Sustainability Solutions | Anitech

Environmental Due Diligence in M&A: ESG for Australian Acquirers

Published: March 2026 | Updated: March 2026

Acquiring a business exposes you to environmental liabilities: contaminated land, environmental non-compliance, stranded assets, unquantified emissions. For Australian acquirers, environmental due diligence is essential for identifying and pricing risk. Poor environmental due diligence has led to multi-million-dollar post-acquisition liability surprises: remediation of soil contamination, pollution penalties, stranded fossil fuel assets, unquantified emissions creating Scope 3 burden.

This article guides Australian organisations through environmental due diligence in M&A. We cover assessment scope, environmental liabilities, emissions profiling, and integration with your broader ESG and risk management. Whether you’re acquiring a manufacturing plant, property, mining operation or supply business, this guide helps you identify and price environmental risk.

Scope of Environmental Due Diligence

Phase 1: Desk-Based Assessment

Review available information without site access:

  • Target’s environmental compliance status (NGER reporting, EPA violations, EPBC permitting)
  • Historical operations (previous industries, potential contamination sources)
  • Environmental approvals and conditions (licenses, permits, ongoing obligations)
  • Known environmental issues (EPA enforcement, community complaints)
  • Environmental management systems (ISO 14001, internal audits, incidents)
  • Emissions profile (energy, water, waste, transport)

Cost: AUD $5K–$20K. Timeline: 1–2 weeks. Often sufficient for low-risk targets; deeper assessment if red flags emerge.

Phase 2: Site Environmental Assessment

Physical inspection of target’s facilities:

  • Soil and groundwater: Visual assessment, test results, contamination history
  • Buildings and infrastructure: Asbestos, PCBs, hazardous materials; structural condition
  • Air emissions: Monitoring data, potential fugitive emissions
  • Waste management: Waste streams, disposal arrangements, legacy issues
  • Regulatory compliance: Permits, spill containment, documentation

Cost: AUD $10K–$50K for standard assessment; up to AUD $100K+ for detailed contamination testing. Timeline: 2–4 weeks. Recommended for manufacturing, property development, mining, energy targets.

Phase 3: Specialist Assessment

For high-risk targets (contaminated land, mining, heavy manufacturing), engage specialists:

  • Contaminated land specialist: Assessment of soil/groundwater; remediation liability estimation
  • Environmental engineer: Facility design, emissions control, compliance assessment
  • Climate/emissions specialist: Scope 1, 2, 3 emissions profile; transition risk assessment
  • Regulatory lawyer: Compliance status, litigation risk, liability apportionment

Cost: AUD $30K–$150K+. Timeline: 4–8 weeks. Most appropriate for large acquisitions or sector transitions.

Key Environmental Issues in M&A

Contaminated Land Liability

Buyer inherits contaminated land liability. Australia has strict contamination laws (state EPA); remediation can cost AUD $1M–$100M+ depending on extent and land use. Assess:

  • Site history (former industries, spills, incidents)
  • Soil/groundwater testing (if available; may require direct testing)
  • Remediation requirements (land-use-dependent; residential more stringent)
  • Timeline and cost estimation for remediation
  • Ongoing liability (residual contamination, monitoring)

Environmental Non-Compliance

Review EPA penalties, violations, enforcement actions. Assess:

  • Outstanding compliance obligations; cost to remediate
  • Litigation risk (regulators pursuing further action)
  • Reputational impact; customer/investor sensitivity

Emissions Profile and Climate Transition Risk

For targets in high-emission sectors (energy, mining, heavy manufacturing):

  • Measure Scope 1, 2, 3 emissions (baseline)
  • Identify transition risk: policy (carbon pricing), physical (climate hazards), market (customer demand shift)
  • Assess capex requirements for decarbonisation; factor into acquisition valuation
  • Determine stranded asset risk (e.g., coal-fired plant, fossil fuel infrastructure)

Supply Chain and Scope 3 Risk

For acquisitions that expand your supply chain:

