IFRS S1 & S2
IFRS S1 & S2 — ESG reporting standard overview with scope, requirements, and implementation guidance. Open-access sustainability resource.
IFRS S1 & S2 — ESG reporting standard overview with scope, requirements, and implementation guidance. Open-access sustainability resource.
The IFRS Sustainability Disclosure Standards (IFRS S1 and S2) establish the global baseline for sustainability-related financial disclosures, issued by the International Sustainability Standards Board (ISSB) in June 2023. These standards require entities to disclose material information about sustainability-related risks and opportunities that could affect enterprise value, with IFRS S1 providing general requirements and IFRS S2 focusing specifically on climate-related disclosures.12
IFRS S1 establishes the foundation for sustainability-related financial disclosures across all sustainability topics. The standard requires entities to provide information about sustainability-related risks and opportunities that could reasonably be expected to affect the entity's cash flows, access to finance, or cost of capital over the short, medium, or long term.3
Core disclosure requirements follow a four-pillar structure:
The standard applies to all material sustainability-related risks and opportunities, not limited to climate. Entities must consider the SASB Standards and industry-specific metrics when determining disclosure topics.4
IFRS S2 builds on the general requirements of S1 with specific climate-related disclosure requirements. The standard is aligned with the Task Force on Climate-related Financial Disclosures (TCFD) recommendations and incorporates climate-specific metrics from the SASB Standards.5
Key climate disclosure requirements:
IFRS S2 requires disclosure of Scope 3 emissions with a one-year transition relief period, recognizing the complexity of value chain emissions measurement.6
The ISSB Standards represent the culmination of years of fragmentation in sustainability reporting. By consolidating the Climate Disclosure Standards Board (CDSB) and Value Reporting Foundation (VRF, including SASB Standards), the ISSB created a unified framework that meets investor information needs while reducing reporting burden.7
Key advantages:
As of 2026, over 20 jurisdictions have committed to adopting or aligning with ISSB Standards:
| Region | Status | Effective Date |
|---|---|---|
| United Kingdom | Endorsed by FRC | 2024 (voluntary), 2025+ (mandatory phasing) |
| European Union | Interoperable with ESRS | 2024 |
| Singapore | Mandatory for listed entities | 2025 |
| Hong Kong | Mandatory for listed entities | 2025 |
| Japan | Endorsed by SSBJ | 2025 |
| Australia | Mandatory phased adoption | 2025-2027 |
| Canada | Endorsed by AcSB | 2025 |
| Brazil | Mandatory for listed entities | 2026 |
The International Organization of Securities Commissions (IOSCO) endorsed the ISSB Standards in July 2023, signaling global regulatory acceptance.8
Entities must apply a financial materiality lens: information is material if omitting, misstating, or obscuring it could reasonably influence decisions of primary users (investors, lenders, creditors). This differs from the double materiality approach in ESRS, which also considers impact materiality.9
Materiality determination process:
IFRS S2 requires Scope 3 emissions disclosure using the GHG Protocol Corporate Value Chain (Scope 3) Standard. Entities must disclose:
Transition relief: Entities are not required to disclose Scope 3 emissions in the first year of adoption, but must disclose the reason for omission and timeline for inclusion.10
For climate-related risks that could reasonably affect financial position, entities must use scenario analysis to assess resilience. This typically involves:
The standard does not mandate specific scenarios, but many entities use the Network for Greening the Financial System (NGFS) scenarios or International Energy Agency (IEA) pathways.11
The Hong Kong Exchanges and Clearing (HKEX) requires listed issuers to comply with IFRS S1 and S2 (or equivalent) for fiscal years beginning on or after January 1, 2025. Entities must disclose climate-related information in ESG reports, with Scope 3 emissions required from 2026.12
HK-specific requirements:
The Singapore Exchange (SGX) mandates climate-related disclosures aligned with ISSB Standards for all listed entities from FY2025. The Accounting and Corporate Regulatory Authority (ACRA) is developing a sustainability reporting framework based on ISSB Standards for broader corporate adoption.13
While the EU has its own European Sustainability Reporting Standards (ESRS) under the Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive (CSRD), the European Commission designed ESRS to be interoperable with IFRS S1 and S2. Entities reporting under ESRS can map disclosures to meet ISSB requirements with minimal additional effort.14
Part of ESG Hub | Curated by Ascent Partners Foundation
IFRS S1 General Requirements — IFRS Foundation ↩
IFRS S2 Climate-related Disclosures — IFRS Foundation ↩
IFRS S1 Official Standard (PDF) — ISSB, June 2023 ↩
IAS Plus: IFRS S1 Summary — Deloitte, June 2023 ↩
IFRS S2 Official Standard (PDF) — ISSB, June 2023 ↩
What You Need to Know About IFRS S2 — EY, June 2023 ↩
Introduction to ISSB and IFRS Sustainability Disclosure Standards — IFRS Foundation ↩
IOSCO Endorsement of ISSB Standards — IOSCO, July 2023 ↩
Overview of IFRS S1 and IFRS S2 — Grant Thornton, August 2023 ↩
IFRS S1 and IFRS S2 Key Differences and Deadlines — Mitiga Solutions, October 2025 ↩
ISSB Issues Sustainability Disclosure Standards — Deloitte DART, June 2023 ↩
HKEX ESG Reporting Guide — Hong Kong Exchanges and Clearing ↩
SGX Sustainability Reporting — Singapore Exchange ↩
ESRS and ISSB Interoperability — EFRAG, 2023 ↩