The disclosures will be included in a dedicated section of the entity’s management report and will – for example - include information on:
- The entity’s business model, strategy, and policies in relation to sustainability.
- The role of the administrative, management, and supervisory bodies with regard to sustainability, as well as any incentive schemes linked to sustainability matters offered to members of those bodies.
- The main risks to the entity related to sustainability matters.
The Directive requires reporting both on the impacts of its activities on people and the environment, and on how sustainability matters affect the entity. That is referred to as the “double materiality” standard.
Double materiality
Double materiality means that a company must report on how its business is affected by sustainability issues (“outside in”) and how their activities impact society and the environment (“inside out”). Double materiality takes the concept of materiality in sustainability reporting one step further. To make a double materiality assessment a company must consider two perspectives:
1. What is material to them?
2. What is material to society or the planet?
A double materiality assessment can contain different steps, such as defining impacts, risks and financial opportunities and risks. Companies subject to the CSRD will have to report according to the European Sustainability Reporting Standards (ESRS), which cover all sustainability matters from a double materiality perspective. Disclosures are subject to the double materiality test with certain exceptions. Where a topical ESRS is not available for a specific topic, the ESRSs mention the possibility for entities to use the GRI Standards to report on material topics.