
Applying IAS 37 after hurricanes, with links to IFRS 16 (leases), IAS 36 (impairment), IAS 1/10 (presentation & events), IAS 12 (tax), IAS 16 (PPE)
After a hurricane, finance teams face urgent questions: What must we accrue now? What stays off-balance sheet with disclosure only? When can we book insurance reimbursements? Under IAS 37, you recognize a provision when there’s a present obligation from past events, an outflow is probable, and the amount can be estimated reliably. If not, you usually disclose a contingent liability. For onerous contracts, recognize a provision for the unavoidable costs of meeting the obligation.
This article gives a practical, audit-ready playbook to:
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separate provisions from contingencies,
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measure cleanup and remediation reliably,
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identify and quantify onerous contracts (including leases),
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handle insurance reimbursements (recognized only when virtually certain), and
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present clear, decision-useful disclosures.
Golden rules:
• Losses first. Recognize provisions when criteria are met—do not net with expected insurance.
• Recognize reimbursement assets only when virtually certain; present them separately.
• Use unbiased, current estimates and discount material long-term obligations.
1) Provision vs Contingent Liability: Quick Tests
| Question | If “Yes” → Likely Provision | If “No” → Likely Contingent Liability |
|---|---|---|
| Is there a present obligation (legal or constructive) from a past event (e.g., spill, contamination, binding contract terms)? | ✔ Present obligation exists. | ✖ No present obligation yet (possible or future event). |
| Is an outflow probable (>50%)? | ✔ Recognize provision. | ✖ Disclose as contingent liability (if outflow is possible). |
| Can we estimate reliably? | ✔ Measure best estimate (range/expected value). | ✖ Disclose nature and reasons estimation is not possible. |
Common obligations after hurricanes
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Cleanup & environmental remediation (legal or constructive).
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Dismantling/demolition required by authorities or internal decisions communicated to stakeholders.
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Onerous contracts: unavoidable costs exceed benefits (supply, service, lease).
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Legal claims (customer penalties, third-party property damage).
2) Measuring Provisions: Best Estimate, Ranges, and Discounting
Best estimate is the amount a rational third party would pay to settle or transfer the obligation at the reporting date. Methods include:
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Expected value (probability-weighted) for populations of items.
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Most likely outcome for single obligations with a dominant scenario.
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Include direct costs to settle: contractor fees, testing, permits, disposal, legal costs (if part of settlement).
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Exclude gains from expected insurance or future operating losses.
Discounting
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Discount to present value when the effect of the time value of money is material (e.g., multi-year remediation).
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Use a pre-tax rate reflecting the time value of money and specific risks of the obligation (risks not already embedded in cash flows).
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Unwind the discount each period to finance cost.
Risk & uncertainty
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Use cautious but neutral assumptions—avoid deliberate bias.
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Consider inflation where relevant (match discount and cash-flow bases).
3) Cleanup & Environmental Remediation
Triggering events
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Authority notices, environmental standards, contractual site-return conditions, or a constructive obligation (public commitment/communication).
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Internal decisions communicated to stakeholders that create valid expectations (e.g., announced decontamination program).
Common cost components
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Site assessment & testing, hazardous waste removal, soil/water treatment, demolition, disposal fees, permits, monitoring.
Journal entry (initial recognition):
As costs are incurred:
If timing is long-dated (discounting):
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Recognize unwinding of discount as finance cost.
4) Legal Claims and Customer Penalties
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Recognize a provision when advice and evidence (letters of claim, counsel opinion) indicate probable outflow and reliable estimate.
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If possible but not probable—or amount cannot be estimated—disclose as contingent liability.
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For customer penalties (missed SLAs, late delivery), assess contractual terms and probability; many become provisions quickly after a region-wide disruption.
Entry (when probable & estimable):
5) Onerous Contracts (Including Leases)
A contract is onerous when the unavoidable costs of meeting it exceed the economic benefits expected. The provision equals the lower of:
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the cost of fulfilling the contract, and
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any compensation/penalties from failure to fulfill.
Before recognizing an onerous contract provision:
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Test impairment for assets dedicated to the contract (IAS 36).
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Then measure the unavoidable costs: direct labor/materials, allocated overheads necessary to meet obligations, unavoidable minimum payments, termination penalties.
Typical post-hurricane cases
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Supply take-or-pay where demand collapsed.
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Service contracts with minimums (data centers, cleaning, security) when sites are partly closed.
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Leases (IFRS 16) where premises are unusable and concession is not yet agreed:
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If no modification, assess unavoidable lease payments vs benefits; recognize onerous contract provision for service components only.
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For pure lease liability, IFRS 16 governs measurement; do not duplicate with IAS 37. If you expect a lease modification or concession, account when enforceable.
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Entry (onerous contract):
6) Reimbursements & Insurance (Don’t Net)
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Recognize a reimbursement asset only when it is virtually certain that the reimbursement will be received (e.g., written insurer confirmation for specific claim heads).
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Measure separately; do not exceed the related provision.
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Present separately in the statement of financial position; in P/L, the expense may be shown net, but clear disclosure is required.
Entry (when virtually certain):
Insurance related to PPE losses is recognized when receivable (IAS 16). For provisions (cleanup/penalties), use the virtually certain test (IAS 37).
7) Events After the Reporting Period (IAS 10)
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Adjusting event: provides evidence of conditions that existed at the reporting date → adjust provisions.
