This section provides guidance for sustainable business reporting. It holds info on stakeholder identification, double materiality assessment, reporting and other guidance that can be useful in the process. If there is a country specific information webpage for sustainability reporting, you find the link here as well.
Guidance on ESRS requirements of organization upstream and downstream value chain. Identifying your value chain stakeholders is relevant for materiality assessment and for acquiring information on material impacts, risks, and opportunities of the organization.
Guidance on ESRS requirements of the materiality assessment. It contains illustrations of possible steps of the process and FAQs on the assessment to provide implementation guidance from a practical perspective. Double materiality assessment is relevant to identifying the organization’s material impacts, risks, and opportunities.
The GRI Standards represent global best practices for reporting publicly on a range of economic, environmental, and social impacts (impact materiality assessment). GRI standards and ESRS standards are strongly aligned, the first being the standard that ESRS-s closely follow. GRI standards also include sectorial standards, which ESRS does not have yet. As defining impacts is strongly related to the sector of the organization, GRI sectorial standards provide guidance on defining impacts as part of your double materiality assessment as well as certain sustainability matters that ESRS do not include but might be relevant to your organization.
SASB's Materiality Map identifies likely material sustainability issues on an industry-by-industry basis that you can use as a starting point when doing financial materiality as part of your double materiality assessment.
Visual presentation of activities needed to carry out to prepare the sustainability report
Standards to be followed while creating a sustainability report
The Sustainability Goals Database gathers more than 1000 goals for sustainability matters for companies to benchmark but also directs with its seven criteria evaluation that is needed for a good target. The embedding project also includes databases for positions on sustainability matters, sustainability issues snapshots with related resources, and a sustainable procurement wheel tool.
The Sustainability Goals Database gathers more than 1000 goals for sustainability matters for companies to benchmark but also directs with its seven criteria evaluation that is needed for a good target. The embedding project also includes databases for positions on sustainability matters, sustainability issues snapshots with related resources, and a sustainable procurement wheel tool.
Full list of ESRS disclosure requirements by data points, which can be both qualitative and quantitative. Datapoints are presented according to standards. Only material topics/standards need to be disclosed, which is determined by double materiality analysis.
The guidance should address the scientific basis and references, policy environment and requirements, and financial system needs and expectations, and good practices and challenges of transition plans
EU Taxonomy Navigator offers a selection of tools to understand and implement EU Taxonomy. The tools consist of a Taxonomy Compass (visual representation of sectors, activities, and criteria), Taxonomy Calculator (step-by-step guide), FAQ, user guide, and NACE classification mapping.
ESRS requires that the materiality assessment of a negative impact is informed by the due diligence processes as well in the due diligence statement itself according to specific UN and OECD guidelines. Companies also need to disclose if they do not respect certain requirements in those guidelines. In all social standards, the company needs to disclose to their own workers, value chain workers, affected community, and consumers/end-users their policies, including human rights policy commitments and how they monitor compliance with these guidelines. Processes to remediate negative impacts can be guided by these guidelines. A summary of the principles can be found here:
ESRS requires that the materiality assessment of a negative impact is informed by the due diligence processes as well in the due diligence statement itself according to specific UN and OECD guidelines. Companies also need to disclose if they do not respect certain requirements in those guidelines. In all social standards, the company needs to disclose to their own workers, value chain workers, affected community, and consumers/end-users their policies, including human rights policy commitments and how they monitor compliance with these guidelines. Processes to remediate negative impacts can be guided by these guidelines. A summary of the guidelines can be found here:
Countries corruption perception index. Useful for ESRS G1 standard corruption matter
Countries corruption perception index. Useful for ESRS G1 standard corruption matter
Country-based key biodiversity areas and their descriptions list. Useful for ESRS E4 Biodiversity and ecosystems standard sustainability matters
Natura-protected sites list with statistics. Useful for ESRS E4 to define biodiversity-sensitive and risk-prone areas
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