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GRI 301: Materials · 2016
Disclosure GRI 301-1

Materials used by weight or volume

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 GRI source.

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

This disclosure asks an organisation to explain the materials it uses in its activities, measured by weight or volume, so readers can understand the scale and type of material inputs behind its operations. The practical point is to report the materials that are actually used, rather than only describing procurement policies or a few notable products.

The focus should be on coverage across the organisation’s relevant operations, not just flagship sites or isolated examples. In practice, that means identifying the material inputs that matter most to the business and presenting them in a way that is complete, consistent and comparable across the reporting period.

This LRA educational guidance supports disclosure preparation. For the exact requirements, always refer to the official GRI 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
Key material type Identify the main material category or categories the organisation uses in making and packing its core products and services, using the same business definitions as the source data. Materials register, procurement specifications, product bills of materials, packaging specifications, or sustainability data workbook showing the material categories used. Procurement / Sustainability
Material weight total Capture the total mass of the materials used to make and pack the organisation’s core products and services, on the same basis and period as the underlying operational records. ERP or procurement extracts, bills of materials, supplier invoices, and calculation workbook supporting the weight total. Procurement / Operations
Material volume total Capture the total volume of the materials used to make and pack the organisation’s core products and services, using the same scope and reporting period as the source records. ERP or procurement extracts, packaging specifications, conversion assumptions, and calculation workbook supporting the volume total. Procurement / Operations
+ Show GRI 301-1 sub-elements (LRA working checklist)

How to prepare it

1Set the reporting boundary first. Decide which products and services sit inside the scope for this disclosure, so the figures relate only to the items you are actually reporting on.
2Agree what will count as the relevant material input. Use one clear basis for identifying the materials used in making and packing those products and services, and keep that basis consistent across the calculation.
3Gather the source records. Pull together the underlying evidence that shows the amounts used, such as purchase, production, stock, or packaging records, so the reported figures can be traced back to support.
4Calculate the totals in the form needed for the disclosure. Prepare the overall weight figure and, where relevant to your reporting approach, the overall volume figure for the materials used in producing and packaging the covered products and services.
5Record any exclusions, assumptions, or changes in method. If anything is left out, estimated, or treated differently from prior periods, note it clearly so readers can understand the basis of the numbers.
6Check the final output against the source material before sign-off. Confirm the wording, scope, and figures align with the official reference and that the evidence supports what is reported.
Request the data

Request materials usage data from Procurement / Supply Chain

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

What materials were used to make and pack our main products and services during the reporting period, and what were the total amounts by weight or by volume?

Use your organisation’s own names for product lines, packaging, raw inputs, bought-in components, and source systems first; then map those terms to the reporting categories before you send the request. Keep the ask in business language your team already uses, and check the official source before sign-off.

Weak request

Please provide the GRI 301-1 materials used by weight or volume data.

Why it fails: It uses framework language only, so the owner may not know which internal records to pull, which product lines are in scope, or how to present the figures. It also leaves out the boundary, source, unit basis, and any conversion method needed to make the data usable.

Better request

Please send the materials usage file for [period] covering [business area]. Use the material names your team already tracks, and include the total amount used for each material group, the unit in the source record, the related product or service line, the source system or file, and any conversion or allocation assumptions. Please also note what is included or excluded and who can answer follow-up questions. Please check the official source before sign-off.

Formal email template
Subject: Request for materials usage data for [reporting period]

Hi [name/team],

We are preparing our sustainability reporting pack and need your help with the materials data for [reporting period].

Please send a table showing the materials used in our main products and services, including packaging, using the terms your team already uses internally. For each material group, please provide:
- the internal material name
- the product / service line it relates to
- the total amount used in the period
- the unit used in the source record
- the source system or file
- any conversion factors or assumptions applied
- any notes on what is included or excluded

Please also confirm the reporting boundary covered by the file and who can answer follow-up questions.

If it is easier, you can return the data in your own format and we will map it into the reporting pack. Please check the official source before sign-off.

