by Mia Pepperdine | Jun 26, 2026 | Artificial Intelligence, Carbon Footprint, Energy Management, News
If you are responsible for energy, finance or compliance in a large UK organisation, ESOS Phase 4 is somewhere on your to-do list. The deadline is 5 December 2027, which feels comfortably far away. It is not. ESOS Phase 4 is one of those rare purchases where the...
by Mia Pepperdine | Jun 24, 2026 | Artificial Intelligence, Carbon Footprint, Energy Management, News
If you make and sell products, you are increasingly being asked to put a number on their carbon footprint. It comes up in tenders, in supplier questionnaires from large customers, and in the reporting rules those customers now have to follow. A footprint per product...
by Mia Pepperdine | Jun 17, 2026 | Artificial Intelligence, Carbon Footprint, Energy Management, News
If your organisation bids for NHS contracts, 2026 is the year to act on carbon reporting. From April 2027, the requirements under PPN 006 are expanding significantly. The businesses that wait until the deadline will find themselves under real compliance and resource...
by Mia Pepperdine | Mar 23, 2026 | Artificial Intelligence, Carbon Footprint, Energy Management, News
Last month, the UK Sustainability Reporting Standards (UK SRS) were formally published by the UK government, marking a significant milestone in the evolution of corporate sustainability reporting. Although sustainability disclosures have been developing for several...
by Mia Pepperdine | Mar 20, 2026 | Artificial Intelligence, Carbon Footprint, Energy Management, News
From 2026 onwards, buyers, regulators and investors are asking a more direct question about sustainability. Not just how much carbon your organisation emits, but how much carbon do each of your products emit. Organisational carbon footprints are no longer enough....
by Mia Pepperdine | Jan 27, 2026 | Artificial Intelligence, Carbon Footprint, Energy Management, News
There is no single definition of strong progress. It is shaped by sector, regulatory pressure, organisational complexity and commercial priorities. A manufacturer responding to customer requests will look very different from that of a public sector supplier navigating...