This disclosure asks an organisation to explain how its activities interact with water as a shared resource. In practice, that means describing where water is taken from, where it is returned, and how the organisation’s operations may affect water availability or water quality for other users and ecosystems. The focus is on the organisation’s overall relationship with water, not just isolated examples.
The practical emphasis is usually on coverage across the business: which operations, sites, or activities are included in the reporting boundary, and whether the organisation has looked beyond a few flagship locations. A useful explanation will show whether the organisation has identified the main parts of its operations that depend on water or influence water conditions, and how broadly that assessment has been applied.
This LRA educational guidance supports disclosure preparation. For the exact requirements, always refer to the official GRI 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 water-use and impact evidence from EHS / Operations
Translate the disclosure into an internal business question — then adapt it to your organisation's own language.
Use your organisation’s own site, utility and environmental terms first, then map them to the reporting labels. For example, ask for the names you use for sites, process water, cooling water, wastewater, stormwater, discharge points, catchments, water-stress areas, supplier/customer engagement and environmental action plans.
Please provide the GRI 303-1 information for water interactions, including withdrawals, consumption, discharges, impacts, stakeholder engagement and targets.
Why it fails: It uses framework language that many operational teams do not use day to day, so the owner may not know which records to pull. It also bundles several topics without telling the team which site names, systems, time period or internal categories to use, making the response harder to assemble and verify.
Please send the water pack for [period] for [sites/in scope]: how water is taken in, used and released; any water issues or incidents; how you identified them; what you are doing about them; who you have engaged locally; and any water goals or targets. Use your normal site, utility and environmental terms, and include the supporting logs, permits, maps or action plans.
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, in plain terms, how the organisation defined the water issues it reviewed, the period covered, the parts of the business included, and the tools or methods used to identify effects and assess them.
Explain what the figures mean in practice by linking water use, releases, and identified effects to the organisation’s activities, sites, and relationships, so readers can understand the operational significance.
If any figures moved materially, note the main drivers, such as changes in activity, site mix, weather, or management actions, and explain whether the shift altered the organisation’s water-related effects or priorities.
Preparation tools & forms
Professional preparation tools for GRI 303-1 — 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.
*Synthetic example only.* We map how our sites take in, use and release water across processing, cleaning and cooling, and we note where withdrawals, consumption and discharges occur by site and catchment. Our review covered the last 12 months, used site water balances, discharge permits, supplier questionnaires and catchment screening, and found three runoff-related issues linked to our operations and one upstream supplier issue; we responded with drainage upgrades, tighter chemical storage, wastewater checks and supplier action plans. - We work with local catchment groups and water users to support shared stewardship, and we engage suppliers and major customers where water pressure or effluent risk is material. - Our water aims are set through site risk reviews, legal checks and local stakeholder input, so each target reflects public policy and the conditions in water-stressed areas where we operate.
This example shows a concise narrative that covers the organisation’s water use, impact identification, response actions, stakeholder work, supplier/customer engagement, and how targets are set and aligned to local policy and stressed catchments. The figures and issues are synthetic and internally consistent.
*Synthetic example only.* We describe water across dyeing, washing and finishing, including where we draw it from, where it is used up in process, and where treated effluent leaves our facilities. Over a 12-month review using plant water audits, effluent sampling, satellite-based catchment checks and a supplier risk screen, we identified two direct discharge issues and two runoff-related issues from shared yards; all four were addressed through process changes, bunding, training and follow-up monitoring. - We coordinate with river basin groups and community representatives on shared water management, and we raise water expectations with wet-processing suppliers and key buyers where our shared footprint is significant. - Our goals are set from site-by-site risk ranking, local rules and basin plans, so the targets fit each water-stressed area’s policy setting and practical constraints.
This example illustrates a different sector with a different water profile, while still covering the required narrative points: how water is used, where it moves, what impacts were found, how they were assessed, what was done, and how targets connect to local policy and stressed-water contexts. The example is synthetic and the counts are internally consistent.
How companies report GRI 303-1
Real reports where this topic is disclosed. These are report practice, not exact disclosure templates to copy.

Scenarios to work through
A manufacturing site takes water from a local river, uses it in cooling and cleaning, and sends treated water back to the same catchment. The site also buys ingredients from a supplier whose farm runoff has been linked to poorer water quality nearby.
A preparer has a list of water issues from the last two years, but the review only covered owned sites and ignored contract manufacturers. The team also used different methods for each region, with no clear explanation of the time period assessed.
A food business has set a target to cut water use at two plants in a dry region, but the draft report only states the target and the headline reduction. It does not say how the target was chosen or how it fits with local water rules and community pressures.
A retailer has worked with a farming supplier to reduce irrigation losses and has joined a local water forum with community groups and other businesses. The draft report mentions the forum but says nothing about how the supplier was engaged or what was done with stakeholders to manage shared water pressures.
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 datapoints to prepare. The page also gives draft-output prompts, so you can turn the collected information into a narrative, a visual, and a content-index line.
The page points you to nine datapoints: water interaction overview, water flow profile, water impact sources, impact assessment method, water response actions, shared water stewardship, supplier and customer engagement, goal-setting process, and local policy alignment. Use those as your data checklist before drafting.
Use the page’s impact assessment method and water flow profile prompts to define what is in scope and how the data is being interpreted. The page is designed to help you make those choices explicit in the draft rather than leaving them implicit.
The page is set up for use by a sustainability or ESG manager, HR or data owner, and an assurance reviewer, so ownership can be split across those roles. Use the step-by-step preparation section to assign who gathers the data, who checks it, and who signs off the evidence pack.
The page includes an evidence pack with five items and six assurance claims to verify, each framed around claim, risk, and evidence. That gives you a practical checklist for building support before review or assurance.
The page has a section on common reporting gaps and mistakes, so it is meant to help you spot weak or missing information before you publish. Use it alongside the evidence pack and assurance claims to catch issues early.
The Download Centre includes a Prep & Assurance workbook in .xlsx format and a printable Library Card in .pdf. Use the workbook to organise the preparation and evidence, and the card as a quick reference while drafting or reviewing.
The page includes draft-output support with visualisation ideas, narrative starters, and a GRI content-index line. That means you can move from raw notes and data into a first-pass disclosure without starting from a blank page.
Yes, but only as an illustrative guide: the example is synthetic and meant to show how the disclosure might look in practice. Use it to understand structure and presentation, then replace it with your own internally consistent data.
The page says ESRS E3 is the closest correspondence, so it can help you think about whether data already collected for another framework can be reused. It does not say the requirements are identical, so treat it as a cross-reference rather than a direct substitute.
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