What is the ESRS?
The ESRS stands for the European Sustainability Reporting Standards. It is a delegated legislation that sets the rules for corporate reporting in the European Union as required by the Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive (CSRD). See the Legislation page for a timeline of reporting deadlines.
The ESRS is a complex new reporting requirement for game businesses, requiring, for example: engaging with stakeholders, undertaking analyses of the business itself, its exposure to actual and potential climate risks, and quite possibly new data collection processes that will require implementation. The process of preparing and producing an ESRS-compliant report cannot be done at short notice, and most organisations should expect no less than several months of work.
If you are already familiar with the key features and structure of the ESRS – feel free to skip down to the ESRS Roadmap heading below.
The ESRS sets the requirements for what, how, and why companies must report their actual and potential impacts on the environment and society, as well as the organisation’s governance processes to manage these impacts. The goal of this process is to align business strategy, policies and production processes with the EU’s vision of a sustainable transition.
A key feature of the ESRS is that it does not require specific behaviours or actions from organisations – like reductions in business output or sales – it only specifies required disclosures, leaving decisions about what actions, strategies, policies and approaches to take up to each organisation.
While the ESRS is relatively “hands-off” in what to do, the SGA is “hands-on” and can help game businesses identify and adopt best practices. The SGA standard will also provide methodological guidance for the E1 “Climate Change” ESRS component, a highly complex topic that most game companies have little experience with, eliminating risks of under-reporting and minimising compliance hurdles.
Structure of the ESRS
The ESRS is divided into 3 main sections of varying length and complexity. In the ESRS delegated legislation itself, each section contains an appendix and “application requirements” that must be considered in certain circumstances when completing specific disclosures. Initial sections of the ESRS apply to every reporting entity and describe the concepts and key ideas informing the ESRS, later sections specify mandatory disclosures for all reporting entities, and the final sections determine specific topic-based disclosures that the reporting entity must decide for itself whether they are material – depending on your circumstance or situation, they may or may not be required. Complicating things further, some sections have a phased-in period for disclosures, and an initial opt-out window for certain first-time preparers.
If this sounds overwhelming – it certainly can be. However, the SGA is here to help you understand the requirements for your organisation.
Expand the boxes below for more details on the contents of each section.
The first “ESRS 1” is a set of core concepts that ESRS preparers should familiarise themselves with and refer back to when completing reporting. The SGA can provide guidance and training on these concepts.
The second “ESRS 2” is a series of mandatory disclosures every reporting entity must complete. These include: basic information about the organisation (BP1&2); how it manages environmental and social risks (GOV1-4); its business model and strategy touching on issues important to stakeholders and material risks across its entire value chain (SBM1-3); its processes and procedures to evaluate and address impacts, risks and opportunities from the green transition (IRO1-3); and a series of minimum disclosure requirements on policies (MDR–P), actions (MDR-A), metrics (MDR-M) specific targets to measure and track effectiveness (MDR-T).
The third part is a series of “topical ESRS” covering different types of Environmental impacts (E1-5), Social impacts (S1-4), and Governance (G1) disclosures. Most companies will have to complete some but not all sub-topics on specific issues (for example Topical ESRS E4 “Water and Marine Resources” is unlikely to be required for all but the largest game businesses) depending on whether the organisation has actual or potential material impacts in that area. A few topical ESRS sub-topics are mandatory and must be completed by all organisations, such as “ESRS E1 Climate Change” and “ESRS S1 Own Workforce”.
The ESRS also has provisions for sector-specific disclosures for high-impact industries. These are still in development (by EU institutions), and likely several years away at the earliest. They may also not be relevant to the games industry, intended more for industries like cement, chemicals, aviation and agriculture.
These could, however, impact game industry partners such as IT and other service providers, potentially adding future requirements at a future date. An SGA standard would pre-empt much of the requirements of a sector-specific ESRS standard.
The SGA ESRS Roadmap
So you want to know where to start, and what you need to do to comply with the CSRD – what’s the process for reporting according to the ESRS? The ESRS itself does not provide a clear step-by-step guide, as it is presented in a format that is mainly for “legal” purposes and as it is full of complex technical language that is not easy for most to comprehend. You can always read the actual text of the document on the European Commission website as it forms the official rules of the ESRS and are legally binding. However the official text is hundreds of pages long, so many people rely on third-party explanations and guides. EFRAG is the only official EU organisation responsible for explaining the ESRS and how to apply it. EFRAG has a number of “implementation guidance documents” which are extremely useful, and a Q&A platform to answer some of the more specific technical questions.
The SGA has been working hard to understand the requirements of the ESRS guided by the text of the ESRS legislation, the EFRAG implementation guidance and EFRAG Q&A platform. Informed by this, and by the experience of ESG experts who are implementing the ESRS at their own game businesses, we have produced the following roadmap for game companies. Given the complexity of the legislation and implementing it (especially for the first time), we have done our best to keep it as simple as possible without missing essential details that might matter to your organisation, however, if in doubt, the ESRS text itself and official EFRAG guidance documents should take precedence over SGA advice. We will do our best to correct any mistakes or omissions made known to us. Please get in touch if you see or even suspect an issue with any part of the SGA ESRS roadmap.
The SGA understanding of how companies should progress through the ESRS reporting process involves five stages. Detailed instructions for each stage can be found by following the links to SGA resources designed for game businesses to achieve the outcomes required by this complex legislation. This main page provides a high-level overview, and some key summaries, click through to the associated subpage for the full instructions.
