what is expected to change in forecast results, cash, or balance sheet items; any planned spend, asset sales, or other investment/disposal activity; the intended funding source; and any items that could move materially in the next annual reporting period. Use your normal budget/forecast/project terms and include the source pack or model extract, plus whether each item is best shown as a single figure or a range.

Formal email template
Subject: Request for finance inputs for [reporting period]

Hi [name/team],

We are preparing the sustainability reporting pack and need your help with the finance and planning inputs for [business area / portfolio].

Please send a short summary, with supporting files where available, covering:
- current financial impact already seen in [reporting period]
- expected changes in forecast performance and cash movement
- expected changes to balance sheet items or asset values
- planned spend, asset sales, or other investment/disposal activity
- intended funding source(s)
- any items that could shift materially in the next annual reporting period
- whether each item is best shown as a single amount or a range

Please use your usual internal terms and attach the source pack or model extract. If helpful, you can complete the response table below.

Please return by [date]. If anything is unclear, I can adapt the request to your team’s wording.

Thanks,
[preparer name]
Short Teams / Slack version
Hi [name] — could you share the finance/planning inputs for [business area] for [period]? We need: current impact, expected forecast and cash changes, balance sheet changes, planned spend/sales, funding source, and any near-term material adjustment risks. Please use your normal internal terms and send the source file or a short table by [date]. Thanks.
Industry examples
Manufacturing

Context. A plant upgrade programme is affecting capital spend, production efficiency, and working capital.

Adapted request. Please share the plant finance pack for [site] covering [period]: actual spend to date, forecast cost to complete, expected effect on margins and cash, any asset write-down or disposal plans, the funding route, and any items that could materially change in the next annual cycle. Use your usual capex and project-control terms.

Example response. A table showing project name, actual spend, forecast spend, expected margin impact, expected cash impact, planned disposal proceeds, funding source, risk flag, amount/range, and source reference, plus the latest project board paper.

Retail

Context. A store closure and refit programme is changing lease costs, inventory levels, and cash planning.

Adapted request. Please provide the retail planning pack for [period]: current impact from closures/refits, forecast changes to trading, cash and lease-related balances, planned store disposals or refits, funding source, and any near-term items that could move materially. Use your normal store programme and forecast wording.

Example response. A schedule listing store, current impact, forecast sales and cash effect, balance sheet effect, planned closure/refit action, funding source, risk of adjustment, amount/range, and links to the latest trading and investment papers.

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 how the figures were built, including the definitions used, the assumptions applied, and whether each amount is shown as one figure or as a range.

Context note

Set out what the numbers mean for the business by linking the current effect, the expected future impact on profit, cash and financial position, and the related investment and funding plans.

Fluctuation statement

Highlight the main reasons for any notable movement from one period to the next, especially where changes in assumptions, planned transactions, or estimate uncertainty have affected the figures.

Content index entry
s1-34-37 Current and anticipated financial effects — [location / page] / [notes]
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Preparation tools & forms

Professional preparation tools for s1-34-37 — 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 · s1-34-37
Learn to prepare this disclosure end-to-end

This guide covers one requirement. The IFRS S1 & S2 Reporting course walks the full ISSB workflow — governance, strategy, risk management and metrics — 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 prepared the coverage figure using the reporting-date information we had, and we limited the work to what could be supported without disproportionate effort.An assurer may ask whether the team relied on weak, outdated, or selectively gathered inputs, or whether the method was stretched beyond the people, systems, and time actually available.Preparation memo; source-data list with dates; methodology note showing the cut-off date and any practical limits; sign-off from the preparers and reviewer.
We treated the disclosed operations consistently and documented why any parts of the business were left out of the analysis.An assurer may probe whether exclusions were chosen to make the figure look better, or whether the boundary was applied inconsistently across sites, entities, or activities.Boundary paper; inclusion/exclusion log; group structure chart; mapping of entities, sites, and activities to the final population; approval of scope decisions.
We used the same basis across the current-period analysis and the forward-looking sections, so the figures can be traced back to the same underlying assumptions.An assurer may test whether the current-period and forecast views were built on different assumptions, making the disclosure internally inconsistent or hard to reconcile.Assumption register; model documentation; reconciliation between current-period inputs and forecast assumptions; version history showing the same basis was used where intended.
We kept evidence for the main judgments behind the figure, including the assumptions, estimates, and any management overlays.An assurer may challenge whether the numbers are supported by auditable records or whether they depend too heavily on unsupported judgement.Working papers; assumption papers; management review notes; calculation files; evidence for any overlays or adjustments; audit trail showing who approved each key judgement.
Before publication, we checked the numbers for internal consistency, arithmetic accuracy, and alignment with the rest of the report and the financial statements.An assurer may look for broken links, calculation errors, mismatches between narrative and numbers, or contradictions with other published information.Tie-out and cross-check schedules; spreadsheet control checks; review notes; reconciliation to the annual report and accounts; final sign-off pack.
For the forward-looking parts, we based the estimate on information available at the reporting date and used a level of effort that matched our skills and systems.An assurer may ask whether the forecast relied on hindsight, unsupported speculation, or a process that exceeded the organisation’s capability at the time.Forecast basis paper; date-stamped source pack; evidence of what was known at the reporting date; capability assessment; review of any gaps or simplifications.

