This disclosure is asking the organisation to explain how much of its financed emissions it has covered in its reporting, and to make clear the basis for that coverage. In practice, the focus is on whether the reported figure reflects the full relevant financing activity or only a selected part of it, so readers can understand what is included and what is left out.
The practical point is comparability and completeness. An organisation should be clear about the scope of the financed emissions information it presents, for example whether it covers all relevant operations and portfolios or only certain business lines, entities, or flagship activities. The aim is to avoid giving a headline number without showing how representative it is of the organisation’s overall financed emissions exposure.
This LRA educational guidance supports disclosure preparation. For the exact requirements, always refer to the official IFRS 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 portfolio data from Investments
Translate the disclosure into an internal business question — then adapt it to your organisation's own language.
Use your organisation’s own portfolio and exposure terms first, then map them to the disclosure wording. For example, ask for the holdings book, mandate book, or exposure file if that is how the team works. Keep the request in the language the owner already uses, and check the source before sign-off.
Please provide the financed emissions data required for the disclosure, including all relevant methodology and exclusions.
Why it fails: It uses framework language instead of the team’s own portfolio terms, so the owner may not know which file or calculation run is being asked for. It also does not specify the period, source system, exposure basis, or the exact fields needed to evidence the working paper.
Please send the month-end portfolio exposure file for [reporting period] used in the climate pack, including the holdings in scope, the exposure measure for each line, the asset and industry labels, any exclusions and reasons, the emissions scope split, the share covered, and the allocation method. Include the source file name, extract date, version, and reviewer details. Use your own internal terms and we will map them for the disclosure pack.
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 the basis used to assign emissions to each holding, including how the portfolio was grouped, how exposure or assets under management were measured, which parts were left out, and what share of the portfolio was actually covered.
Explain what the figures represent in practice: the size of the portfolio segments, the emissions linked to them, the proportion included in the analysis, and how the results should be read alongside the chosen allocation approach.
If the numbers move materially, point to the main drivers such as changes in portfolio mix, coverage, exclusions, or the allocation approach used, and note whether the shift reflects a real change in the portfolio or a change in the data set.
Preparation tools & forms
Professional preparation tools for s2-29-a-vi-2 — 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 have shown the part of our portfolio we include in this calculation, split by asset type and industry where relevant. For each slice, we show the amount covered, the emissions we attribute to it by scope, the share included, the exclusions, and the allocation approach used.
Synthetic illustration only. This example shows how a firm might present a covered portfolio view with emissions split by scope, alongside the share of the portfolio used and the basis for allocation.
We have set out the lending and project-finance book we used, grouped by borrower sector. For each group, we show the balance covered, the emissions we assign across scopes, the portion included, the amounts left out, and the method used to spread emissions across our exposure.
Synthetic illustration only. This example shows how a lender might present financed emissions by sector, with the covered balance, excluded balance, included share, and the allocation basis used to attribute emissions.
How companies report S2-29-a-vi-2 in practice
Real reports where this topic is disclosed. These are report practice, not exact disclosure templates to copy.

Scenarios to work through
A lender has a mixed portfolio: some loans are fully in scope for the financed-emissions calculation, while a small legacy book is left out because the data needed to allocate emissions is not available. The draft note also splits the included book by asset class and industry, and shows the exposure amount used for each slice.
An asset manager reports financed emissions for two portfolios. One is measured using assets under management, the other using gross exposure, because the underlying products are structured differently. The preparer is unsure whether both bases can sit in the same note.
A bank has calculated financed emissions for lending and investment activities, but the emissions profile is not the same across all greenhouse gas categories. For one book, only some scopes are available from counterparties; for another, all scopes are estimated. The draft note currently gives one total with no further detail.
A preparer has a draft table showing the included percentage as 92%, the exposure base as 500 million currency units, and financed emissions by scope. However, the narrative says the calculation covered 95% of the portfolio, and the exclusions note lists a segment that appears to be part of the 8% gap.
Related framework references
How this disclosure maps across the major reporting frameworks.
Questions this page answers
The page says to prepare asset mix by sector, portfolio size measure, screening exclusions, emissions by scope, coverage percentage and the allocation method. Use the step-by-step preparation section to turn that list into a working data request.
It is there to help you move from the disclosure topic to a draft by setting scope, collecting the listed datapoints and checking what evidence you have. The page also points you to the workbook and library card to support that process.
Ask for the specific datapoints named on the page, plus the evidence needed to support them. In practice that means the underlying figures, the method used to allocate them, and any exclusions or coverage notes.
The page tells you to work from the listed datapoints and the allocation method, so scope and method should be set before drafting. Use the preparation section and workbook to keep the approach consistent and documented.
The page includes an evidence pack with five items for assurance readiness, alongside five assurance claims to verify. Use those items to show how the figures were built and what supports them.
The page says there are five claims to verify, each with a claim, risk and evidence angle. Use them as a checklist to test whether your draft is supported and where the main assurance risks sit.
The page lists common reporting gaps and mistakes to help you spot weak points before sign-off. Use that section as a pre-submission check so you can fix missing data, unclear methods or unsupported statements.
The workbook is a downloadable .xlsx designed to help you prepare the disclosure and get assurance-ready. Use it to organise the required datapoints, evidence and checks before you draft the final text.
The page includes synthetic illustrative examples, including a quantitative table, to show what a finished disclosure can look like. Treat them as a drafting aid only and make sure any real numbers in your own version are internally consistent.
The page gives draft-output support in the form of visualisation ideas, narrative starters and a content-index line. Use those to turn your prepared data into a clear first draft, then check it against the evidence pack and common gaps.
The page notes ESRS E1 (Climate Change) as the closest correspondence, so the same data may be reusable across both contexts. It does not say the requirements are identical, so you still need to check the other framework separately.
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