As the European Union progresses toward a unified sustainability reporting system under the Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive (CSRD), the coexistence of voluntary and mandatory frameworks presents both challenges and opportunities for preparers. A key development in harmonising these frameworks is the mapping of the EU Eco-Management and Audit Scheme (EMAS) against the European Sustainability Reporting Standards (ESRS), spearheaded by the European Financial Reporting Advisory Group (EFRAG) and the European Commission’s Directorate-General for Environment (DG ENV).
This article provides a technical overview of the mapping exercise, assesses interoperability between the frameworks, and offers practical insights for practitioners seeking to leverage existing EMAS reporting processes to meet ESRS requirements.
Background: understanding EMAS and ESRS
The EMAS Regulation (EC) No 1221/2009, a voluntary EU-wide framework, provides guidelines for organisations to evaluate, manage, and improve their environmental performance. It requires participants to produce an independently verified Environmental Statement, aligned with the EMAS annexes (notably Annex IV).
In contrast, the ESRS—developed by EFRAG under the CSRD—establish a mandatory and comprehensive sustainability reporting framework applicable to large companies and listed SMEs operating in the EU. These standards cover environmental, social, and governance topics and must be reported in machine-readable, structured formats beginning in 2025 for certain companies.
To support convergence, EFRAG and DG ENV conducted a detailed technical mapping of EMAS’ reporting requirements against the cross-cutting and topical standards within the first set of ESRS, formally adopted by the European Commission on 31 July 2023 download document here (pdf).
Key output: EMAS–ESRS mapping matrix
The core output of this alignment effort is the EMAS–ESRS Mapping Matrix, now available on the EMAS website or you can download it here (excel). This document:
- Compares the EMAS Annex IV requirements with relevant ESRS datapoints.
- Highlights areas of conceptual and technical overlap.
- Identifies complementary requirements and potential reporting gaps.
Example use case:
An EMAS-registered manufacturing company already disclosing data on energy consumption, emissions, and environmental policy objectives can align these disclosures with ESRS E1 (Climate Change), especially:
- E1-5: Energy consumption and mix.
- E1-6: Scope 1, 2, and 3 GHG emissions.
- E1-1: Transition plan for climate change mitigation.
By using the mapping matrix, the company can determine which EMAS disclosures fully or partially satisfy these ESRS requirements and where additional information may be needed.
Technical interoperability: what does the mapping reveal?
The mapping confirms that EMAS provides a solid foundation for meeting several ESRS environmental disclosures, particularly within ESRS E1–E5. The alignment is strongest in the following areas:
1. Environmental management systems (EMS) and governance
- EMAS requires a fully operational EMS, internal audits, and corrective actions. These elements support disclosures under ESRS G1 (Governance) and ESRS 2 GOV-1 (The role of administrative, management and supervisory bodies in sustainability matters).
2. Performance metrics and targets
- EMAS Annex IV includes KPIs and performance against environmental targets, which are directly relevant to ESRS E1-3, E2-3, etc.
3. Policy disclosures
- EMAS requires publication of an Environmental Statement, which typically outlines environmental policies and performance—a clear overlap with ESRS requirements in E1-1 to E1-4.
However, the mapping also reveals:
- EMAS does not fully cover social and governance aspects required by the ESRS (e.g. ESRS S1-S4, G1).
- There are format and digitisation gaps, as EMAS disclosures are generally narrative and unstructured, whereas ESRS requires taggable data, aligned with the EFRAG ESRS XBRL taxonomy.
Practical implications for EMAS-registered organisations
Organisations currently reporting under EMAS can use the mapping exercise to:
- Conduct a gap analysis: Identify which ESRS disclosures are already covered by EMAS and which require additional reporting.
- Leverage existing controls and audits: Use EMAS’ structured approach to environmental data verification as a foundation for the limited assurance required under CSRD.
- Plan for system upgrades: Update reporting tools to comply with digital tagging and machine-readability via ESRS XBRL standards.
Implementation example:
A logistics company participating in EMAS might integrate its verified energy efficiency and fuel use data into its ESRS E1-5 disclosures, while expanding data collection to include social metrics for ESRS S1 and governance data for ESRS G1.
Supporting convergence with EU sustainability policy
This mapping initiative supports the European Green Deal and the Circular Economy Action Plan by ensuring that voluntary efforts (like EMAS) contribute meaningfully to the mandatory corporate sustainability reporting regime.
It also strengthens the credibility of EMAS as a stepping stone toward full CSRD compliance and reinforces the EU’s objective to streamline ESG disclosures, reduce administrative burdens, and enhance transparency across sectors.
Conclusion: strategic benefits of alignment
For practitioners, aligning EMAS with ESRS offers a pragmatic, phased approach to CSRD readiness. By using the EMAS–ESRS mapping matrix, organisations can:
- Capitalise on verified EMAS data.
- Minimise duplication of effort.
- Accelerate their sustainability reporting maturity.