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ESRS E1: Climate Change · 2026-5010-final
Disclosure Requirement E1-3

Resilience in relation to climate change

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 how resilient its business model and strategy are when climate change is considered over time. In practice, that means describing whether the organisation has thought through how different climate-related conditions could affect its ability to operate, invest, and deliver its plans, and what that means for the long term.

The practical focus is on the organisation’s own assessment of resilience, not just a statement about a few well-performing sites or a flagship location. It should cover the parts of the business that matter to the overall strategy and operations, so readers can see whether the conclusion reflects the organisation as a whole rather than a limited sample.

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
Resilience analysis results Summarise the main findings from the climate resilience review, including what the analysis shows about how the business holds up under the scenarios assessed. Scenario analysis pack, risk assessment outputs, board or management papers, and the final narrative used in reporting. Sustainability / climate risk team
Strategy and model impacts Set out how the climate findings affect the organisation’s strategy and operating model, including any changes to priorities, products, services, assets or ways of working. Strategy review papers, business model change logs, executive papers, and planning documents showing agreed implications. Strategy / corporate planning
Scenario-based response Describe the actions or response the organisation has chosen because of the scenario work, showing how the analysis informed those decisions. Scenario analysis outputs, decision papers, action plans, and governance minutes linking the analysis to the chosen response. Climate risk / strategy
Transition plan resilience Explain how the transition plan supports resilience, including the specific ways planned changes help the organisation stay robust under climate-related pressures. Transition plan, implementation roadmap, resilience assessment, and governance papers showing the link between the plan and resilience. Transition planning / sustainability
Key uncertainty areas Identify the main areas where the climate assessment remains uncertain, and explain what is not yet clear in the analysis or assumptions. Assumptions log, model limitations note, sensitivity analysis, and risk register entries covering unresolved points. Climate risk / finance
Near-term adaptation capacity Describe the organisation’s ability to adapt in the short term, including the practical measures, resources and constraints that affect near-term response. Short-term adaptation plan, operational risk assessments, resource plans, and business continuity or resilience documents. Operations / risk
Mid-term adaptation capacity Describe the organisation’s ability to adapt over the medium term, including planned changes, enabling actions and any limits on delivery in that timeframe. Medium-term planning documents, capital or programme plans, adaptation roadmap, and approved milestones. Strategy / programme management
Long-term adaptation capacity Describe the organisation’s ability to adapt over the long term, including structural changes, strategic options and enduring constraints relevant to that horizon. Long-range strategy, scenario planning outputs, investment plans, and board papers covering long-horizon resilience. Strategy / climate risk
+ Show E1-3 sub-elements (LRA working checklist)

How to prepare it

1Set the reporting boundary first. Decide which parts of the business, value chain links, and time horizons are in scope for the climate-resilience assessment, so the final write-up clearly covers the periods and activities the datapoints ask about.
2Define the criteria you will use to judge resilience. Agree in advance what counts as a meaningful climate risk, a relevant response, a material uncertainty, and a credible adaptation capability, so the team applies one consistent basis throughout.
3Gather the underlying support. Pull together scenario work, internal planning papers, risk registers, transition planning material, and any other records that show how the assessment was formed and what it relied on.
4Prepare the disclosure content in the required form. For the narrative parts, explain the assessment outcome, what it means for the business model and strategy, how the response was shaped by scenario work, how the transition plan supports resilience, where uncertainty remains, and how adaptation capacity looks in the short, medium, and long term.
5Record any gaps, exclusions, or changes in approach. If a topic, period, assumption, or source was left out or treated differently from prior reporting, note that clearly and explain why, so readers can understand the limits of the information.
6Check the draft against the official source before sign-off. Confirm that each required point is covered, the wording matches the underlying requirement in substance, and nothing important has been missed, overstated, or added beyond the source material.
Request the data

Request climate resilience evidence from Strategy / Risk

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

How has the business tested whether its current plan and operating model can cope with climate-related change over time, and what did that testing show?

Use your organisation’s own language first (for example, your planning cycles, risk review process, scenario work, adaptation planning, or business continuity terms), then map the outputs to the disclosure points. Keep the ask practical and evidence-led; do not use framework wording unless that is already how your teams talk internally.

Weak request

Please provide the ESRS E1-3 resilience disclosure evidence, including the results of the climate resilience analysis, implications for strategy and business model, scenario analysis response, transition plan contribution to resilience, uncertainties, and adaptation capacity over short, medium and long term.

