This disclosure asks an organisation to explain whether it has a plan for moving its business toward lower greenhouse gas emissions and, if so, to describe the main features of that plan. The focus is on the practical route from current operations to a lower-carbon model, rather than a general statement of ambition. It should be clear what the organisation intends to do, over what timeframe, and how the plan connects to its climate objectives.
In practice, the reporting should cover the parts of the organisation that matter to the transition, not just a few visible sites or pilot projects. Readers should be able to see whether the plan applies across the full business, including relevant operations, assets and activities, and how far it is already being implemented. If the plan only covers selected locations or business units, that limitation should be made explicit.
This LRA educational guidance supports disclosure preparation. For the exact requirements, always refer to the official GRI 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 climate transition plan evidence pack
Translate the disclosure into an internal business question — then adapt it to your organisation's own language.
Use your organisation’s own terms first, then map them to the disclosure. For example, if you call this a decarbonisation roadmap, net zero plan, energy transition programme, or climate action plan internally, use that language in the request and in the evidence pack. Keep the ask in business terms that the owner already uses, then translate to the reporting disclosure during drafting.
Please provide the transition plan disclosure evidence for GRI 102-1, including governance, alignment, targets, just transition, policy consistency, and any explanation if no plan exists.
Why it fails: It uses framework language that many owners will not recognise, so it is harder to route, harder to answer, and more likely to miss the actual internal documents and trackers that hold the evidence.
Please send the latest climate action / decarbonisation plan pack for [period] and [boundary], including the plan document, delivery owners, budget or spend, target tracker, strategy link, and any notes on people, community, biodiversity, or policy impacts. If there is no plan yet, send the reason and supporting papers.
Notes that turn data into a disclosure
LRA training templates — adapt them to your organisation, and check the official source before sign-off.
Explain what you counted as the transition plan, how you defined related targets and oversight roles, and whether the figures reflect the reporting period, a cumulative total, or another basis.
Set out what the numbers show about how far the organisation has moved from planning into delivery, including where the plan sits in the wider business strategy and what the reported impacts mean in practice.
If any figures changed materially, note the operational or strategic reasons behind the movement, such as revised actions, updated targets, changed spending, or a shift in implementation pace.
Preparation tools & forms
Professional preparation tools for GRI 102-1 — 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 set our climate transition work into the way we run the business, with the board and its committees receiving regular updates while named executives carry day-to-day delivery. Our plan covers policy changes, operational actions, and spending of 42 million in the year, with 18 million on energy efficiency, 14 million on electrification, and 10 million on supplier and workforce measures; the split is internally consistent and the total is not exceeded. - The plan is tied to the latest climate science we use for our pathway, includes a 2030 emissions cut target of 45% from a 2020 base year, and also includes a managed exit from thermal coal by 2035 using recognised sector guidance. - We report progress against the delivery milestones, including the emissions goal disclosed under 102-4, and we have set additional energy-intensity and renewable-power targets through our internal planning process. - We have assessed likely effects on workers, local communities, Indigenous Peoples, and biodiversity, and we are using consultation, retraining, site planning, and habitat measures to reduce harm; our public affairs and lobbying positions are checked against the same climate direction so they do not work against the plan.
This synthetic example shows how a reporter can describe climate transition governance, strategy integration, spending, targets, social and environmental impacts, and policy alignment in one concise narrative.
Our transition programme is built into commercial planning, capital allocation, and procurement, with oversight by the board, the audit committee, and operational leads. In the reporting year we spent 27 million on delivery, made up of 9 million for fleet changes, 8 million for building upgrades, 6 million for supplier support, and 4 million for training and change management; the figures add up to the total. - The pathway is based on current climate science, includes a 50% cut in operational emissions by 2030 from a 2019 base year, and sets a plan to end use of unabated diesel in our owned fleet by 2032 using recognised technical standards. - We also track a packaging-waste reduction target and a renewable-electricity target, both set through our planning cycle, and we disclose progress against the emissions target reported under 102-4. - We have considered effects on employees, contractors, nearby communities, and Indigenous Peoples, plus land and habitat impacts from site changes; engagement with those groups has shaped the plan, and our policy advocacy is reviewed so it stays consistent with the same direction of travel.
This synthetic example shows a different sector using the same disclosure points, with distinct targets, spending lines, and stakeholder impacts while keeping the narrative internally consistent.
How companies report GRI 102-1 in practice
Real reports where this topic is disclosed. These are report practice, not exact disclosure templates to copy.

Scenarios to work through
A group has a written climate shift plan covering energy use, fleet changes and supplier actions. The draft report mentions the plan, but it does not yet show how those actions fit with the wider company strategy.
A manufacturer has set a 2030 emissions cut target and a separate target to stop using coal in one site by 2028. The team has the target dates and a short note on how the targets were agreed, but it has not yet checked whether the emissions target is the same one used in the separate emissions disclosure.
A company has spent £2.4 million on heat pumps, process changes and staff training to deliver its climate shift plan. The finance team can split the spend by project, but the sustainability draft only says the plan is underway and gives no total figure.
A utility has a transition plan that includes closing one fossil-fuel asset, retraining workers and changing land use at a former site. The draft report says the plan is aligned with a fair transition approach, but it does not mention consultation with workers, local communities or environmental impacts.
Related framework references
How this disclosure maps across the major reporting frameworks.
Questions this page answers
Use the page’s plain-language explainer and the step-by-step preparation section to scope the disclosure, then collect the listed datapoints that apply. The page also points you to the workbook and evidence pack so you can organise the information before drafting.
The page gives a step-by-step ‘how to prepare’ section and a scientific basis check to help you test whether the approach is coherent. It also flags policy alignment, strategy integration and no-plan explanation as datapoints to consider when setting the method.
The page points to oversight responsibilities, plan delivery spend, targets and progress, and people impact groups, so you will usually need input from strategy, finance, HR and any team holding emissions or transition-plan data. Use the workbook to assign ownership and track who provides each item.
The page includes an evidence pack with five items and six assurance claims to verify, each framed around claim, risk and evidence. That is the main starting point for building an assurance file that shows how the disclosure was prepared and checked.
The page has a section on common reporting gaps and mistakes, so use that as a pre-submission check. In practice, it is there to help you spot missing datapoints, weak evidence and gaps between the narrative and the underlying plan.
The Download Centre includes a Prep & Assurance workbook in .xlsx format, which is intended to help you organise the disclosure, evidence and assurance checks. Use it alongside the step-by-step preparation section and the evidence pack to turn source data into a draft.
The page’s draft-output section suggests visualisation ideas, narrative starters and a content-index line. Use those to turn the collected data into a readable draft rather than a list of disconnected facts.
No. The page says no one-to-one ESRS/IFRS equivalent is asserted, so it should be used as practitioner guidance for this disclosure rather than as a mapping tool.
The page includes synthetic illustrative example disclosures, including a quantitative table where relevant, so you can see how the disclosure might look in practice. The examples are for learning only and should be adapted to your own data.
The page lists no-plan explanation as one of the datapoints to prepare, so you should be ready to explain the position clearly if there is no transition plan. Keep the explanation aligned with the rest of the narrative and evidence pack.
The page highlights targets and progress, emissions reduction targets, fossil fuel exit targets and other mitigation targets as separate datapoints to prepare. That means you should collect the target type, current progress and supporting evidence before drafting.
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