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, wrong language
The team asks for the figures using framework terms instead of the business’s own labels, so the person who holds the source records does not recognise what is being requested.
Scope left vague
No one agrees which business units, assets, projects, or plans sit inside the data pull, so different teams send different populations.
Period basis not fixed
The request does not pin down whether the numbers relate to the current reporting cycle or the next annual cycle, so the same item is captured on different timing bases.
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Where judgement is often needed

Set the reporting boundary when assets or operations move in or out
Decide whether to include only the business units and cash flows in place at the reporting date or also newly acquired, sold, or closed parts, and explain the cut-off used so readers can see why the figures changed.
Choose one country basis where local labels differ
Where the same operational issue is described differently across jurisdictions, map each local measure to one group-wide definition, state the basis used, and explain any exclusions or reclassifications.
Decide how to treat teams or sites near the scope line
For people, sites, contracts, or activities that sit just inside or just outside the boundary, set a consistent inclusion rule, apply it the same way across the group, and disclose the rule and any material exceptions.
+ Show 7 more
Examples

Illustrative examples

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

Illustrative (synthetic) example — manufacturing

We have recognised a £12 million charge this year from higher energy and logistics costs, and that has reduced operating profit and operating cash by the same amount. Looking ahead, we expect a further £8 million to £14 million hit to profit and cash over the next 12 months, with a possible £3 million to £5 million adjustment to the carrying value of plant and inventory if demand weakens; to respond, we plan £9 million of equipment upgrades and one small site disposal, funded £6 million from existing cash and £3 million from a committed bank facility.

This example shows how to describe the period’s effect, the likely near-term financial impact, the balance-sheet implications, planned capital actions, and where the money will come from, while also flagging a possible material adjustment in the next annual cycle. The figures are synthetic and internally consistent.

Illustrative (synthetic) example — retail

Our group recorded a £4 million reduction in gross margin and a £2 million increase in store closure costs this year, which together lowered profit and operating cash by £6 million. We expect a £5 million to £9 million decline in profit and cash over the coming year, plus a £1 million to £4 million write-down of lease-related assets if trading stays soft; in response, we intend to open two smaller-format stores and exit three underperforming sites, with £7 million of funding from cash on hand and £2 million from asset sales.

This example covers the current-year effect, the expected near-term movement in results and cash, the likely balance-sheet change, the planned investment and disposal actions, the funding mix, and the risk of a significant adjustment in the next reporting period. The example is synthetic and the amounts are internally consistent.

Company reportsReal published reports
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How companies report S1-34-37 in practice

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

SITC International Holdings Company Limited
Water Transportation · Hong Kong · 2025
Open report →
SITC International Holdings Company Limited’s 2025 Environmental, Social and Governance Report does not provide clear disclosures on the current or expected effects of climate-related risks and opportunities on its financial position, performance, or cash flows, as no quotable evidence was found in the report (no page). There is some unclear context on investment disposal plans related to managing or decommissioning carbon-, energy-, or water-intensive operations on page 193, but this does not constitute a clear disclosure. Other datapoints such as planned funding sources and narrative explanations are also not found in the report.
Enel Chile S.A.
Electric Utilities / IPP / Energy Traders · Chile · 2025
Open report →
Enel Chile's 2025 Integrated Annual Report includes a covered datapoint on investment disposal plans, detailing the Investment Plan for 2026-2028 on page 368. There is unclear information regarding expected changes to the financial position on page 111, where financial objectives and net debt evolution are mentioned but not clearly disclosed. Notably, the report lacks evidence on the current effect on financial position, performance, and cash flows, expected changes to financial performance and cash flows, planned funding sources, and the use of a single amount or range.
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Scenarios to work through

A manufacturer has already spent £12 million to retrofit one site after a climate-related incident, and finance has booked the cost in the current year. The team is drafting the sustainability note and wants to mention that the spend affected profit and cash.

QHow should the team decide whether to describe that present-day impact, and what should they cover?
Reveal model answer →

A retailer expects to close two stores next year because of water-stress risks at the sites. Management has a draft plan showing £8 million of closure costs and £3 million of lease exit payments, but the board has not yet approved the final plan.

QWhat should the preparer do when explaining the likely future effect on profit and cash, and how should they handle the uncertainty?
Reveal model answer →

A utility expects to replace ageing equipment over the next three years because of heat-related disruption. The project team has identified £24 million of capital spending, funded by £10 million of cash on hand and a £14 million green loan, but the finance team is unsure whether to mention the funding mix in the disclosure.

QShould the funding plan be included, and what level of detail is useful?
Reveal model answer →

A food producer has identified a drought-related supply risk that could force a write-down of inventory and a contract penalty in the next reporting year. The estimate could move by a wide margin, and management is debating whether to leave it out because the amount is not fixed.

QHow should the team judge whether to disclose the risk, and what should they say about the possible adjustment?
Reveal model answer →
Framework references

Related framework references

How this disclosure maps across the major reporting frameworks.

IFRS / ISSB
s1-34-37
within IFRS S1: General Requirements for Disclosure of Sustainability-related Financial Information
Open official source →
Primary
Related & explore
Go deeper · s1-34-37
Learn to prepare this disclosure end-to-end

This guide covers one requirement. The IFRS S1 & S2 Reporting course walks the full ISSB workflow — governance, strategy, risk management and metrics — with exercises on your own data.

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

FAQ

Questions this page answers

For s1-34-37, what data do I need to gather before I start drafting the disclosure?+
How do I use the step-by-step 'how to prepare' section for s1-34-37?+
What should I include in the evidence pack for s1-34-37 if I want to be assurance-ready?+
What are the six assurance claims I need to verify for s1-34-37?+
What are the common reporting gaps or mistakes on the s1-34-37 page, and how do I avoid them?+
How do I use the synthetic example disclosure for s1-34-37 without copying it into my report?+
What does the draft-output section give me for s1-34-37, and how can I turn it into a first draft?+
How do I use the Prep & Assurance workbook for s1-34-37?+
What is the printable Library Card PDF for s1-34-37 for?+
Can I reuse data from ESRS 2 (General Disclosures) for s1-34-37?+
What kind of published company reports does the 'From company reports' table point me to for s1-34-37?+
More questions this page can help with
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