Stage 1 – Familiarisation
Stage one involves some basic skilling-up that we recommend ESRS preparers undertake. The goal is to become familiar with four key concepts that the ESRS applies, some preparers may already be familiar with, some may be brand new, and some may have slightly different definitions from past approaches.
The key concepts are: double materiality (impacts from and impacts on both people and planet), characteristics of information (specific criteria for what ‘counts’ as information, or what makes a kind of disclosure relevant), due diligence (the processes and procedures in place for managing sustainability impacts and risks), stakeholders (with the ESRS requiring a particular understanding of who and what a stakeholder is that may go beyond existing approaches), and value chain (with an holistic focus that extends beyond immediate suppliers and business partners).
For a more detailed guide to this stage, and links to SGA resources see the Stage 1 – ESRS Core Concepts page.
Traditional financial materiality is concerned with factors that might impact the bottom line of the organisation. This might be increased costs of resources, the entity’s position in the market, its brand and reputation, or its capacity to develop new products and services.
Double materiality means considering these elements as well as the impacts that the organisation has on the environment, society and others. For games businesses, this might mean impacts like the emission of greenhouse gasses, the production of waste, the impact on employees of culture and policy in the workplace, and the particular monetization strategies and impacts on vulnerable gamers, like children.
The ESRS has an entire appendix (ESRS 1, Appendix B) dedicated to how preparers should think about the qualitative characteristics of “information”. This may seem like an academic exercise, but the ESRS requires an expansive understanding of what “matters” that encompasses all potential users of ESG information that might not have been previously considered.
In brief, disclosures must be completed primarily with “relevance and faithful representation” in mind, and information is considered relevant “when it may make a difference in the decisions of users under a double materiality approach”.
There are also requirements that specify information is disclosed in a way such that it enables “comparability, verifiability and understandability.” For games companies, this means disclosing information in similar or comparable ways to other companies – this is made much simpler and easier with adoption of the SGA Standard.
Due diligence describes the processes that an organisation uses to manage, minimise, and respond to risks – including the ESRS preparation process. Importantly, the “ESRS do not impose any conduct requirements in relation to due diligence” (ESRS 1.4.58) – you do not have to change any existing due diligence process (though you might find you want to after preparing for the ESRS). Organisations are only required to disclose their processes.
There are many resources that describe and inform best practices for business due diligence – in particular, the OECD due diligence guidelines, which the SGA ESRS roadmap will refer to in our guidance.
The ESRS takes an expansive view of who or what a stakeholder is. It introduces two types. The first is affected stakeholders such as “individuals or groups whose interests are affected or could be affected – positively or negatively” by the organisation and its activities. The second type of stakeholders are users of sustainability statements. This includes familiar groups like existing or potential investors, lenders, analysts, asset managers, and so on. But it also means parts of civil society, business partners and suppliers, trade unions, NGOs, academics, researchers and any other organisations that use or rely on accurate sustainability information.
A core requirement of the ESRS is to treat the boundaries of sustainability reporting in the same way as financial reporting, and this extends the requirement to make sustainability assessments and disclosures cover the “direct and indirect business relationships in the upstream and/or downstream value chain”.
This does not necessarily mean listing every actor in the entire value chain of the production of your game, however. What it obliges organisations to do is consider the entire value chain and – particularly regarding impacts, risks and opportunities – include value chain actors in your disclosures about material issues on this subject.
It might mean considering and disclosing the impacts of using a new service provider, or it might mean considering and disclosing the sustainability risks associated with expanding development to a new hardware platform with higher end-user energy consumption. It could also mean reporting the opportunities from switching to moving to more energy–efficient offices.
Stage 2 – Preparation
Stage two involves a number of key preparatory activities, including some desk research and initial activities. It starts with identifying stakeholders – such as investors, key suppliers, industry partners and platforms – as organisations are expected to engage with stakeholders to identify material issues.
At the same time, ESRS preparers will begin to formulate an understanding and description of their organisation’s business model including mapping the value chain that supports your production process.
Additionally, we recommend examining your existing due diligence processes and procedures to make sure they are in line with recommendations for best practices.
For a more detailed description of this stage, and links to SGA resources see the Stage 2 – Preparation page.
Stage 3 – Materiality and impacts analysis
Stage three takes the understanding developed in the preparation stage and applies a double materiality lens
For a more detailed description of this stage, and links to SGA resources see the Stage 3 – Materiality and Impact Analysis page.
Stage 4 – Data collection and gap analysis
This stage involves undertaking a “gap analysis” of your current data collection processes, what you already have access to and knowledge of, and what data you will need to begin collecting in order to meet the disclosure requirements of both cross-cutting ESRS 2 and topical ESRS E1-5, S1-4 and G1 (for those topics which you have determined are materially relevant).
For a more detailed description of this stage, and links to SGA resources see the Stage 3 – Materiality and Impact Analysis page.
Stage 5 – Report drafting and assurance
The final stage involves collecting the required data, drafting the report following the required structure of the ESRS document and ensuring compatibility with the required format (XML), and collating a list of mandatory data points to be disclosed. This is the final stage, and ends with submission of your report to your auditor for assurance. Once signed off, your report can be submitted to the EU digital reporting platform, and you can publish your report.
For a more detailed description of this stage, and links to SGA resources see the Stage 3 – Materiality and Impact Analysis page.