2.1 Understand ESG Policies and Processes
Define how your organisation manages each material sustainability topic
Why This Step Matters
Once you’ve identified which topics are material (in Step 1), the next question is:
How does your organisation manage each of these topics?
This is where policies and processes come in. For each material topic, Klappir‑Strategy helps you document how your organisation defines expectations, assigns responsibility, and takes action.
What Are ESG Policies?
A policy is a formal or informal statement of intent that guides how your organisation approaches a specific sustainability matter.
Policies typically include:
-
A commitment or principle (e.g. reduce emissions, ensure safety, prevent discrimination)
-
Who is responsible
-
The intended scope of the policy
Example
“We are committed to reducing Scope 1 and 2 emissions by 30% by 2030 through energy efficiency upgrades and staff engagement.”
What Are Processes?
A process describes how the policy is implemented in practice. It turns intentions into action.
Processes might include:
-
Internal procedures or workflows
-
Risk assessments and due diligence
-
Monitoring, audits, or training
-
Supplier controls or screening tools
Example
“All suppliers must complete an environmental risk self-assessment before onboarding.”
What the Standards Say
ESRS (Draft July 2025)
For each material topic, companies must disclose:
-
Whether they have a policy to manage the matter (ESRS 2 GOV‑1)
-
How the policy is implemented in practice (ESRS 2 GOV‑2)
-
How the policy is monitored and reviewed (ESRS 2 GOV‑3)
-
Related actions, resources, and results (topical standards, e.g. E1‑1, S1‑1, G1‑1)
If no policy exists for a material matter, the company must explain why and describe any plans to develop one.
VSME Standard
Organisations must report:
-
Whether they have practices, policies, or future initiatives for each applicable topic
-
Whether the policies include targets and who is accountable
Policies do not need to be formal documents but should show clear intent, structure, and accountability.
How Klappir‑Strategy Helps
In the Policies and Processes module, you can:
-
Upload existing policies or describe informal practices
-
Document how the topic is managed (governance, actions, monitoring)
-
Tag each entry to the relevant material topic
-
Identify gaps or areas for improvement
This creates a clear, auditable link between your materiality results and your sustainability management approach.
What to Include
For each material topic, document:
| Field | What to Include |
|---|---|
| Policy description | The organisation’s commitment and intent |
| Process or implementation | How the topic is managed operationally |
| Monitoring or review | How effectiveness is tracked (if applicable) |
| Future initiatives | Planned improvements or updates |
| Accountability | Who is responsible (role or function) |
You can also link or upload relevant documents, e.g. codes of conduct, ESG strategy, supplier requirements.
Where This Leads
This step lays the foundation for:
-
Objectives and Actions (Step 4)
-
Targets (Step 5)
-
Reporting (Step 7)
You’re building a clear chain from Materiality → Policy → Action → Reporting.
Outcome of Step 2.1
You now understand:
-
What ESG policies and processes are
-
How they relate to each material topic
-
What ESRS and VSME require in terms of disclosure
-
How Klappir‑Strategy helps you document and manage these effectively
Only material topics need policies. If a topic is material but lacks a policy, you can document that and explain plans to address the gap.
Go to the next step:
2.2 How to use the Policy and Processes module in Klappir-Strategy