Thanks,
[preparer name]
[team]
[contact details]
Short Teams / Slack version
Hi [name] — could you send the materials usage data for [period] for [business area]? Please use your team’s own material names and include totals, units, source file/system, and any conversion assumptions. We’ll map it into the reporting pack. Please check the official source before sign-off. Thanks.
Industry examples
Food and drink manufacturing

Context. The team tracks ingredients, primary packaging, and secondary packaging in production and purchasing systems.

Adapted request. Please send the materials usage data for [period] covering [site / product range]. Use your usual names for ingredients, packs, and production inputs. For each item, include the total used, unit, source system, and any conversion factors used to roll up pack materials and ingredients into the period total. Please note what is included or excluded and check the official source before sign-off.

Example response. A table listing flour, sugar, cocoa, film wrap, cartons, and pallets with totals in kg or litres, source system references, and notes showing that pallets were excluded from the pack total but included in logistics records.

Consumer electronics assembly

Context. The team holds bills of materials, component issue records, and packaging data across several plants.

Adapted request. Please send the materials usage data for [period] for [product family / plant set]. Use the component and packaging names your operations team already uses. For each material group, include the total amount used, the unit, the BOM or stock issue source, and any conversion or allocation assumptions used to combine plant records. Please note the boundary and check the official source before sign-off.

Example response. A table showing circuit boards, casings, cables, foam inserts, and cartons with totals in kg, source references from the BOM and warehouse system, and a note that one plant’s figures were converted from piece counts using standard weights.

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

State which materials were counted, how the organisation defined the products and services in scope, and whether the figures are reported by mass, by volume, or both.

Context note

Explain that these numbers show the scale of materials going into the organisation’s main offerings and help readers understand the resource intensity of production and packaging.

Fluctuation statement

If the figures move materially from one period to the next, note the main operational reasons, such as changes in output, product mix, packaging design, or the materials included in scope.

Content index entry
GRI 301-1 Materials used by weight or volume — [location / page] / [notes]
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Preparation tools & forms

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Assurance readiness

For each claim, check the evidence

ClaimRiskEvidence to check
I used a documented method to decide which materials were counted in the coverage figure, and I applied that method consistently across the reporting period.The assurer will probe whether the inclusion rules were set in advance, applied consistently, and not adjusted to improve the result.Method note or calculation policy; version-controlled working papers; evidence of the inclusion criteria applied; review trail showing the same approach was used throughout the period.
I based the figure on the mass of inputs used for making and packing the organisation’s main products and services, rather than on estimates from unrelated activities.The assurer will probe whether the reported amount really relates to the disclosed operations and whether any non-relevant items were excluded.Source data extracts; bills of materials or equivalent production records; purchasing and inventory records; mapping showing which product or service lines were included and excluded.
Where the figure was prepared in units of volume rather than mass, I used a documented conversion approach and kept the underlying records that support it.The assurer will probe whether the volume basis is appropriate, whether conversions are reliable, and whether the same basis was used consistently.Conversion methodology; density or equivalent supporting data; calculation sheets; evidence of unit definitions; management review sign-off on the chosen basis.
I checked the underlying data for completeness and obvious errors before publication, and I resolved any anomalies before the number was finalised.The assurer will probe whether the data set was complete, whether manual adjustments were controlled, and whether the final figure could be reproduced from source records.Data validation checks; exception logs; reconciliation to source systems; evidence of corrections and approvals; final calculation file with audit trail.
I kept enough supporting evidence to show how the figure was built, including the assumptions, calculations, and sign-off used to approve it for reporting.The assurer will probe whether the evidence base is sufficient to support the claim and whether the approval process was properly documented.Working papers; assumptions register; calculation model; approval emails or sign-off forms; document retention records; version history for the final submission.