Why it fails: It uses framework language that many teams will not recognise, so the owner may not know which internal papers or outputs to pull. It also bundles several ideas without pointing to the business documents, review forums, or planning artefacts that actually hold the evidence.

Better request

Please send the latest internal materials that show how the business tested climate-related resilience, what those tests mean for the plan and operating model, any scenario-based response work, how the transition plan helps resilience, where the main uncertainties remain, and how adaptation looks across the short, medium and long term. Include the source deck, model, tracker, or minutes, plus the owner and date.

Formal email template
Subject: Request for climate resilience evidence for [reporting period]\n\nHi [name/team],\n\nWe are pulling together the evidence pack for our climate resilience disclosure and need your help with the materials your team holds. Please share the latest internal outputs that show:\n- what the business found when it tested how well the current plan and operating model hold up under climate-related change;\n- what that means for strategy and the way the business is run;\n- any response work that was shaped by scenario-based analysis;\n- how the transition plan, if relevant, supports resilience;\n- any areas where the team still sees material uncertainty; and\n- how the organisation’s ability to adapt looks over the short, medium and long term.\n\nPlease send the source documents and, if possible, a short summary in the attached response form. Use your team’s own terminology and systems, and we will map it into the reporting pack. If there are multiple versions, please include the latest approved one and note any key differences.\n\nPlease also include the period covered, the business area, the assumptions used, and the owner for follow-up questions.\n\nThank you,\n[preparer name]
Short Teams / Slack version
Hi [name/team] — could you share the latest climate resilience materials for [reporting period]? We need the outputs showing what the business found, what it means for strategy/operations, any scenario-based response work, the main uncertainties, and how adaptation looks over short / medium / long term. Please send the source file(s) plus the completed response form. Use your own team terms; we’ll map them later. Thanks, [preparer name]
Industry examples
Manufacturing

Context. A plant network is exposed to heat stress, water constraints, and supply interruptions.

Adapted request. Please share the latest plant and network resilience pack for [reporting period], including the outputs from any climate-related stress testing, the implications for production planning and capex, the scenario-based actions agreed, how the decarbonisation or transition plan supports site resilience, the main uncertainty points, and the short / medium / long-term adaptation view for each major site.

Example response. A pack with site-by-site summaries, a scenario workbook, a board slide on production continuity, and a tracker showing adaptation actions, owners, and timing.

Financial services

Context. A lender or insurer is assessing whether climate impacts could affect operations, premises, and client-facing services.

Adapted request. Please provide the latest resilience assessment materials for [reporting period], including the outputs from climate-related testing, what they mean for the operating model and service delivery, any scenario-informed response actions, how the transition plan supports resilience where relevant, the key uncertainty areas, and the short / medium / long-term adaptation view for premises, technology, and critical suppliers.

Example response. A risk committee paper, a scenario analysis summary, a business continuity addendum, and an action log covering premises, technology, and supplier resilience.

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 the basis used to assess climate resilience, including how the scenario work was applied, how the short-, medium- and long-term views were defined, and what was included when judging uncertainty and adaptation capacity.

Context note

Set out what the results mean for the organisation’s strategy, operating model and ability to stay resilient under different climate conditions, including how the transition plan supports that position.

Fluctuation statement

If the results vary across periods or scenarios, describe the main drivers of the change, such as shifts in assumptions, different exposure levels, or changes in the organisation’s response capacity.

Content index entry
E1-3 Resilience in relation to climate change — [location / page] / [notes]
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Preparation tools & forms

Professional preparation tools for E1-3 — 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.

