GHG Emissions Inventory Assessment & Strategic Analysis
Knowing your Greenhouse Gas (GHG) Emissions Inventory is your first step in understanding your carbon impact and legislative obligations. This measure will allow your organisation to manage and mitigate its emissions, potentially resulting in cost savings, internal benefits, assured regulatory compliance and an increase in your corporate social responsibility (CSR) image.
Further this, once your GHG emissions inventory is known, your organisation may seek entrance into new environment markets, for example, buying offsets through accredited schemes to reduce you GHG emissions, or, selling your surplus GHG allowances under a cap-and-trade scheme. Depending on your organisation’s size, there are a growing number of options for those who act early.
A WMGC&S GHG Emissions Inventory Assessment is developed through the latest methodologies, standards and scientific data stipulated by the Australian, New Zealand government or international body, depending on where the organisation is located. |
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Corporate Sustainability Report Development
A corporate sustainability report developed to international guidelines is an effective tool in communicating an organisation’s CSR commitment. Studies have shown that the increased wave of environmentalism being felt by the global community is putting pressure on organisations to practice triple bottom line reporting (i.e. economic, environmental & social aspects) through the principles of transparency and accountability. Those organisations that “do the right thing” as a critical part of their “social license to operate” have been shown to have a clear competitive advantage in the marketplace.
A corporate sustainability is built to international standards and includes measuring a corporation’s GHG emissions inventory, water use, waste management, EMS systems, and, community commitment. While not only providing a useful tool for communicating CSR to stakeholders, a corporate sustainability report helps an organisation’s identify areas where risk management issues exists and where it can become more efficient by cutting costs.
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