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 request goes to a team that does not hold the purchasing, production, or packaging records, so the answer comes back in framework terms instead of the business terms used in day-to-day operations.
Scope left vague
No one pins down which products and services are in scope, so different teams pull different material sets and the final data cannot be reconciled.
Boundary not fixed
The collection brief does not say which sites, business units, or outsourced steps are included, so the figures mix together populations that should stay separate.
Period basis is inconsistent
Some teams use one reporting window while others use a different cut-off or snapshot date, which makes the totals impossible to compare on the same basis.
Weight and volume get mixed
One source file combines mass and volume entries in the same tally, so the numbers cannot be separated cleanly into the two data points.
Source labels are stripped out
The original descriptions from ERP, procurement, or production files are removed during cleaning, so the audit trail no longer shows what each line item actually was.
Evidence metadata is missing
The file arrives without a date, owner, version, or source reference, so no one can tell whether the data is current or trace it back to the original record.
No sign-off trail
The dataset is passed on without a named reviewer confirming it, so there is no clear record of who checked the numbers before they moved into reporting.

Where judgement is often needed

Set the reporting perimeter after acquisitions or disposals
Decide whether the year’s figures follow the business as it stood at the end of the period or are adjusted for bought-in or sold-off operations, and explain the basis used.
Choose one rule where local material names differ
If the same input is described differently across countries or sites, map it to a single internal category and disclose the rule used so like-for-like items are counted consistently.
Be clear about borderline sites and activities
State how you treated operations, products, or packaging that sit just inside or outside the reporting scope, and explain any inclusion or exclusion call.
Fix the timing basis for the quantities counted
Use one clear cut-off point for the period and explain whether the numbers reflect purchases, consumption, or another internal measure of use.
Separate measured data from estimates
Where direct records are missing, estimate only with a stated method, identify the parts based on calculation rather than measurement, and keep the approach consistent.
Explain any unit conversions
If site data arrive in mixed units, convert them to a single basis for the final totals and disclose the conversion method or factors applied.
Show how rounding affects the totals
Round only after the underlying figures have been combined, or explain any other rounding approach, so the published total can be traced back to the source data.
Aggregate small or sensitive locations where needed
If site-level detail would expose confidential information or create an impractical level of granularity, combine the data at a higher level and say how the grouping was done.
Decide how to treat shared materials across product lines
Where one input supports more than one product or service, set out the allocation rule used so the same material is not counted twice or left out.
Examples

Illustrative examples

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

Illustrative (synthetic) example — Food manufacturing

We set out the main raw and packaging inputs used to make and pack our core products, split by material type. This is a synthetic illustration only, with figures shown in tonnes and litres for one reporting period.

Illustrative only: the table shows how to present the main material inputs used for production and packaging, with each row split into additive parts that sum to the row total.

Illustrative material inputs used for production and packaging (tonnes)
Paper and board1200300
Plastics800200
Metals45050
Glass0180
Other materials15020
Illustrative (synthetic) example — Consumer electronics assembly

We show the principal materials we use to make and package our products, grouped by material class. This synthetic example uses consistent figures and is for training purposes only.

Illustrative only: the table shows how to present the main material inputs used for production and packaging, with each row split into additive parts that sum to the row total.

Illustrative material inputs used for production and packaging (tonnes)
Plastics950120
Metals140080
Paper and board300260
Glass2200
Other materials13040
Company reports

How companies report GRI 301-1

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

China Airlines, Ltd.
Air Transportation — Airlines · Taiwan · 2024
Open report →
China Airlines' Sustainability Report 2024 includes a narrative on sustainable procurement and resource recycling, mentioning an aim to increase the percentage of recycled materials (p.100). The report also references materials used by weight or volume and energy consumption within the organisation, citing GRI standards (p.183). However, specific numeric values for the percentage of sustainable procurement or detailed data on materials usage are not clearly presented or found in the report.
JSW Steel Limited
Mining — Iron, Aluminum, Other Metals · India · 2025
Open report →
JSW Steel Limited’s Integrated Annual Report FY 2024-25 provides detailed coverage of materials used by weight or volume, including specific figures such as 191,093,393.4 tonnes reported on page 164 and cost of materials consumed at ₹89,998 crore on page 144. The report also addresses management of material topics related to materials on page 109. However, no clear numeric values were found for recycled input materials or reclaimed products, and some narrative context on stakeholder engagement and risk management is referenced but not detailed on page 25.
Home Product Center Public Company Limited
Retailing · Thailand · 2025
Open report →
Home Product Center Public Company Limited’s Sustainability Report 2025 provides detailed coverage of materials management, referencing GRI 301 standards and reporting materials used by weight or volume on page 201. The report includes specific numeric data on recyclable materials such as plastics, ceramics, metals, and electronic components, with quantities detailed on page 50. However, the report does not clearly address non-recyclable materials or provide comprehensive data on procurement practices or other material topics beyond the materials scope.
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Check your understanding

