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The European Sustainability Reporting Standards (ESRS)

With the principle of double materiality, the ESRS directly focus the financial impacts of climate change on corporate strategy. The framework compels companies to establish sustainability as an integral part of investment decisions and risk assessments.

The European European Sustainability Reporting Standards (ESRS) are the detailed rules for CSRD reporting. They specify, was and like must be reported to make sustainability measurable and comparable. It goes far beyond traditional CSR approaches. What initially sounds like additional reporting effort is increasingly developing into a strategic management tool – especially in the context of climate risks, energy prices, and pressure to transform.

Especially for companies with CSRD reporting obligation it is becoming increasingly clear that the ESRS are no longer purely a compliance issue. They deeply affect business models, investment decisions, and risk assessments – and this is precisely where their actual added value.

ESRS becomes the strategic framework

Already in the summer of 2022, the European Financial Reporting Advisory Group (EFRAG) began drafting the ESRS within the framework of EU Directive 2022/2464 (CSRD). Today, they are defining a uniform and binding set of rules for sustainability reporting in the EU. With the aim of transparency, comparability, and decision relevance for investors and companies to create, at the center is the Double materiality principle.

  • Inside-out perspective What impact does the company have on the environment and society?
  • Outside-in perspective With the question: What financial risks and opportunities arise for the company from sustainability issues?

This dual consideration compels companies to view sustainability not in isolation, but as an integral part of their corporate strategy.

Structurally, the ESRS consist of:

  • Four groups: General, (E) Environmental, (S) Social, and (G) Governance standards
  • Twelve thematic standards, with Group E, covering climate change, pollution, water and marine resources, biodiversity and ecosystems, and resource use and the circular economy, having the most standards.
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The standard is particularly noteworthy. ESRS E1 (Climate Change), which is of the greatest content and economic relevance for many companies.

Climate Risks in Focus: ESRS E1 as a Strategic Lever

The further developments of the ESRS from December 2025 – particularly in the E1 area – show a clear direction: away from pure data reporting, towards a reliable assessment of climate risks and their financial impacts.

Reporting is intended to gain flexibility, and in return, content requirements will increase. This methodological opening is a significant advancement. Companies are no longer exclusively bound by classic Scenario analysis bound, but can instead also qualitative or alternative quantitative assessment approaches use. This flexibility reduces complexity but simultaneously increases the responsibility to present a plausible and robust risk assessment.

Harmonization of standards

Another crucial aspect for the further development of the ESRS is increasing harmonization with international standards. In particular, alignment with „IFRS S2 – Climate-related Disclosures,” which was already published in summer 2023, has been pending. This standard forms a unified basis on the global capital market for investment decisions and was developed by the International Sustainability Standards Board (ISSB). For companies, this means:

  • Fewer duplicate structures in reporting
  • Greater consistency towards international capital markets
  • Better comparability for investors

This development is highly relevant, particularly for export-oriented or capital market-oriented companies.

Climate risk analysis as a crucial factor in the ESRS

The analysis of climate risks is no longer just a regulatory requirement of the ESRS. It is developing into a central component of corporate management. At its core, it is about the impact of external changes on the own business model to recognize and economically evaluate early on.

Physical risks such as extreme weather events directly impact sites, infrastructure, and supply chains. Without structured evaluation the foundation is missing to specifically invest in resilience measures and limit potential damage. At the same time, requirements on the financing side are becoming more stringent: Banks and investors increasingly take climate risks into account in a binding manner in their credit decisions. A lack of transparency thus directly leads to poorer conditions or restricted access to capital.

Pressure is also mounting along the value chain. Large companies are demanding reliable data and strategies from their suppliers, particularly in the context of Scope 3 emissions. Those who cannot provide this information risk clear competitive disadvantages.

ESRS tasks for companies

Many climate-related risks, as defined by ESRS Group E, are closely linked to energy issues. Rising CO₂ costs, regulatory interventions, volatile electricity prices, and delayed modernizations represent central transition risks for many companies. In this context, establishing in-house CO₂-neutral electricity supply with battery storage is becoming strategically important. It reduces emissions, stabilizes energy costs, and decreases dependence on external markets. Consequently, it addresses both regulatory requirements and concrete economic risks in accordance with the ESRS.

Conclusion: ESRS as a steering instrument

The ESRS clearly shift the focus from pure data collection to assessing financial impacts and strategic risks. While CSRD reporting is mandatory for large companies, the ability to understand, quantify, and translate climate risks into concrete measures is crucial. Those who don’t start early not only meet regulatory requirements but also sustainably strengthen their own competitive position.

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