What Are ESRS Standards? European Sustainability Reporting Standards Explained
If you're running a mid-to-large company with EU operations and you haven't started thinking about ESRS yet, you're already late. This isn't an opinion — the first wave of mandatory filings under the Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive (CSRD) began in 2025, and the compliance surface area is enormous.
Here's the unvarnished explainer.
The Short Answer
ESRS stands for European Sustainability Reporting Standards. They are a set of mandatory disclosure standards developed by EFRAG (European Financial Reporting Advisory Group) under the EU's CSRD. Think of them as IFRS but for sustainability data — structured, auditable, and cross-comparable.
The CSRD replaced the older Non-Financial Reporting Directive (NFRD), which was widely criticized for producing vague, unverifiable ESG narrative. ESRS are the teeth.
The Standard Architecture
ESRS are organized in three tiers:
Cross-cutting standards (apply to all):
- ESRS 1 — General requirements (structure, materiality, timeframes)
- ESRS 2 — General disclosures (governance, strategy, risk management)
Environmental (E):
- E1 — Climate change (Scope 1, 2, 3 emissions)
- E2 — Pollution
- E3 — Water and marine resources
- E4 — Biodiversity and ecosystems
- E5 — Resource use and circular economy
Social (S):
- S1 — Own workforce
- S2 — Workers in the value chain
- S3 — Affected communities
- S4 — Consumers and end-users
Governance (G):
- G1 — Business conduct (anti-corruption, lobbying, supplier relationships)
Not every standard is mandatory for every company. ESRS 1 and 2 are always required. The topic-specific standards (E1–G1) kick in based on a double materiality assessment — you disclose on topics that are material either because they affect your business financially, or because your business affects the environment/society. Often both.
Who Must Comply?
The CSRD rolls out in phases:
| Phase | Entities | First Report | |---|---|---| | 1 | Large PIEs (>500 employees) already under NFRD | FY2024 (filed 2025) | | 2 | All large EU companies (>250 employees OR >€40M revenue OR >€20M assets — hitting 2 of 3) | FY2025 (filed 2026) | | 3 | Listed SMEs, small non-complex credit institutions, captive insurers | FY2026 (filed 2027) | | 4 | Non-EU companies with €150M+ EU net turnover and at least one EU subsidiary/branch | FY2028 (filed 2029) |
If you're a US or APAC company with a meaningful EU footprint, Phase 4 catches you.
What Makes ESRS Hard
The surface area is the first shock. A full CSRD/ESRS report can require disclosures across hundreds of data points — Scope 3 supply chain emissions, workforce gender pay gap by category, biodiversity impact assessments, due diligence processes for human rights. This isn't something you produce in a spreadsheet over a weekend.
The second shock is double materiality. You need to formally assess and document why each topic is or isn't material. That assessment itself is subject to audit.
The third challenge is interoperability. ESRS are partially aligned with GRI, TCFD, and SASB, but not identical. If you're already reporting under those frameworks, expect to remap — not just copy-paste.
How Technology Is Changing ESRS Compliance
Most companies hitting Phase 2 requirements are discovering that their data lives in 12 different systems: ERP, HR platforms, supplier portals, utility bills in someone's inbox, travel expense tools. Before you can report, you need data infrastructure.
This is where purpose-built ESG platforms (Persefoni, Watershed, Sweep, Greenly) and AI-powered data pipelines come in. Automated extraction from invoices, supplier questionnaire processing, Scope 3 emission factor matching — tasks that took teams of consultants weeks can now run in hours with the right stack.
The catch: these tools require integration work. Your ERP schema isn't plug-and-play with any of them.
Key Takeaways
- ESRS are mandatory EU sustainability disclosure standards under CSRD — not voluntary guidelines
- They cover environment, social, and governance topics across ~12 thematic standards
- Materiality determines which topics you disclose; the assessment process itself is reportable
- Phase 2 companies (most large EU businesses) file their first ESRS report in 2026
- Collecting the underlying data is typically the biggest bottleneck — start building data pipelines now
Running an engineering team trying to make sense of ESRS data infrastructure? That's exactly the kind of problem we solve.
Related: What is CSRD? · What is Double Materiality Assessment? · Scope 3 Emissions Explained · Persefoni vs Watershed: ESG Platform Comparison
Further Reading
- CSRD Compliance for Tech Companies 2026 — What tech startups need to know about the Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive
- Building an ESG Data Pipeline — Technical architecture for collecting and reporting ESG metrics
- How AI Is Transforming ESG Reporting — Using LLMs and automation to streamline sustainability reporting
Compare: Manual vs Automated ESG Reporting · Persefoni vs Watershed
Browse all terms: AI Glossary · Our services: ESG Compliance