Scenarios to work through

A food manufacturer buys flour, sugar and packaging film for its main product line. The procurement team can pull purchase records for the year, but some materials are recorded in kilograms and others in litres.

QHow should the preparer decide what to report for the materials used in making and packing the main products, and how should the mixed units be handled?
Reveal model answer →

A cosmetics business makes creams and lotions in-house, then fills them into jars and tubes. It also buys outer cartons, but the finance team is unsure whether to include the packaging materials in the same totals as the product ingredients.

QShould the preparer include the packaging materials when calculating the totals for the organisation’s main products and services?
Reveal model answer →

A software company reports that it has no physical products, but it does buy printed manuals and branded boxes for customer starter kits. The sustainability lead is unsure whether the disclosure can be left blank because the business is mostly digital.

QWhat should the preparer do if the organisation has very limited physical material use but still uses some materials for its main service offering?
Reveal model answer →

A manufacturer has one site that makes its flagship item and another site that only produces spare parts for internal use. The reporting team has a complete list of all materials bought across both sites, but it is unclear which items belong in the disclosure.

QWhich materials should be included in the reported totals: everything purchased by the organisation, or only the materials tied to the main products and services?
Reveal model answer →
Framework references

Related framework references

How this disclosure maps across the major reporting frameworks.

GRI
GRI 301-1
within GRI 301: Materials
Open official source →
Primary
Related & explore
FAQ

Questions this page answers

For GRI 301-1 Materials, what data do I need to collect before I start drafting the disclosure?+
How do I use the step-by-step 'how to prepare' section for GRI 301-1 Materials?+
Who should own the GRI 301-1 Materials data in practice?+
What should I include in the evidence pack for GRI 301-1 Materials?+
What are the five assurance claims I need to verify for GRI 301-1 Materials?+
What are the common reporting gaps or mistakes on the GRI 301-1 Materials page?+
How can I turn the GRI 301-1 Materials data into a draft disclosure?+
How do I use the GRI 301-1 Materials workbook download?+
What is the printable Library Card PDF for GRI 301-1 Materials used for?+
Can I use the synthetic example disclosure on the GRI 301-1 Materials page as a template?+
How does the GRI 301-1 Materials page relate to ESRS E5, and can I reuse the data?+
More questions this page can help with
GRI 301-1 Materials: what are the three datapoints I should request from operations or procurement?GRI 301-1 Materials: how do I check whether my material type classification is good enough for the disclosure?GRI 301-1 Materials: what evidence should I keep to support the total material weight and volume figures?GRI 301-1 Materials: how do I avoid the most common mistakes before assurance review?GRI 301-1 Materials: what should go into the draft narrative starter and content-index line?GRI 301-1 Materials: how do I use the Prep & Assurance workbook to track data owner sign-off?GRI 301-1 Materials: is the synthetic example disclosure suitable for training a data owner?GRI 301-1 Materials: where can I find real published company reports linked from the page?GRI 301-1 Materials: what should an assurance reviewer look for in the evidence pack?GRI 301-1 Materials: how do I turn the prepared data into a first draft without overcomplicating it?GRI 301-1 Materials: can the Library Card PDF be used as a quick reference during review meetings?GRI 301-1 Materials: what does the page say about using ESRS E5 data alongside this disclosure?