Amid growing environmental urgency, businesses worldwide are rethinking how they measure, manage, and communicate their impact. A World Economic Forum study found that over 90% of CEOs now prioritise sustainability, reflecting how carbon accounting and transparent certification have become strategic
As organisations face growing pressure to demonstrate meaningful climate action, understanding and reducing carbon impact has become essential. Achieving Net-Zero isn’t just about good intentions — it requires accurate measurement, reliable data, and clear insight into where emissions are coming
For many organisations, carbon accounting has become a familiar exercise. Each year, emissions are measured, reports are compiled, and numbers are shared with stakeholders. These steps are valuable. They build transparency, accountability, and a foundation for progress. But as sustainability
CCS in the Climate Puzzle Carbon Capture and Storage (CCS) has shifted from being a niche technology to one of the most critical levers in global decarbonization strategies. As industries such as power generation, cement, steel, and chemicals wrestle with
low carbon building market report includes region like North America (U.S, Canada, Mexico), Europe (Germany, United Kingdom, France, Italy, Spain, Netherlands, Turkey), Asia-Pacific (China, Japan, Malaysia, South Korea, India, Indonesia, Australia), South America (Brazil, Argentina), Middle-East (Saudi Arabia, UAE, Kuwait,
Regeneration starts with building relationships, not regulations. Carbon has become a currency: a unit to trade, a number to reduce, a quota to meet. Governments and corporations are building frameworks to monitor, tax, and limit carbon, and while the intention