This disclosure asks an organisation to explain the sustainability-related risks and opportunities it has identified and how it has considered them in preparing its reporting. In practice, the focus is on giving a clear picture of what matters to the business, rather than listing every possible issue. The organisation should describe the main matters it has found and the way they relate to its activities and reporting.
The practical emphasis is on coverage across the organisation, not just a few well-known sites or flagship operations. Readers should be able to understand whether the explanation reflects the full business, including relevant operations, locations and activities, and whether any parts of the organisation are more exposed than others. The aim is a balanced, decision-useful summary of the sustainability-related risks and opportunities that are most relevant overall.
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 risk and opportunity evidence from Finance
Translate the disclosure into an internal business question — then adapt it to your organisation's own language.
Use your own internal labels first, then map them to the reporting categories. For example, use the names your teams already use for business risks, commercial opportunities, funding impacts, or value-chain issues rather than framework wording.
Please provide the sustainability-related risks and opportunities data for the disclosure.
Why it fails: It uses framework language only, gives no clue which team should respond, and does not specify the business fields needed to evidence the issue, its location in the business, or the financial linkage. That makes it hard to extract usable evidence from existing finance or risk materials.
Please send the finance or treasury items you already track that could affect cash flow, funding access, or the cost of capital. For each item, include the internal name, plain-English description, business area, value-chain location, theme or driver, estimated financial effect, assumptions, source file, and the person who can confirm it. Use your own team terms first, then we will map them for 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.
We based this disclosure on the issues we had already identified, using our own working definitions for the pathway, the business area affected, the issue type, and any possible financial connection.
Taken together, these figures show which sustainability issues could matter most for future performance, funding conditions, or financing costs, and where in the business value chain those effects may arise.
Any changes from the prior period can be explained by updates to the issue list, a different view of which themes are most relevant, or a revised assessment of how each issue could affect the business financially.
Preparation tools & forms
Professional preparation tools for s1-30-a — 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 identified a climate-related issue in our upstream agricultural supply chain that could affect crop yields, packaging continuity and the timing of customer deliveries. In this synthetic illustration, the issue sits mainly in our raw-material sourcing tier, and we estimate that a prolonged disruption could reduce annual operating cash inflows by about £4.0m, while also increasing our borrowing spread by 15 basis points if lenders view the exposure as less well controlled. - Theme: climate change, with the practical pathway running from hotter, drier growing conditions to lower farm output and tighter input availability. - Nature of the matter: a downside risk, because the same weather pattern could raise purchase prices, interrupt supply and weaken our ability to meet contracted volumes. - Where it arises: mostly before our own operations, in the farms and first-stage processors that supply us, rather than inside our sites.
Synthetic illustration only. The figures are internally consistent and intended to show how a reporter might describe a value-chain exposure, the business mechanism, the sustainability topic, the risk character and the possible effect on cash generation and funding terms.
In this synthetic example, we see a market opportunity linked to lower-energy buildings in our managed portfolio, where tenant demand and refinancing terms may improve as performance expectations tighten. The opportunity is concentrated in our owned and managed assets, and we estimate that upgrading 12 buildings could lift annual rental income by £2.4m and lower average debt funding costs by 10 basis points if the improvements are recognised by lenders. - Theme: energy efficiency and emissions reduction, with the pathway running from building upgrades to stronger tenant appeal and better financing terms. - Nature of the matter: an upside opportunity, because better-performing assets may support higher occupancy, stronger pricing and cheaper capital. - Where it arises: within our own properties and the services we provide to asset owners, rather than in a distant supplier tier.
Synthetic illustration only. The numbers are internally consistent and intended to show how a reporter might explain the business route from a sustainability topic to financial effects, including where in the value chain the matter sits.
How companies report s1-30-a
Real reports where this topic is disclosed. These are report practice, not exact disclosure templates to copy.

Scenarios to work through
A procurement team flags that a key raw material comes from a region facing water stress. The issue could disrupt supply and raise input prices, but the finance team has not yet linked it to any forecast.
A business unit has identified a chance to win lower-cost financing if it meets a new emissions target, but the estimate is still being refined and no final loan terms have been agreed. The team wants to mention only the financing benefit and leave out the operational driver.
An operations team has two linked issues: a flood risk at one supplier site and a separate chance to redesign sourcing to reduce disruption. Both affect the same product line, but one is a downside exposure and the other is a potential benefit.
A treasury paper says a climate-related supply issue may increase working capital needs by about £4 million and could make lenders more cautious, but the sustainability team has only written a broad note about 'resilience'. The draft disclosure also names the issue as both a risk and an opportunity in the same sentence.
Related framework references
How this disclosure maps across the major reporting frameworks.
Questions this page answers
Use the page’s datapoint list as your starting checklist: impact pathway, financial linkage estimate, sustainability theme, risk or upside summary, issue direction, and value chain stage. The page also has a step-by-step preparation section you can follow to turn those inputs into a draft.
Work through it as a drafting sequence rather than a theory note: identify the topic, collect the listed datapoints, then shape them into the draft-output section. The page is designed to help you move from raw inputs to a disclosure-ready narrative.
The page is useful for assigning ownership because it shows which datapoints need to be prepared and which evidence items support assurance readiness. In practice, that helps a sustainability manager, HR lead, or data owner split responsibilities across narrative, data, and evidence.
The page includes five assurance claims to verify and an evidence pack with five items, so you can build a file that links each claim to supporting evidence. Use those sections together to show what was checked, what was used, and where it came from.
The page has a common reporting gaps / mistakes section that is meant to help you spot weak points before sign-off. Use it as a pre-submission review so you can catch missing datapoints, thin evidence, or unclear drafting early.
The draft-output section gives you practical ways to present the information, including visualisation ideas, narrative starters, and a content-index line. That makes it easier to move from the collected datapoints to a first draft for review.
Yes — the Download Centre includes a Prep & Assurance workbook (.xlsx) and a printable Library Card (.pdf). The workbook is the practical tool for collecting and checking inputs, while the card is a quick reference for the disclosure page.
The page includes synthetic illustrative example disclosures, including a quantitative table, to show how the disclosure could be presented. Treat it as a format guide only and replace it with your own organisation’s data and wording.
Use it as a reference point for seeing where the topic appears in real published reports and how others have located it in their reporting. It is there to help you find examples, not to replace your own evidence or drafting process.
The page says the closest ESRS correspondence is ESRS 2 (General Disclosures). You can treat that as a useful cross-check and reuse data where it fits, but the page does not say the requirements are identical.
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