Climate Scenario Analysis for IFRS S2: A Step-by-Step Guide for Mexican Companies
Climate Scenario Analysis for IFRS S2: A Step-by-Step Guide for Mexican Companies
IFRS S2 requires companies to conduct climate scenario analysis to assess the resilience of their strategy under different climate futures. For Mexican listed companies (BMV/BIVA), this means selecting at least two climate scenarios — one consistent with 1.5°C or well-below-2°C warming — identifying material physical and transition risks, and disclosing the impact on their business model and financial position. This guide walks through the process step by step.
What Is Climate Scenario Analysis?
Climate scenario analysis is a structured way to explore how different possible climate futures could affect your business. It is not a forecast — it's a tool for testing the resilience of your strategy under a range of plausible futures.
IFRS S2 requires climate scenario analysis because:
Climate risks are material to financial performance over medium and long time horizons
Companies need to demonstrate they understand and have planned for these risks
Investors and regulators need comparable, structured information
Scenarios You Can Use
IFRS S2 doesn't mandate specific scenarios but recommends using publicly available, established scenarios:
Scenario Source | Key Scenarios | Temperature Outcome |
|---|---|---|
IEA (International Energy Agency) | Net Zero Emissions by 2050 (NZE) | 1.5°C |
IEA | Stated Policies Scenario (STEPS) | ~2.5°C |
IEA | Announced Pledges Scenario (APS) | ~1.7°C |
NGFS (Network for Greening the Financial System) | Net Zero 2050 | 1.5°C |
NGFS | Current Policies | ~3°C |
IPCC | SSP1-1.9 | 1.5°C |
IPCC | SSP5-8.5 | 4-5°C (high warming) |
Recommendation for Mexican companies: Use IEA NZE 2050 (1.5°C transition scenario) and IEA STEPS or NGFS Current Policies (higher warming / physical risk scenario). This covers both transition and physical risk perspectives.
Step-by-Step Process
Step 1: Scope the analysis
Define:
Time horizons: short (0-5 years), medium (5-10), long (10-30 years)
Business units or geographies to include
Which risks are likely material (based on your industry and operations)
Step 2: Select your scenarios
Choose at least two scenarios — one low-carbon transition (1.5°C or well-below-2°C) and one higher-warming scenario that emphasizes physical risks. Document why you chose those scenarios.
Step 3: Identify climate risks and opportunities
For each scenario, identify which of these apply to your business:
Transition risks (more severe in low-carbon scenarios):
Policy risks: carbon pricing, emissions regulations, product standards
Legal risks: climate litigation, regulatory non-compliance
Market risks: changing customer preferences, shifts in commodity markets
Technology risks: cost of transitioning to low-carbon technologies
Reputational risks: perception of climate performance
Physical risks (more severe in high-warming scenarios):
Acute: hurricanes, floods, wildfires, extreme precipitation
Chronic: rising sea levels, heat stress, water scarcity, changing precipitation patterns
For Mexico specifically:
Risk Type | Examples |
|---|---|
Physical - Acute | Hurricane intensity (Pacific and Gulf coasts), flood risk in major cities |
Physical - Chronic | Water stress in northern Mexico (Monterrey, Chihuahua, Sonora), heat stress |
Transition | Mexico's carbon trading scheme expansion, energy transition policy |
Physical - Agriculture | Changing rainfall patterns affecting food/beverage supply chains |
Step 4: Assess materiality
Evaluate each identified risk for:
Likelihood (under each scenario)
Magnitude of financial impact (on revenues, costs, assets)
Time horizon when impact would materialize
Document which risks are material and which are not (with reasoning).
Step 5: Quantify where possible, qualify where not
IFRS S2 allows qualitative analysis initially, but progress toward quantification is expected:
Physical risk: asset exposure mapping (what % of your assets are in flood zones, water-stressed areas?)
Transition risk: carbon cost exposure (what would a $50/tCO₂e carbon price do to your P&L?)
Step 6: Assess strategic resilience
For each scenario, describe:
How your current strategy would perform
What adaptations are planned or under consideration
Which aspects of your business model are resilient
Step 7: Disclose the results
IFRS S2 disclosures should include:
Which scenarios were used and why
Key assumptions made
Material risks and opportunities identified under each scenario
Impact on strategy, financial position, and financial planning
How findings inform your transition plan and targets
Common Mistakes to Avoid
Mistake 1: Treating scenario analysis as a one-time exercise
It should be reviewed annually as scenarios evolve and your business changes.
Mistake 2: Using only one scenario
IFRS S2 explicitly requires at least two scenarios to capture different risk dimensions.
Mistake 3: Only analyzing downside risks
Scenario analysis should also identify climate-related opportunities: renewable energy cost reduction, growing demand for low-carbon products, new markets.
Mistake 4: Keeping it siloed in sustainability
Finance, strategy, and risk management teams need to be involved. Scenario analysis that doesn't connect to financial planning fails the "investor-grade" standard.
Mistake 5: Not documenting assumptions
Every scenario analysis requires clear documentation of assumptions, data sources, and methodologies to support future assurance.
What Tools and Frameworks Help?
TCFD Scenario Analysis Guidance — foundational methodology document
WRI Aqueduct — water risk mapping for physical risk assessment
CLIMADA — open-source platform for quantitative physical risk assessment
Oliver Wyman Climate Risk Navigator — for financial impact modeling
Climatta — integrates operational data (Scope 1/2/3 emissions, facility data) with climate risk frameworks
Frequently Asked Questions
Can we do climate scenario analysis in-house or do we need consultants?
Both approaches work. In-house analysis (guided by TCFD and IFRS S2 guidance documents) is feasible for initial qualitative assessment. For quantitative modeling of financial impacts, many companies use specialist consultants for the first year and then internalize the process.
How detailed does the analysis need to be for the 2026 first report?
The CNBV mandate and IFRS S2 allow for proportionality. For the first filing, a well-reasoned qualitative analysis using established scenarios, with documented methodology, is acceptable. Quantification is expected to improve in subsequent years.
Does scenario analysis need to be externally assured in 2027?
Limited assurance (required starting FY2026) will cover quantitative disclosures like GHG emissions. The methodology and qualitative elements of scenario analysis fall under broader consistency and completeness reviews. Building a well-documented process now prepares you for 2027.
We operate in multiple sectors — how do we handle sector-specific risks?
Focus on the segments that represent the most material financial exposure. Use sector-specific scenario tools where available (e.g., IEA scenarios for energy-intensive sectors, physical risk tools for real estate or agriculture).
Climatta integrates your operational emissions data with climate scenario frameworks — connecting the dots between your GHG data and your IFRS S2 strategy disclosures. Request a demo to see how it works for your industry.