This disclosure asks an organisation to explain how it has identified and assessed the impacts, risks and opportunities that matter for its sustainability reporting. In practice, it is about showing the basis for what has been included in the statement: what the organisation looked at, how it judged significance, and how that process led to the topics and matters reported elsewhere in the sustainability statement.
The practical focus is on the scope and consistency of the assessment, not just on a few headline sites or activities. An organisation should be able to describe whether its approach covers the whole business and value chain where relevant, or only selected operations, and why that approach is appropriate. The key point is to make clear how the assessment was carried out so readers can understand the coverage, boundaries and logic behind the reporting.
This LRA educational guidance supports disclosure preparation. For the exact requirements, always refer to the official EFRAG 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 disclosure map and evidence pack from Sustainability Reporting
Translate the disclosure into an internal business question — then adapt it to your organisation's own language.
Use your organisation’s own labels for topics, reports, systems and governance forums first, then map them to the reporting framework wording. Keep the ask in business language rather than framework terms where possible, and check the source material before sign-off.
Please provide the ESRS 2:IRO-2 disclosures, including material impacts, risks, opportunities, disclosure requirements, supplementary disclosures, and appendix linkage.
Why it fails: It uses framework language only, which makes it harder for the business owner to recognise what is being asked. It also bundles several different checks into one vague request, so the owner may not know which tracker, report, or evidence set to return.
Please send the current disclosure map for our sustainability statement: which topics are covered, where each one appears, what source evidence supports the mapping, what changed since last year, which sites or countries are higher risk, and which topics are not included with the reason why. If you already keep this in a tracker, send that version and note the owner, source system, and latest update date.
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 identify and define the significant matters, explain how the reporting boundary was applied across the business and value chain, and note which disclosures were used or linked to support the conclusion.
Explain what the figures and lists mean in practice by linking them to the organisation’s main areas of exposure, the parts of the business or value chain they affect, and the locations where those exposures are most concentrated.
Describe any notable movement by pointing to the underlying business, operational or external drivers, and clarify whether the change reflects a shift in the underlying assessment, the reporting scope, or the underlying conditions.
Preparation tools & forms
Professional preparation tools for IRO-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 explain that our material matters include water stress in our own sites and in upstream farming, labour conditions in the supply chain, and product safety in use; we also note a possible upside from lower-emission packaging and energy efficiency. We have not concluded that climate is immaterial, because climate-related effects are already part of our current impacts, exposures and transition plans. - Since the last reporting cycle, we have seen a rise in supplier audit findings, a wider spread of heat-related downtime at two plants, and a larger set of efficiency projects that could improve margins. - The matters covered by our reporting package are the environmental, social and governance topics in the core report, with the detailed location given in the sustainability statement; we have used cross-references for the labour and water sections, and not for the climate note. - For the areas we flag as more exposed, the main operating types are fresh-produce intake, cold storage and primary processing, with the highest exposure in Spain, Morocco and southern Italy.
Synthetic example for training only; figures and locations are illustrative and internally consistent.
Our material topics include process safety, air emissions, and worker exposure in our own plants, plus transport and contractor controls in the wider chain; we also identify a commercial upside from low-carbon product lines. We do not treat climate as immaterial, because weather disruption, energy-price swings and customer demand shifts already affect our operations and plans. - Compared with the prior year, we recorded fewer lost-time incidents, more near-miss reports, and a larger share of sales from lower-carbon products. - The supplementary topics we report alongside the main statement are the health-and-safety, emissions and supply-chain sections, with the exact signposting shown in the report index; we use reference links for the safety and emissions sections, but not for the climate discussion. - The higher-risk operating types are batch blending, bulk storage and road distribution, and the main exposed geographies are the Gulf Coast of the United States, northern Germany and the Netherlands.
Synthetic example for training only; figures and locations are illustrative and internally consistent.
How companies report IRO-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 preparer has mapped the year-end sustainability statement and finds that one topic standard is covered only through a short note in a separate report, while another topic is described in the main statement with a cross-reference to a detailed annex. The team is unsure whether the reader can tell where each topic sits and whether any topic has been left out.
During drafting, the climate team concludes that climate is not a material topic for the period, but the evidence file only says 'low exposure' and does not explain the judgement path. The sustainability lead asks whether that brief note is enough to support the conclusion.
A business unit reports that a new supplier region has increased labour and water-related exposure in the supply chain, while a separate product line has created a fresh growth path in a low-carbon market. The reporting team is deciding whether these are simply current-year updates or whether they belong in the section that tracks shifts in the undertaking’s material matters.
The reporting pack includes a table showing which topic standards are covered, but the team is unsure whether it also needs to say which extra disclosures were added because they were needed to explain the business properly. In one case, the extra material comes from a risk area in a high-exposure country and from a plant type with elevated operational risk.
Related framework references
How this disclosure maps across the major reporting frameworks.
Questions this page answers
Use it to understand the disclosure at a practical level before you start collecting data or writing the narrative. It is designed to help you prepare the disclosure, not to act as an official source.
The page lists the datapoints to prepare, including material impacts, risks and opportunities, business and value chain links, changes over time, required disclosures, where the information is disclosed, linked-by-reference items, extra disclosures, high-risk operations and locations, the cross-reference table, report location, and the not material flag.
Follow it as a working sequence for building the disclosure, from scoping the topic through to drafting the output. It is there to help a sustainability, HR or data owner turn source information into a usable draft.
The page is aimed at sustainability/ESG managers, HR or data owners, and assurance reviewers, so ownership should sit with the people who can provide the underlying data and evidence. Use the page to coordinate who prepares the inputs, who checks them, and who signs off the draft.
The page includes an evidence pack with five items to support assurance readiness. Use it to assemble the documents and records that back up the claims, the data, and the final disclosure.
The page says there are six assurance claims to verify, each with a claim, risk and evidence angle. Use them as a checklist to test whether the disclosure is supported and whether the evidence pack is complete.
The page lists common reporting gaps and mistakes so you can spot weak points before finalising the draft. Use that section to check for missing data, unclear scope, weak links between the narrative and evidence, and incomplete cross-references.
They are there to show how a disclosure can be structured and how the narrative and data table can work together. Treat them as examples only and adapt the approach to your own facts and evidence.
Use the visualisation ideas, narrative starters and content-index line to convert your prepared data into a first draft. The section is designed to help you move from source information to a clear report structure.
The Download Centre includes a Prep & Assurance workbook in .xlsx format and a printable Library Card in .pdf format. Use them to organise the preparation work, track evidence, and support review before the disclosure is finalised.
The page has a 'From company reports' table that links to real published reports at the pages where the topic is disclosed. Use it to see how other companies have presented similar information in practice.
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