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Non-adjusting event: arises after reporting date (e.g., hurricane on 5 Oct for a 30 Sep year-end) → no adjustment, but disclose nature and estimate of financial effect (or state if not estimable).
8) Presentation, Disclosure & Governance (IAS 1/37)
Disclose for each class of provision:
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Nature of the obligation and expected timing of outflows.
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Carrying amount at the start/end of the period, additions, utilizations, reversals, and unwinding.
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Uncertainties and assumptions; sensitivities (ranges/ scenarios).
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Reimbursement arrangements (amounts recognized, uncertainties).
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For contingent liabilities: nature, uncertainties, and estimate of financial effect where practicable.
Governance tips
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Approve a Provisioning Memorandum: criteria, estimation methods, discount rates.
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Maintain an Obligation Register: legal basis, probability rating, estimate owner, evidence links.
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Align legal, risk, and finance; minute decisions (useful for auditors and insurers).
9) Mini-Cases (Caribbean Context)
A) Coastal Plant Decontamination (Two-Year Program)
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Regulator mandates soil and water remediation. Expected outflows: J$22m next year, J$18m the year after. Pre-tax discount rate 10%.
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Provision recognized at present value (compute PV), unwind each year.
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Insurer acknowledges claim but offers no specific confirmation → no reimbursement yet.
Entry (recognition at PV):
Annual unwinding:
B) Take-or-Pay Gas Contract (Demand Collapse)
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Unavoidable minimums exceed benefits for the next 9 months. Impair dedicated assets first (IAS 36). Remaining unavoidable costs net of subleasing opportunities → onerous contract provision.
C) Hotel Management SLA Penalties
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Contract penalties kick in after 30 days of service unavailability. Legal advice indicates payment is probable; estimate is reliable → provision. If the owner grants a formal waiver before reporting date, reassess probability.
10) Journal Entry Library (Copy/Paste)
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Cleanup/remediation provision
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Utilization of cleanup provision
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Onerous contract provision
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Legal claims provision
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Recognition of reimbursement (virtually certain)
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Unwinding discount on long-term provision
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Reversal (obligation reduced/no longer probable)
11) Controls & Audit Readiness Checklists
A. Recognition & Measurement
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Legal/constructive obligation documented (orders, contracts, public commitments).
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Probability assessment (>50%) and estimation basis (expected value / most likely).
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Discount rate memo (pre-tax, risk-adjusted) where material.
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Separate tracking for utilizations and reversals.
B. Onerous Contracts
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Impair dedicated assets (IAS 36) before measuring provision.
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Schedule of unavoidable costs vs benefits by month.
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Evidence for termination penalties/waivers/sublease options.
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Clear demarcation between lease liability (IFRS 16) and service components (IAS 37).
C. Reimbursements & Insurance
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Written confirmations identifying specific claim heads.
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Reimbursement not exceeding related provision.
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No netting in GL or notes; cross-walk to claim schedules.
D. Disclosure Pack
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Movement tables; timing of outflows; sensitivities.
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Contingent liabilities narrative with ranges (if practicable).
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Events-after analysis (IAS 10) and going-concern linkage (IAS 1).
12) FAQs
Q1: Can we delay recognizing a cleanup provision until the insurer confirms?
No. Recognize the provision when the obligation exists and is probable/estimable. Recognize reimbursement only when virtually certain.
Q2: Are future operating losses provisions?
No. Future operating losses are not recognized as provisions. Test assets/CGUs for impairment instead.
Q3: When do we discount?
When timing is material and reliable schedules exist. Document rate derivation and unwind each period.
Q4: Do lease concessions eliminate onerous provisions?
Only if the concession is enforceable at reporting date and appropriately accounted for under IFRS 16. Otherwise, assess onerous exposure on the current enforceable terms.
13) How the Dawgen Global Team Can Assist
Rapid Provisioning & Onerous Contract Review (1–2 weeks):
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Obligation diagnostics, probability assessments, and best-estimate models.
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Onerous contract quantification (supply, service, and lease service components) with audit-ready papers.
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Discount rate calibration, utilization tracking, and sensitivity analyses.
Insurance & Legal Interface:
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Evidence packs and reimbursement thresholds mapping; cross-walk to adjusters’ claim heads.
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Coordination with counsel on claims and settlements; disclosure drafting aligned with legal privilege.
Governance & Disclosure:
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IAS 37 policy refresh, movement tables, and sensitivity templates.
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Board/audit committee briefings; training for finance & legal teams.
Contact Dawgen Global:
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📞 Jamaica/Caribbean Office: 876-929-3670 | USA: 855-354-2447
Appendix: Quick Reference
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IAS 37 — Provisions, contingent liabilities/assets, reimbursements (virtually certain), onerous contracts.
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IFRS 16 — Lease measurement/modifications; avoid double counting with IAS 37.
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IAS 36 — Asset/CGU impairment before onerous assessment.
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IAS 1/IAS 10 — Disclosures, estimation uncertainty, going concern, events after reporting.
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IAS 12 — Deferred tax effects of provisions and discount unwinding where applicable.
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IAS 16 — Interactions where dismantling/remediation relates to PPE.
Final Thought
Well-designed provisioning separates what’s unavoidable now from what’s merely possible later—and it keeps insurance, leases, and impairments in their proper lanes. Do this right, and you’ll have cleaner audits, faster claims, and stronger stakeholder trust. When precision matters under pressure, Dawgen Global is ready to lead.
About Dawgen Global
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