This disclosure asks an organisation to explain how management is involved in overseeing climate-related matters. In practice, it is about showing who in management has responsibility, what they do, and how climate issues are handled in decision-making and internal control. The focus is on the management role itself, not on describing climate performance or targets.
The practical question is whether this oversight is embedded across the organisation or limited to a few visible sites or senior individuals. A useful response should make clear the scope of management coverage, how often climate matters are reviewed, and how information moves from operational teams to decision-makers. Keep the explanation specific enough for a reader to understand how management oversight works in day-to-day practice.
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 management oversight evidence
Translate the disclosure into an internal business question — then adapt it to your organisation's own language.
Use your organisation’s own names for committees, roles, approval routes and control processes first, then map them to the reporting disclosure. Keep the request in internal business language rather than framework wording, and check the source material before sign-off.
Please provide evidence for management role under the disclosure.
Why it fails: It uses framework language only, gives no clue which internal team should respond, and does not say what records or details are needed. That makes it hard to gather usable evidence.
Please send the committee papers, role notes, and process documents that show how the management process is run, who owns it, how responsibilities are delegated, how it connects with finance, risk, audit, and operations, and how the delegated role is monitored. Include the period, version/date, owner, and meeting or approval reference. Use your internal names first, and I will map them to the disclosure.
Notes that turn data into a disclosure
LRA training templates — adapt them to your organisation, and check the official source before sign-off.
Describe the basis used to identify the controls, responsibility split, linked functions, named owner and oversight route, including how each item was classified from the underlying records.
Explain what the disclosure shows about how the organisation has organised accountability, connected the process into wider business functions, and put oversight around delegated responsibilities.
If the arrangements changed during the period, note whether this reflects a reallocation of duties, a new owner, stronger oversight, or a wider integration with other functions.
Preparation tools & forms
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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 run a formal process for climate oversight that sets out who decides what, how updates move through the business, and how the board is kept informed. - A board committee receives the main climate updates each quarter, while a named executive sponsor leads day-to-day coordination and reports through our risk and finance forums. - The sponsor works with finance, risk, internal audit, and operations so climate matters are built into planning, controls, assurance work, and operational decisions; the board committee checks that the delegated role is being carried out as intended.
This example shows a board-level committee, a named management owner, links into core business functions, and board oversight of the delegated role.
Our group uses a documented climate governance setup that assigns responsibilities from the board down to management and explains how information is escalated. - The audit and risk committee reviews climate matters every six months, a sustainability lead coordinates the work across finance, risk, operations, and internal assurance, and the committee receives evidence on how that lead is carrying out the assigned duties. - This arrangement is supported by written controls and reporting steps so climate information is checked, routed to the right decision-makers, and folded into business planning and oversight.
This example shows a documented governance arrangement, a delegated management lead, cross-functional integration, and committee review of the delegated role.
How companies report s2-6-b
Real reports where this topic is disclosed. These are report practice, not exact disclosure templates to copy.

Scenarios to work through
A group has split climate reporting work between the sustainability team, finance, risk, internal audit and operations. The sustainability lead drafts the narrative, finance checks numbers, risk reviews assumptions, and operations supplies site-level data, but the hand-offs are not written down.
A preparer has one executive who coordinates climate reporting, but several parts of the work are done by different managers. The draft says only that the executive is “responsible for climate reporting” and does not explain who does what or where authority sits when issues arise.
Climate reporting is linked to finance through budget assumptions, to risk through scenario work, to audit through assurance planning, and to operations through emissions data collection. The draft mentions these functions separately, but it does not explain how they connect or influence each other.
A company has a climate steering group chaired by the chief operating officer, with the head of sustainability as the day-to-day owner. The board receives quarterly updates, but the draft does not say what the steering group does, who owns the work, or how the board keeps an eye on the delegated arrangement.
Related framework references
How this disclosure maps across the major reporting frameworks.
Questions this page answers
Start with the plain-language explainer and the step-by-step preparation section, then use the datapoints list to gather the core information before drafting. The page also gives narrative starters and a content-index line to help turn the data into a usable draft.
The page says to prepare five datapoints: control setup, delegated authority map, cross-function links, committee role holder, and delegated oversight. Use those as the minimum data set to brief owners and build the draft.
The page points you to a delegated authority map, cross-function links, and the committee role holder, which are the practical clues for assigning owners. In practice, use those items to identify who holds the information and who signs off the final wording.
The page includes an evidence pack with five items and five assurance claims to verify, each framed around claim, risk, and evidence. Use those together so the pack supports both the draft disclosure and the checks an assurance reviewer will want to see.
The page lists common reporting gaps and mistakes, so it is designed to help you spot missing governance detail before you finalise the disclosure. Use that section as a pre-submission check against your draft and evidence pack.
The Download Centre includes a Prep & Assurance workbook in .xlsx format, which is intended to support preparation and assurance readiness. Use it alongside the page’s datapoints, assurance claims, and evidence pack to organise the work and track completion.
The page includes synthetic illustrative examples, including a quantitative table where relevant, to show how the disclosure can be written up. Treat them as drafting aids only and make sure any figures or statements in your own draft are internally consistent and match your evidence.
Use the draft-output section, which gives visualisation ideas, narrative starters, and a content-index line. That section is there to help you convert the collected datapoints into a readable disclosure rather than a set of notes.
The page says the closest ESRS correspondence is ESRS E1 (Climate Change), so the data may be reusable across both contexts. Use the page as a practical bridge, but do not assume the reporting needs are identical.
Work through the five assurance claims, then compare them with the five evidence-pack items to see whether each claim is supported. The page is set up to help you identify gaps before an assurance reviewer sees the draft.
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