Double materiality assessment is a fundamental concept in ESG reporting that Australian organisations must understand as mandatory climate disclosure requirements take effect. The Australian Sustainability Reporting Standards (ASRS) adopt double materiality, requiring organisations to assess and disclose both financial and impact materiality.
What is Double Materiality?
Double materiality recognises that ESG information can be material from two perspectives:
- Financial materiality (outside-in): How sustainability issues affect the organisation’s financial position, performance, and cash flows
- Impact materiality (inside-out): How the organisation’s activities impact people, communities, and the environment
For full materiality, an issue must be material from at least one perspective. Some issues are material from both perspectives, creating a comprehensive view of sustainability relevance.

ASRS Double Materiality Requirements
The Australian Sustainability Reporting Standards require climate-related financial disclosures based on double materiality assessment:
- AASB S2 Climate-related Disclosures: Requires assessment of climate-related risks and opportunities material to financial statements
- Scope 3 emissions: Must disclose if material, based on double materiality assessment
- Climate resilience: Scenario analysis required for material climate risks
Organisations must document their materiality assessment methodology, criteria, and outcomes for assurance and regulatory review.
Financial Materiality Assessment
Financial materiality focuses on how sustainability matters affect enterprise value. The assessment considers:
- Risk factors: Climate risks that could affect revenue, assets, liabilities, or cost of capital
- Opportunity factors: Sustainability developments that could enhance competitive position
- Time horizons: Short-term (1-2 years), medium-term (2-5 years), long-term (5+ years)
- Magnitude thresholds: Quantitative or qualitative criteria for significance
Financial materiality aligns with traditional financial materiality concepts used in Australian Accounting Standards.
See our Climate Risk Assessment Framework for detailed guidance on climate risk identification.

Impact Materiality Assessment
Impact materiality considers the organisation’s effects on people and environment. Assessment criteria include:
- Scale: The severity of impact — positive or negative
- Scope: The reach of the impact across affected communities and ecosystems
- Irremediability: Whether the impact can be reversed or restored
- Likelihood: The probability of the impact occurring
Impact materiality often captures sustainability matters that financial materiality may overlook, particularly environmental and social impacts not yet reflected in financial metrics.
Conducting a Double Materiality Assessment
Effective double materiality assessment follows a structured process:
1. Establish Context
Document the organisation’s activities, business model, value chain, and stakeholder relationships. Identify relevant sector-specific ESG topics and emerging issues.
2. Identify ESG Topics
Develop a comprehensive list of potential material topics using:
- Sustainability reporting frameworks (GRI, SASB, ISSB)
- Industry guidance and peer analysis
- Stakeholder engagement and feedback
- Regulatory requirements and guidance
3. Assess Materiality
Evaluate each topic from both financial and impact perspectives:
- Document assessment criteria and thresholds
- Engage subject matter experts across functions
- Consider stakeholder views and expectations
- Apply consistent methodology across topics
4. Validate and Prioritise
Review materiality outcomes with leadership and validate conclusions:
- Executive oversight of material topics
- Board or committee approval
- Prioritisation for disclosure and action

Stakeholder Engagement
Stakeholder engagement strengthens materiality assessment validity:
- Investors: Understand ESG information needs for capital allocation decisions
- Employees: Insights on workplace conditions and labour practices
- Communities: Local environmental and social impacts
- Customers: Product sustainability and supply chain concerns
- Regulators: Compliance expectations and emerging requirements
Engagement methods include surveys, interviews, focus groups, and ongoing consultation mechanisms.
Materiality Matrix Development
The materiality matrix visualises double materiality outcomes:
- X-axis: Financial materiality (impact on enterprise value)
- Y-axis: Impact materiality (impact on people and environment)
- Plotting: Position topics based on assessment scores
- Prioritisation: Topics in top-right quadrant are highly material from both perspectives
The matrix provides a clear visual summary for disclosure and stakeholder communication.
Documentation and Disclosure
ASRS requires disclosure of materiality assessment methodology:
- Process description: How materiality was assessed
- Criteria and thresholds: Quantitative and qualitative factors used
- Stakeholder input: How stakeholder perspectives were considered
- Material topics: Outcomes and disclosure decisions
Thorough documentation supports assurance readiness and regulatory compliance.
Common Challenges
Organisations often encounter these challenges:
- Data availability: Limited data for impact assessment
- Threshold setting: Defining appropriate materiality thresholds
- Value chain scope: Extending assessment beyond operations
- Stakeholder representation: Ensuring diverse stakeholder input
- Subjectivity: Managing judgment in impact assessment
Structured methodology and clear documentation address these challenges systematically.
How ESG Solutions Can Help
ESG Solutions supports Australian organisations with double materiality assessment:
- Methodology design: Develop fit-for-purpose assessment framework
- Stakeholder engagement: Facilitate consultation and input gathering
- Materiality workshops: Structured sessions with cross-functional teams
- Documentation: Comprehensive records for assurance and compliance
- ASRS alignment: Ensure assessment meets regulatory requirements
Contact ESG Solutions for double materiality assessment support.
Key Takeaways
- Double materiality requires assessment from both financial and impact perspectives
- ASRS mandates climate-related disclosures based on materiality assessment
- Stakeholder engagement strengthens assessment validity
- Documentation of methodology is essential for assurance readiness
- Regular review ensures materiality reflects changing business conditions