This disclosure asks an organisation to explain how it identifies, assesses and manages sustainability-related risks in practice. The focus is on the organisation’s actual risk management approach: what processes it uses, who is involved, how often risks are reviewed, and how sustainability-related risks are considered alongside other business risks.
In practical terms, the report should show whether this approach applies across the whole organisation or only to selected parts such as major sites, business units or flagship operations. Readers should be able to see the breadth of coverage, the level of integration into existing risk processes, and any important gaps or limitations in how risks are managed.
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 process evidence from ERM
Translate the disclosure into an internal business question — then adapt it to your organisation's own language.
Use your organisation’s own risk language first, then map it to the reporting request. For example, if you talk about risk registers, control reviews, issue logs, or board risk packs internally, use those terms in the request and only translate them later for reporting. Keep the ask practical and evidence-led; check the source disclosure before sign-off.
Please provide the disclosure wording for risk management and confirm compliance with the objective.
Why it fails: This is too close to reporting language and does not tell the owner what evidence to pull. It asks for a statement rather than the underlying material, so it is harder to verify, harder to trace to source documents, and more likely to produce a generic narrative instead of usable evidence.
Please send the current risk register summary, board or committee risk paper, and any process note that shows how risks are reviewed, rolled up, and escalated for [period] and [scope]. Include the source file, owner, date, and any recent changes. I’ll translate your internal terms into the reporting draft after review.
Notes that turn data into a disclosure
LRA training templates — adapt them to your organisation, and check the official source before sign-off.
Explain the basis used to judge risk exposure, how the organisation defines its risk categories, and how the reporting process links those judgments to wider risk management arrangements.
Set out what the figures say about the organisation’s overall exposure, how closely risk work is connected to day-to-day management, and how open the process is to readers.
If the numbers move, point to changes in the underlying risk picture, shifts in how risk is built into management routines, or differences in how fully the process is described.
Preparation tools & forms
Professional preparation tools for s1-43 — 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 how our risk view is built so readers can judge the main exposures facing the group, and we show how that view is linked into our wider risk process rather than sitting apart from it. - Our quarterly risk review covers 18 principal risk areas; 5 are rated high, 9 medium and 4 low, giving a simple picture of where pressure is concentrated. - The same risk map feeds the enterprise risk register, with 18 of 18 principal risks assigned an owner, control actions and review dates. - We describe the steps used to prepare the assessment: business-unit inputs, central challenge by risk specialists, and final sign-off by the executive risk forum.
This synthetic example shows a plain-language narrative that helps a reader understand the overall risk picture, how it connects to the wider risk system, and the steps used to produce it.
We set out the main threats and uncertainties in a way that lets users see the group’s overall exposure, and we explain how those matters are folded into our company-wide risk process. - Our latest review identifies 12 key risk themes; 3 are judged high, 6 medium and 3 low, so the balance of concern is visible at a glance. - All 12 themes are carried into the central risk log, and 12 of 12 have an assigned control owner and a scheduled review point. - We outline the method used to reach the view: store and online teams submit evidence, risk leads test it, and the board risk committee receives the final summary for challenge.
This synthetic example uses a different sector and wording, but still shows the overall exposure picture, the link to the wider risk process, and enough process detail for a reader to follow how the disclosure was prepared.
How companies report s1-43
Real reports where this topic is disclosed. These are report practice, not exact disclosure templates to copy.

Scenarios to work through
A preparer is drafting the climate and wider sustainability risk section. The draft explains that the risk team scores issues, but it does not yet show how those scores help a reader understand the organisation’s overall exposure.
The risk register is maintained by the central risk function, while sustainability risks are also discussed in the same forum as other business risks. The draft mentions the sustainability team separately, but it does not say how this sits within the wider risk framework.
A company has a detailed internal workflow for identifying and reviewing risks, but the draft only says that risks are “managed through established controls.” It does not explain the main stages, who is involved, or how the process operates in practice.
The draft says the board receives a quarterly risk summary, but it does not explain whether the same risk process is used for financial and sustainability matters, or whether the sustainability risks are handled separately. The preparer is unsure how much to say without overloading the note.
Related framework references
How this disclosure maps across the major reporting frameworks.
Questions this page answers
The page says to prepare three things: an overall risk view, how risk management connects to the topic, and a clear note of the method used. Use those as the starting data set before you turn anything into narrative.
Use it as a working sequence: first collect the core datapoints, then check the assurance claims, then build the evidence pack, and only then draft the disclosure. The page is set up to help you move from raw inputs to a reviewable draft.
The page treats this as one of the key datapoints to prepare, so it should come from the person or team that can summarise the organisation’s current risk position on the topic. In practice, that is usually a sustainability, risk, or business owner who can evidence the view.
The page includes an evidence pack with five items to support assurance readiness. Use that pack to keep the source material behind the risk view, the risk-management link, and the method clear enough for review.
The page says there are five assurance claims to verify, each tied to a claim, the related risk, and the evidence. Use those checks to test whether the draft is supported before it goes to review.
The page flags common reporting gaps and mistakes, so it is worth using that section as a pre-submission checklist. It is especially useful for checking that the method is clear and that the disclosure is backed by evidence rather than general statements.
The draft-output section gives you visualisation ideas, narrative starters, and a content-index line. That makes it easier to move from the prepared datapoints into a structured draft without starting from a blank page.
Treat the example as a pattern for structure and level of detail, not as content to reuse. The page also includes a quantitative table in the example, which can help you see how the data might be presented in a consistent way.
The Download Centre includes a Prep & Assurance workbook in .xlsx format and a printable Library Card in .pdf format. Use the workbook to organise preparation and assurance checks, and the card as a quick reference while drafting.
The page says the closest ESRS correspondence is ESRS 2 (General Disclosures), so there is a useful cross-framework link. You can reuse data where it fits your reporting needs, but the page does not say the requirements are identical.
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