  • Target’s supply chain emissions (Scope 3 Category 1: purchased goods/services)
  • Supplier environmental compliance; pollution/contamination risk in supply chain
  • Integration risk: will target’s supply chain increase your Scope 3 significantly? Plan supplier transition

Water Stress and Availability

For water-intensive targets (agriculture, manufacturing):

  • Water entitlements (licensed allocation vs. current use)
  • Water stress in region (WRI Aqueduct tool); future availability risk
  • Regulatory changes (Murray-Darling Basin Plan tightening); compliance burden

Regulatory and Permitting Risk

Assess environmental approvals and conditions:

  • EPBC Act approval conditions (if major project); ongoing reporting, monitoring, remediation
  • State EPA licenses/permits; renewal risk, condition changes
  • Community opposition risk (development, mining, waste projects often face community legal challenge)

Due Diligence Process and Timeline

Integration with Overall M&A Process

Environmental due diligence should parallel financial and legal due diligence:

  • Weeks 1–2: Desk-based assessment; identify red flags
  • Weeks 3–5: Site assessment; specialist recommendations
  • Weeks 6–8: Detailed investigation of major issues; remediation costing; risk quantification
  • Week 9+: Remediation estimates inform valuation adjustment, purchase price allocation, indemnities

Reporting and Risk Quantification

Environmental due diligence should produce:

  • Risk register: Identified issues, likelihood, financial impact, timeline
  • Valuation impact: Quantified liability/remediation cost; recommended valuation haircut
  • Indemnities: Seller indemnification for unknown/latent liabilities; timelines
  • Transition plan: Post-acquisition actions (compliance, remediation, ESG integration)

ESG Integration in Acquisition

Beyond risk assessment, consider ESG opportunity:

  • Emissions reduction investment: Energy efficiency, renewable energy capex post-acquisition can add value (operational savings, ESG improvement)
  • Compliance improvement: Post-acquisition compliance investment reduces litigation/regulatory risk
  • Supply chain transformation: Engage suppliers on sustainability; potential margin improvement
  • ESG integration: Align acquired business ESG with your targets; consolidation of emissions, improved reporting

Frequently Asked Questions

What if environmental due diligence reveals major liability?

Renegotiate purchase price (valuation adjustment), require seller remediation pre-close, establish indemnities for unknown liabilities. If liability is material (>10% of deal value) and unexpected, consider walking away if risk/reward doesn’t justify acquisition.

Who should conduct environmental due diligence?

Typically: environmental consultant (desk-based and site assessment) + environmental lawyer (regulatory review, indemnity structure) + emissions/climate specialist (for emissions-heavy targets). Your procurement team may coordinate; external experts essential for credibility and liability protection.

Can we negotiate seller indemnities for unknown contamination?

Difficult post-closing. Best approach: thorough pre-closing due diligence, detailed Phase 2 testing. If unknown contamination emerges post-close, indemnity may be challenged (seller argues it was discoverable in due diligence). Avoid relying on indemnities; rely on upfront discovery.

How do we factor emissions increases from acquisition into net-zero targets?

If acquisition increases your Scope 1, 2 or 3 emissions, your baseline and targets should be adjusted. Most organisations set targets on pro-forma basis (including acquired entity from day 1). This is transparent and avoids manipulation through M&A structuring.

What if target has history of environmental violations?

Assess: (1) Are violations ongoing or resolved? (2) What was cost of remediation? (3) Is regulatory relationship improved? (4) What’s reputational impact? (5) Can post-acquisition compliance improvement rebuild trust? Violations are risk but not necessarily deal-breaker if remediation is feasible and justified by strategic value.

Should we conduct post-acquisition environmental audit?

Yes. Most acquisition contracts include 90–180 day environmental indemnity period; conduct Phase 2 audit during this window to identify latent contamination before indemnity expires. Post-acquisition audit is standard risk management for manufacturing and property acquisitions.

Conduct Rigorous Environmental Due Diligence

Environmental risk in M&A can be substantial and unexpected. Our specialists help Australian acquirers conduct thorough environmental due diligence, quantify liability, and integrate ESG considerations into acquisition strategy.

Book a Free ESG Strategy Session to discuss your M&A environmental due diligence needs.