
KoSIF Issue Brief - Current
Status and Tasks of Water Risk and Disclosure for Korean Companies
The water risks
inherent in Korea’s core industries have transcended simple environmental
issues and are now manifesting as substantial financial threats. Concurrently,
a multi-layered disclosure landscape is emerging, combining institutional
mandates such as the EU ESRS E3 with increasing information demands from
capital markets and global customers (e.g., TNFD, IFRS). This 'KoSIF Issue
Brief' presents integrated response strategies and insights to enhance
corporate reporting efficiency.
This issue brief
diagnoses, through objective data, that water risk exacerbated by climate
change has been elevated to a core "financial risk" directly linked
to a company's financing and production stability, moving beyond mere
environmental metrics. Furthermore, it examines the current status of
multi-layered global regulations (ESRS E3, TNFD, IFRS) and the mandatory
information requirements of global clients, while analyzing the gap in
competitiveness arising from the domestic industry's continued reliance on
voluntary disclosures.
Through this brief,
corporate executives and disclosure practitioners can clearly grasp the latest
pressure from global regulations and capital markets surrounding water
disclosure. Notably, rather than responding individually to the fragmented
requirements of multiple disclosure frameworks, this brief identifies an
efficient integrated response strategy: leveraging 'CDP Water Security' as a
single tool to simultaneously satisfy core requirements. Additionally, it
highlights strategic opportunities to reduce actual financing costs by linking
water disclosure data with Sustainability-Linked Loans (SLLs).
[Table of Contents]
- Expansion
of Water Information Disclosure Demands by Global Stakeholders
- - Water disclosure requests
from major global corporations
- - Water disclosure requests
from global financial institutions and investors
- Current
Status of Water Risks
- Financial
Impact of Water Risks
- Regulatory
Trends in Water Disclosure
- - Global: Expansion of
mandatory water disclosure through ESRS E3, TNFD, and IFRS
- - Korea: Centered on voluntary
disclosure
- Implications:
Response Directions for Domestic Companies
- - CDP Water Security
- - Comprehensive Summary
- References
[Key Findings]
- - Structural
Water Risk Vulnerability and Risks of Domestic Companies:
According to 2025 CDP response data, 49% of domestic companies extract
water from water-stressed regions, and 77% have identified significant
physical water risks such as floods and droughts. Korea’s core industries,
including pharmaceuticals (88.5%), industrial goods (61.2%), and IT
(60.4%), show high water intensity with over 50% of water extraction
occurring in water-stressed regions.
- - Insufficient
Identification and Quantification of Financial Impacts of Water Risks:
Despite such high-risk industrial structures, domestic CDP Water Security
respondents estimate the average financial impact per water risk incident
at approximately 33 million KRW. This is significantly lower than the 11.4
billion KRW calculated for climate change risks, indicating a low level of
awareness regarding water risks and suggesting that the field is still in
its nascent stage compared to climate change.
- - Global
Mandates vs. Domestic Voluntary Disclosure: While the global market is
expanding mandatory water disclosure even to non-EU companies through the
EU CSRD (ESRS E3), TNFD, and IFRS S2, Korea remains at a stage of
voluntary disclosure, lacking integrated and mandatory water disclosure
norms for private enterprises.
- - Securing
Efficiency Through Integrated Response Tools: To mitigate the immense
administrative and cost burdens caused by regulatory fragmentation,
participation in 'CDP Water Security' is proposed as the most realistic
and cost-effective disclosure response strategy. It enables companies to
fulfill 50–80% of the core requirements of various frameworks, including
ESRS E3, GRI 303, and TNFD, through a single questionnaire.
[Read the Issue Brief (Korean)]
Inquiry: Nahyun Nam, Senior
Researcher (nhn5505@kosif.org)