New Analysis of California's Top Suppliers Points to Impact of Proposed Climate Reporting Mandates
- A new analysis reveals most of California's top suppliers do not disclose key climate data.
- California is expanding climate disclosure requirements amidst increasing demands from large institutional buyers.
- Only 25% of CA suppliers disclose Scopes 1 & 2 emissions, and even fewer report on other climate factors.
- Louis Coppola, CEO of G&A Institute, stated SB 755 establishes a baseline to measure progress.
- SB 755 could bring more suppliers into CA's climate framework, yet low reporting rates indicate a lack of readiness.
20 Articles
20 Articles
California’s Climate Superfund Passes First Committee
Earlier today, the Senate version of the Polluters Pay Climate Superfund Act, a vital bill that would require fossil fuel corporations to pay for the climate devastation they have contributed to across California, passed out of the Senate Environmental Quality Committee in a 5-3 vote. In conjunction with the vote, grassroots groups overflowed the hearing room in support of the bill, and rallied outside the Western State Petroleum Association bui…
California SB 219: New ESG Reporting Standards and How to Comply
It’s no secret that many federally-backed enterprise sustainability initiatives have been paused—if not shelved entirely—in recent months. However, state legislators across the U.S. have been picking up the slack and pushing forward on local measures aimed at having a global impact where environmental reporting is concerned. Case in point is California’s Senate Bill 219 (SB 219), which will require roughly 10,000 companies doing business in th…
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