Resources
ESG Reporting Expectations
2025-06-26
Knowledge ESG
ESG Reporting Expectations
Why ESG Reporting Matters

In today’s regulatory environment, ESG reporting is no longer optional—it’s expected. Businesses are under pressure to disclose how they manage environmental, social, and governance risks. From carbon emissions to labor practices and board diversity, stakeholders demand transparency. Clear, consistent reporting is critical for earning investor trust, meeting legal requirements, and positioning for long-term growth.

How We Help You Stay Ahead

We support companies by making ESG reporting more manageable and accurate. Our platform automates the collection of emissions and governance data, organizes it into customizable templates, and ensures alignment with major reporting frameworks. Whether it’s for investor relations, regulatory filings, or supply chain compliance, we provide the tools to simplify the process and enhance credibility. With our solutions, businesses can stay ahead of expectations and lead confidently in the era of sustainability.

More Resources

CBAM certificate is the only legal voucher for EU carbon cost offset, requiring report-verification-purchase-write-off process; centralized sales start Feb 2027 (priced with EU ETS), settlement by Sep 30, full repurchase by Oct 31, unused 2-year-old certificates cancelled Nov 1 (no compensation).

CBAM

The EUDR-China-EU trade report (Fern-supported, BellaTerra-written) notes compliance core is supply chain control & traceability; classifies non-core (soybean for domestic use) and core industries (wood products exported to EU), and lists 3 compliance key points.

EUDR

Practical guide for enterprise carbon footprint quantification data, defining 6 core categories, regulating primary/secondary data use, offering 5-step collection framework & quality principles, adapting to CBAM, carbon labeling and ISO 14067, enabling efficient carbon data compliance.

Carbon Footprint

The final EU CBAM transition period reporting window is closing, the last drill before "taxation and compliance" phase; transition needs quarterly reports without payment, full phase requires carbon tariffs with reduced free allowances, dual responsibilities, mandatory verification, stricter penalties; enterprises confirm 6 products, strengthen data traceability, cooperate with EU importers.

CBAM

The core of EUDR compliance is establishing a low-cost and confidential evidence system, following the data minimization principle. It requires providing necessary data around three core issues, clarifying data boundaries and transmission norms, and avoiding compliance and confidentiality misunderstandings.

CBAM