This disclosure asks an organisation to explain how climate-related risks could affect its finances, strategy and operations, and how it is managing those risks. In practice, the report should focus on the main risk types the organisation faces, the time horizons it uses to think about them, and the actions it is taking to assess, reduce or respond to those risks.
The practical emphasis is usually on the organisation as a whole, not just a few high-profile sites. That means looking across relevant operations, assets, supply chains and business activities where climate risk could matter, rather than limiting the discussion to flagship locations or isolated examples.
This LRA educational guidance supports disclosure preparation. For the exact requirements, always refer to the official CARB 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 risk evidence from Risk / 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 disclosure categories. For example, ask for the risks your teams already track in risk registers, scenario work, business continuity, or strategic planning, rather than using framework labels in the first ask. Check the official source before sign-off.
Please provide the climate-related financial risk disclosure evidence for the reporting period, including physical and transition risks and all material categories.
Why it fails: It uses framework language first, which can force the owner to translate before they can answer. It also does not point to the organisation’s own risk records, so the response may be incomplete or hard to trace back to source documents.
Please send the latest risk register extract, scenario analysis, or board paper for [reporting period] covering the climate risks your team already tracks for [entity/boundary]. Use your internal risk names first, and include anything that affects investments, customers, people, operations, suppliers, markets, and the time windows you use for planning. Please add the source file, owner, last update date, and a short note on how each risk was assessed.
Notes that turn data into a disclosure
LRA training templates — adapt them to your organisation, and check the official source before sign-off.
The disclosure should explain the basis used to identify and group climate-related financial risks, including how the organisation distinguished physical from transition exposures and how it assigned them to short, medium and long time periods.
The figures should help readers understand where climate-related financial risk is concentrated, which parts of the business or value chain are most exposed, and whether the main concerns are immediate or longer dated.
If the profile changes from one period to the next, the reporter can note whether that reflects a revised assessment, a change in business activity, updated climate assumptions, or movement in the timing or severity of the risks.
Preparation tools & forms
Professional preparation tools for SB261-CLIMATE-RISK — 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 describe how climate-related risks could affect our business over the near, middle and longer term, separating weather-driven losses from transition pressures. - Physical hazards could disrupt generation sites, damage grid assets and raise repair spend; in this example, £18m of the £30m estimated exposure is near term, £9m is medium term and £3m is long term, with the same profile also affecting employee safety and the continuity of our operations and supply chain. - On the transition side, policy, technology and market shifts could reduce customer uptake, weaken asset values and tighten financing conditions; here, £12m of the £20m estimated exposure is near term, £6m is medium term and £2m is long term, with knock-on effects for capital deployment, consumer demand, financial markets and the wider economy.
This example shows a utility-style reporter linking weather damage and transition pressure to operations, workers, suppliers, customers, investment value and broader market conditions across three time horizons.
We explain how climate-related risks may affect our group across short, medium and longer horizons, using separate estimates for weather-related and transition-related pressures. - Physical events such as heat, flood and water stress could interrupt production, affect staff wellbeing, and strain inbound ingredients and packaging; in this example, £9m of the £15m estimated exposure is short term, £4m is medium term and £2m is long term. - Transition pressures, including changing regulation, customer preferences and financing conditions, could reduce demand, pressure margins and lower the value of planned investments; here, £6m of the £10m estimated exposure is short term, £3m is medium term and £1m is long term, with possible spillovers into our operations and the broader economy.
This example shows a manufacturer describing physical and transition risks in plain language, with separate time buckets and clear links to demand, investment value, worker safety, supply continuity and market-wide effects.
How companies report SB261-CLIMATE-RISK 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 is drafting the climate-risk section for a group with manufacturing sites, a lending book, and a large retail customer base. The team has notes on flood exposure at two plants, possible changes in customer buying patterns, and a review of how weather events could affect deliveries.
A finance lead has prepared a short paragraph saying the company faces weather-related disruption, but it does not say when those effects are expected to show up. The risk team has separate notes for near-term, mid-range, and longer-range planning.
A company has identified a possible shift away from a carbon-intensive product line, but the draft only mentions a general strategic concern. It does not explain whether the issue could affect revenue, financing, or asset values.
A preparer has a draft that lists storm damage at one site and heat stress for warehouse staff, but the supply-chain team says a key supplier in another region could also be disrupted by the same weather pattern. The draft does not yet mention that supplier dependency.
Related framework references
How this disclosure maps across the major reporting frameworks.
Questions this page answers
Start with the plain-language explainer, then work through the step-by-step preparation section and the datapoints list. The page also gives draft-output ideas, so you can turn the collected information into a narrative and a content-index line.
The page points you to nine datapoints: capital and investment risk, customer demand risk, workforce health risk, market stability risk, operating disruption risk, physical climate risk, supplier disruption risk, risk timing bands, and transition climate risk. Use those as the starting checklist for data collection.
Use the page’s datapoints list as your scope check and make sure each risk area is considered before drafting. The common reporting gaps section is there to help you spot omissions early.
The page does not assign roles, but it is designed for sustainability/ESG managers, HR or data owners, and assurance reviewers to use together. In practice, you would use the workbook and evidence pack to coordinate ownership and sign-off across those people.
The page includes an evidence pack with five items to support assurance readiness. Use it alongside the six assurance claims to verify that each claim, risk and evidence point is covered.
The page says there are six assurance claims to verify, each linked to a claim, risk and evidence check. Use the assurance section to test whether your draft is supported before it goes to review.
The page has a list of common reporting gaps and mistakes to help you avoid missing key risk areas or weak evidence. It is meant as a practical check before you finalise the draft.
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, then use the Library Card as a quick reference while drafting.
Yes, but only as synthetic illustrations. The page’s example disclosures are there to show how the content can be presented, so you should adapt them to your own data and evidence rather than copy them.
The page says the closest ESRS correspondence is ESRS E1 (Climate Change). You can reuse data where it is relevant, but the page does not say the requirements are identical, so you still need to check the disclosure against your own reporting needs.
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