Install
openclaw skills install @mohitagw15856/esg-disclosure-draftDraft an honest, audit-ready ESG disclosure section in a CSRD/ESRS-flavored structure, adaptable to other frameworks. Use when asked to write a sustainability report section, draft an ESRS or CSRD disclosure, prepare an ESG section for an annual report, or turn raw sustainability data into disclosure text. Produces a disclosure draft with double-materiality framing, metric-methodology-limitation triplets, based forward statements, and explicit data-gap handling.
openclaw skills install @mohitagw15856/esg-disclosure-draftDisclosure text fails in two ways: it overclaims (greenwash, assurance findings) or it hides gaps (omission, restatement risk). This skill drafts a section that survives both an assurer and a skeptical reader — every metric travels with its methodology and limitation, and missing data is disclosed, not disappeared. It drafts; it does not give legal or compliance advice.
Ask for these if not provided; from a thin brief, draft with labelled assumptions and mark every invented placeholder value as [to confirm] rather than refusing:
1. Double-materiality framing. Open the section by stating why this matters on both axes: the organization's impact on people/environment (impact materiality) and the topic's effect on the organization's finances (financial materiality). If only one axis is material, say which and why the other was assessed as not material.
2. Metric–methodology–limitation triplets. Never publish a bare number. Each metric gets three parts:
| Part | Rule |
|---|---|
| Metric | Figure, unit, period, boundary |
| Methodology | How it was produced: measured, calculated (which factors/model), estimated, or proxy — and any change vs prior year |
| Limitation | What the number does not cover, its uncertainty, and known weaknesses |
3. Forward statements with basis. Every target or projection names its basis: baseline year, scenario or assumption set, dependencies (e.g. grid decarbonization, supplier action), and whether it is a commitment or an ambition. No basis available → downgrade the language to intent and say the basis is being developed.
4. Honest gap handling. For each required datapoint that is missing: state that it is not yet reported, why, what interim proxy (if any) is used and its weakness, and when it will be reported. A disclosed gap is defensible; an omitted one is a finding.
5. Plain-language discipline. Prefer "reduced scope 1 emissions 8% against a 2023 baseline" over "continued our climate leadership journey". Strip adjectives that a metric doesn't support.
1. Materiality statement — impact and financial materiality conclusions, assessment method in one sentence, stakeholders affected.
2. Policies, actions, and resources — what the organization does about this topic, stated as verifiable facts (dates, coverage, owners), not aspirations.
3. Metrics — the triplet table (metric / methodology / limitation), plus prior-year comparatives and restatement notes where methodology changed.
4. Targets and forward statements — each with baseline, timeframe, basis, and dependencies. Distinguish commitments from ambitions.
5. Data gaps and roadmap — what is not reported yet, why, interim proxies, and the collection timeline.
6. Compliance review checklist — the specific datapoints and claims the compliance team must verify before publication.
Include this line in the artifact: "This is a working draft. Verify required datapoints, phase-in reliefs, and wording against the applicable standard and regulation (e.g. ESRS, local transposition) with your compliance team and legal counsel before publication."
[to confirm]CSRD/ESRS disclosure architecture (double materiality, policies–actions–metrics–targets structure, phase-in and gap disclosure practice), adaptable to ISSB/GRI-style reports.