[wpcode id=”13916″]

UK unveils draft sustainability reporting standards (SRS): a new era for corporate transparency begins

[wpcode id=”13921″]

Big changes are coming for UK companies when it comes to how they report on sustainability and climate-related risks. The UK government has officially released the exposure drafts of its first-ever UK Sustainability Reporting Standards (UK SRS) — setting the stage for a future where ESG reporting will be more consistent, comparable, and investor-ready.

Built on the backbone of international frameworks, these new standards — UK SRS S1 and UK SRS S2 — aim to align the UK with global best practices while tailoring the details for domestic law and business reality.

You can dive straight into the consultation materials here, or if you’re keen to see the draft documents themselves:

What are the UK SRS and why now?

The world is moving fast when it comes to ESG disclosures. Investors are demanding clarity, regulators are raising the bar, and companies are trying to keep up with overlapping standards from all directions. In this context, the UK’s move to introduce its own sustainability reporting standards is both strategic and overdue.

These new standards are based almost word-for-word on the IFRS Sustainability Disclosure Standards (developed by the ISSB), which launched globally in 2023. The UK versions make light edits  tweaking legal language, adapting references to UK laws, and making sure everything fits smoothly into the British regulatory system.

Let’s break down what’s inside these drafts.

UK SRS S1: The sustainability reporting playbook

Think of S1 as the master guide for how companies should disclose sustainability-related risks and opportunities — no matter the topic (climate, biodiversity, social issues, you name it).

Key principles in S1:

Structure-wise, S1 follows four big themes:

So far, so familiar — but this sets a legally consistent foundation for sustainability reporting in the UK.

UK SRS S2: a deep dive into climate

If S1 is the map, S2 is the climate-specific GPS. It drills down into climate-related disclosures, aligning tightly with the TCFD framework and extending it with more granular requirements.

Highlights of S2 include:

These aren’t fluffy ambitions — they’re hard requirements designed to make climate-related risks real, measurable, and visible to the market.

What’s been “UK-ified”?

Here’s what’s different in the UK version compared to the international baseline:

The idea is to maintain global interoperability (so multinationals aren’t stuck reporting in 10 different ways) while also ensuring the standards work legally and practically in a UK setting.

Who needs to pay attention?

While no company is suddenly forced to use these standards overnight, the writing is on the wall. Here’s who should start paying close attention:

What’s next?

The consultation runs until 14 August 2025, and the UK government is actively seeking feedback from:

Depending on the feedback, the final standards could be adopted and operational in 2026, with phased timelines based on company size and sector.You can access the full consultation document and submit your feedback here.

Notizie correlate