As ESG reporting standards evolved in the energy and utilities sector, the client faced increasing pressure to deliver accurate, auditable, and regulator-ready GHG disclosures, critical for both compliance and stakeholder trust.
Their legacy systems, however, were no longer fit for purpose:
- Inaccurate and Incomplete Emissions Data: Existing reporting relied on outdated emission factors and limited Scope 2 visibility, leading to discrepancies in carbon reporting
- Inability to Capture Full GHG Spectrum: Lack of detailed tracking across NOx, SOx, and other emissions beyond CO₂ restricted comprehensive reporting
- Technology Limitations: Legacy tools were not equipped to support modern ESG frameworks or provide the flexibility required for evolving regulatory demands
- Lack of Audit-Ready Infrastructure: Absence of traceability and validation mechanisms limited confidence in reported data, especially for third-party audits
- Operational Complexity at Scale: Managing ESG data across multiple states and facilities added layers of complexity without centralized governance
The core challenge: Upgrade from a legacy, compliance-limited system to a high-accuracy, audit-ready ESG reporting framework capable of supporting multi-framework disclosures.