Free · Community members
Go deeper · E1-3
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 based the coverage figure on the climate risks we had already flagged as material, and we checked that the same boundary was used when looking at the wider implications for the business model and strategy.An assurer may test whether the scope was set consistently, or whether the team left out relevant parts of the business or used a different boundary from the risk assessment.Boundary paper for the analysis; link to the material risk assessment; mapping showing which entities, sites or activities were included; review notes confirming the same scope was used across the disclosure.
We used the latest risk assessment available at the reporting date, and we refreshed the analysis where the earlier assessment had been updated.The assurer may probe whether the disclosure reflects the most recent assessment or relies on an out-of-date version.Version history of the risk assessment; dated working papers; sign-off pack showing the update was incorporated before publication; change log explaining what was refreshed.
We looked at the disclosed operations over the short, medium and long term, so the figure reflects how the business could adjust over different time horizons.The assurer may ask whether the time horizons were actually considered, or whether the analysis only covered one period and was then generalised.Scenario or resilience workpapers showing the three time horizons; internal guidance on horizon selection; management review notes; final draft showing the horizon references used in the published text.
We assessed how current and planned climate actions, including the transition programme and adaptation measures, feed into resilience, rather than treating them as separate workstreams.The assurer may challenge whether the actions were genuinely linked to resilience, or whether the disclosure simply listed initiatives without showing their effect.Action tracker; transition programme documents; adaptation plan; cross-reference table linking actions to risk reduction or resilience outcomes; evidence of internal challenge on the linkage.
We documented the main uncertainties in the assessment, including where the evidence was less certain or assumptions had a wider range.The assurer may test whether the uncertainty was clearly identified, or whether key judgement areas were left out.Assumption log; sensitivity analysis; uncertainty register; meeting minutes showing discussion of judgement areas; draft-to-final comparison showing the uncertainties were retained in the published version.
We kept evidence showing how the analysis was built from scenario outputs into the final narrative, and we checked the figures and wording before issue.The assurer may probe whether the published statement is supported by the underlying scenario work and whether basic review checks were performed before release.Scenario analysis outputs; reconciliation from model results to the disclosure text; internal review checklist; evidence of numerical and narrative checks; approval records from the final publication stage.

Evidence pack to prepare

Common reporting gaps

The information is presented without a date or as-at point.The scope or boundary of the statement is left undefined.Key terms are used inconsistently across the report.Material changes since the previous period are not disclosed.Assertions are made without supporting detail or a source record.Boilerplate is used that does not actually answer what is asked.
Common gaps

Mistakes to avoid when collecting the data

Wrong owner
The team asks a policy lead or sustainability contact for inputs that sit with operations, risk, finance or strategy, so the evidence comes from the wrong part of the business.
Framework language only
People ask for answers using disclosure labels instead of the organisation’s own terms, and the source team cannot map the request to the reports, models or plans they actually use.
No clear boundary
The data pull is started without fixing which entities, sites, activities or time horizons are in scope, so different teams send numbers from different parts of the group.
+ Show 5 more

Where judgement is often needed

Set the reporting perimeter for bought-in and sold businesses
Use the same organisational boundary you apply for the rest of the climate narrative, explain any acquisition or disposal cut-off that changes the picture, and note where the resilience story is based on a different perimeter from the prior period.
Choose one way to handle country-by-country climate assumptions
Where local operations face different weather, regulation or market conditions, group them using a clear common basis or split them where that better reflects the business, then explain the basis used and why it is the most faithful fit.
Decide how to treat sites, assets or activities that sit near the boundary
State whether marginal operations, joint arrangements, leased assets or other borderline items are included, excluded or treated separately, and explain the practical rule used so readers can see what sits inside the analysis.
+ Show 5 more
Examples

Illustrative examples

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

Illustrative (synthetic) example — Electricity generation and supply

We used climate scenario work to test how our assets, supply chain and customer service would hold up under hotter summers, more flooding and tighter policy settings, and the results show that our current plan remains workable but needs extra investment in network hardening and flexible generation. - Those findings changed our medium-term capital allocation, our site design standards and our fuel mix assumptions, and our transition plan now includes resilience actions that support the business case for those changes. - The main areas where judgement remains open are the pace of policy change, the cost and timing of grid upgrades, and the extent to which extreme weather could disrupt maintenance windows; we judge our ability to cope as strong over the next 12 months, moderate over the next 3–5 years, and dependent on further adaptation measures over the longer horizon.

This synthetic example shows how to explain the outcome of climate scenario work, the knock-on effects for strategy and operating model, the way the transition plan supports resilience, the main uncertainties left open, and a plain-language view of adaptation strength across short, medium and long horizons.

Illustrative (synthetic) example — Food processing and packaging

Our scenario review indicates that water stress, heatwaves and supply interruptions could affect raw material availability and plant throughput, so we have adjusted sourcing, storage and process cooling plans to keep the company viable under those conditions. - In response, we have reworked our product mix, supplier contracts and site investment programme, and the transition plan now helps fund measures that make those changes more robust. - The biggest unknowns are regional water regulation, crop yield volatility and the speed at which suppliers can adapt; we assess our current ability to respond as adequate in the short term, improving in the middle period, and still requiring further upgrades over the long term.

