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Sustainability now appears in most event RFPs. Current industry insight suggests that around 62% of RFPs include sustainability requirements, yet those requirements are often vague.
Questions like:
are increasingly common. But they don’t always translate into what event teams actually need in order to deliver an event, measure its impact, or meet client and stakeholder expectations.
While an event supplier may be strong on sustainability at a company level, that doesn’t automatically mean:
For event professionals, this creates a practical problem. Asking about sustainability capability is not the same as requesting the specific data and support your event requires. This checklist is designed for teams who need to move from sustainability intent to consistent delivery and credible data, without adding unnecessary complexity to already busy workflows.
Once you decide to measure events consistently, the nature of your briefs and supplier conversations has to change. Measurement shifts the focus from intent to delivery. Instead of simply asking suppliers how they are “sustainable”, you need clarity on things like:
One-off measurement might generate a number. A repeatable measurement programme generates insight. TRACE by isla exists to make this level of consistency realistic for busy event teams, without turning measurement into an admin-heavy process.
This guide focuses on how to move from ad-hoc measurement to a clear, repeatable approach you can apply across your 2026 events.
Here’s our three step process to take you from a Sustainability ‘huh?’ to a Sustainability Hero.
Measurement without intent produces data with no direction. Clear intent sets the boundaries for what you measure, how detailed it needs to be, and how the data will be used. This intent underpins consistency across events, making results comparable, defensible, and useful over time.
Your 2026 measurement intent should answer three questions:
Checklist – set your intent
TOP TIPS!
Most measurement issues don’t come from the tool you use, they come from starting too late. If suppliers aren’t asked for the right information at
briefing stage, teams end up retrofitting estimates or chasing data after delivery.
Measurement works best when it’s designed into planning, not bolted on at the end.
What preparation actually looks like:
Once these foundations are in place, actual measurement can be straightforward, particularly when using platforms like TRACE.
DID YOU KNOW?
Scope and boundaries are related, but not the same thing.
A basic event measurement scope should include travel, production transport, catering, energy, materials, and waste. Boundaries ensure clarity and consistency across events.
Measurement only becomes valuable when it changes how events are delivered. Using a carbon measurement platform, like TRACE allows you to compare events, spot patterns, and focus effort where it actually matters – rather than chasing marginal gains or reporting for reporting’s sake.
What good use of data looks like:
Checklist – use the data
For example, identifying that audience travel consistently accounts for the largest share of emissions across similar events may lead to changes in location choice, format, or audience engagement strategies. This isn’t just about lower numbers – it’s about better-informed decisions and better-
designed events.
Make 2026 your first year of consistent, repeatable, and comparable event emissions measurement.
Get started with a TRACE trial and measure your first event for free.
No additional headcount required. Designed to fit real delivery teams and real event timelines.
If you want to go further, book a demo with the team to explore how TRACE can support a comprehensive, programme-wide measurement
plan across your events.
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