The Guide to Selecting the Right Carbon Accounting Software: The carbon accounting software space is brimming with numerous players—each touting unique capabilities, features, and promises. But not all platforms are created equal.
Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive (CSRD): At its core, the Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive (CSRD) strives to achieve better corporate transparency concerning sustainability and achieve harmony and standardization between existing international frameworks. The CSRD is the most ambitious sustainability disclosure regulation. It applies to as many as 49,000 companies that must disclose information across all material sustainability topics as dictated by the law’s technical reporting rules, the European Sustainability Reporting Standards (ESRS).
California Climate Bills: SB 253 & SB 261: The California State Assembly passed major climate bills that will alter how companies do business. California Senate Bill 253 (SB 253) requires thousands of public and private companies to disclose their scope 1, 2, and 3 GHG emissions annually to California’s Air and Resource Board (CARB).
California Senate Bill 261 (SB 261)—also known as the Climate-related Financial Risk Act (CRFRA)—requires certain entities to disclose financially material climate-related risk and opportunity information consistent with the recommendations of the Task Force on Climate-Related Financial Disclosure (TCFD) to CARB.
Choosing the Best Carbon Accounting Methods for Your Company: Get the free ebook to help your organization understand how to measure and manage your carbon emissions.
Getting to Know Emissions Reduction Targets: Thousands of companies have already set or committed to a net-zero, science-based, climate-positive, or other emissions reduction target—but despite the aspirational pledges, most companies are not on a trajectory to meet them. Will your company be different?
Accounting for supply chain emissions: The guide to Purchased Goods & Services (PG&S): Is your company ready to understand its supply chain emissions? Purchased Goods & Services (PG&S) emissions fall under scope 3, category 1 within the GHG Protocol and are commonly referred to as “supply chain emissions.”
This guide covers the complexities of quantifying these emissions, explores the methodologies for accurate accounting, and highlights the technical innovations that improve transparency and reporting of these emissions—all essential for navigating a path to net-zero.
Sustainability Reporting Standards and Frameworks Explained: Understand sustainability reporting standards and frameworks with this free resource.
Will mandatory climate disclosures impact your business?
Find out with this free comparison resource. It’s designed for any business looking to make sense of leading voluntary and mandatory standards and frameworks laws that underpin climate disclosure.