ECB Threatens to Fine Banks for Failure to Publish Emissions Data

The European Central Bank is planning on imposing financial penalties on businesses that do not comply with the ECB climate risk mitigation recommendations. In 2020, the ECB published recommendations for banks to determine their climate risks and reduce their environmental impact. These recommendations include imploring banks to identify the percentage of carbon-related assets in each […]

Navigating EN 16258: Comply with DitchCarbon!

In the contemporary world, where environmental sustainability is not just a choice but a necessity, businesses in the transportation and logistics sector are increasingly turning towards standards like EN 16258. This European Standard is pivotal in measuring and managing greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions in transport services. But how can organizations ensure compliance and accuracy in […]

Accompaniment to Our Recommendations

Not only do we provide you with your supplier’s carbon emissions data, we are now in the beta stage of providing specific climate action items that can mitigate your supplier’s carbon emissions. Each recommendation sheet expresses your supplier’s carbon emissions for each of the categories we have access to as well as tailored actions to […]

How Do We Capture Data?

So many companies now understand how important it is to present their carbon emissions data, but a lot of this data is hard to access and hard to read. Every company presents data in a different structure with different units and different designations for their carbon emissions. We capture this data and streamline it for […]

Why Surveying Your Supply Chain isn’t the Way

The traditional method of surveying your suppliers’ carbon emissions is outdated. Instead, companies should switch to DitchCarbon’s carbon intelligence platform to more accurately and efficiently assess the carbon emissions of their supply chain.

How to Really Drive Climate Action

While employers, employees, and consumers alike seem to agree that fighting climate change is important, mention actual climate action, and the room suddenly goes quiet. It’s not that people don’t care – more than 2/3 of Americans report being concerned about climate change – it’s that people simply don’t know where to start.