This synthetic example shows how to describe the practical outcome of scenario work, the implications for strategy and the business model, how the transition plan contributes to resilience, where uncertainty remains, and how adaptation capacity can be described over three time horizons without using the standard’s wording.

Company reportsReal published reports
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How companies report E1-3 in practice

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

Ferrovial SE
Construction and Engineering · Netherlands · 2024
Open report →
Ferrovial SE’s 2024 Integrated Annual Report includes references to its resilience analysis and the impact of climate-related risks and opportunities on its business, strategy, and financial planning, notably on pages 83 and 291. The report mentions climate resilience and mitigation strategies and processes for identifying and assessing material climate-related impacts, risks, and opportunities (p.81, p.291). However, the disclosures are unclear and do not provide a definitive or detailed description of these processes or a clear transition plan, with several datapoints not found or only partially addressed.
Redeia Corporación, S.A.
Electric Utilities / IPP / Energy Traders · Spain · 2025
Open report →
Redeia Corporación’s 2025 report provides some evidence related to its ability to adjust to climate-related challenges, as noted on page 43. The report includes references to a transition plan for climate change mitigation and outlines climate change actions and targets, such as a zero emissions goal for 2050 and interim targets for 2030, mentioned on pages 42, 47, 49, and 148-149. However, the report lacks clear, direct disclosures on specific narrative items related to business conduct, quality of supply, innovation, or the linkage between strategy and business model, with only unclear context found on page 18 and no quotable evidence elsewhere.
Pirelli & C. S.p.A.
Automobiles and Components · Italy · 2025
Open report →
Pirelli & C. S.p.A.'s 2025 Annual Report includes evidence of analysis conducted using the Group’s Climate strategy and business model to strengthen resilience to climate change, as noted on page 152. The report also references identification of climate-related issues and greenhouse gas emissions management policies on page 118. However, several narrative items relevant to the disclosure are not found or lack quotable evidence elsewhere in the report.
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Scenarios to work through

A manufacturer has run a climate stress test showing that repeated heatwaves could reduce output at one site and raise cooling costs, while a second site is less exposed. The draft report currently lists the test result but does not explain what it means for the group’s operating model.

QHow should the preparer turn that analysis into a clear narrative for the disclosure?
Reveal model answer →

A utility group has used several climate scenarios, but one of them gives very different results depending on assumptions about regulation, technology costs and customer behaviour. The team is unsure whether to mention that uncertainty because the figures are still being refined.

QWhat should the preparer do about the areas where the outcome is still highly uncertain?
Reveal model answer →

A food producer has a transition plan covering energy efficiency, electrification and supplier changes. Management believes the plan will also help the business cope with drought and supply disruption, but the draft only describes emissions reductions and omits any link to resilience.

QHow should the preparer handle the relationship between the transition plan and climate resilience?
Reveal model answer →

A property group has assessed resilience over the near, middle and longer horizons. The short-term view suggests manageable flood risk, but the longer-term view points to possible asset impairment and relocation costs; the team is tempted to summarise everything in one sentence to save space.

QHow should the preparer present the organisation’s ability to adapt across different time horizons?
Reveal model answer →
Framework references

Related framework references

How this disclosure maps across the major reporting frameworks.

ESRS
E1-3
within ESRS E1: Climate Change
Open official source →
Primary
Related & explore
Go deeper · E1-3
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 E1-3 page to draft a climate resilience disclosure from scratch?+
What data do I need to collect for ESRS E1-3 climate resilience analysis?+
How should I set the scope and methodology for the E1-3 disclosure?+
Who should own the E1-3 climate resilience disclosure in practice?+
What should go into the evidence pack for E1-3 assurance readiness?+
What are the common mistakes to avoid when preparing an E1-3 disclosure?+
How do I use the Prep & Assurance workbook for E1-3?+
What can I take from the synthetic illustrative example for E1-3?+
How do I turn E1-3 data into a draft disclosure text?+
Where can I find real company examples of climate resilience reporting for E1-3?+
More questions this page can help with
How this library is built 312 published reports indexed 63171 pages with page-level citations 272 practitioner guides