Epidemic Sound

Sustainability Report and Carbon Intensity Rankings

Is Epidemic Sound doing their part?

Their DitchCarbon score is 50

Epidemic Sound has a DitchCarbon Score of 50, indicating a moderate level of sustainability in their operations. This score reflects the company’s carbon intensity, which is a measure of the greenhouse gases emitted relative to its activity. A score of 50 suggests that Epidemic Sound has room for improvement in reducing its carbon intensity to enhance its environmental performance.

This was calculated based on 30+ company specific emissions data points, the higher the score, the better. Check out our methodology.

Industry emissions intensity

Very low

Low

Medium

High

Very high

Epidemic Sound is a company in the services sector, which has a very low carbon intensity ranking compared to other industries. Some industries are more damaging than others, this ranking gives you an indication of how carbon intensive the industry is which this company operates in.

Location emissions intensity

Very low

Low

Medium

High

Very high

Epidemic Sound is located in Sweden, a country with a very low carbon intensity rating. This suggests that the company benefits from the nation’s strong sustainability efforts and clean energy infrastructure.
6.15%

...this company is doing 6.15% better in emissions than the industry average.

Epidemic Sound, founded in 2009 and headquartered in Stockholm, Sweden, operates within the services sector, specifically in the music industry. The company boasts the world’s largest catalogue of non-collecting society affiliated music, offering over 30,000 tracks to online creators. With additional offices in New York, Hamburg, Amsterdam, and Madrid, Epidemic Sound serves a global clientele, providing immediate access to a growing library of both instrumental and vocal music for audiovisual productions.

Good news, Epidemic Sound has set SBTi climate action goals

Epidemic Sound has established targets to significantly reduce their greenhouse gas emissions from both direct operations and purchased energy. These targets align with the ambitious goal of limiting global temperature rise to 1.5°C above pre-industrial levels.
Participating

The Ultimate Guide to Building Sustainability Into Procurement​

In this guide you can learn about the three stages of sustainable procurement.

Stage 1) – Identify and Communicate
Sustainability Maturity

Stage 2) – Start to Give Preference to Mature Suppliers

Stage 3) – Make Climate Action a “Hard” Measure for Procurement

The Ultimate Guide to Building Sustainability Into Procurement​​

In this guide you can learn about the three stages of sustainable procurement.

Stage 1) – Identify and Communicate
Sustainability Maturity

Stage 2) – Start to Give Preference to Mature Suppliers

Stage 3) – Make Climate Action a “Hard” Measure for Procurement

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Our methodology

Read about our emission calculation methodologies, and what the DitchCarbon Score means.

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