Cross industry News | ESG & Sustainability | OneStop ESG
1327 articles · Page 72 of 111
1327 articles · Page 72 of 111
If you’re working on ESG, climate action, governance, social impact, or sustainable innovation your perspective matters.
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Stay informed with the latest ESG news and expert coverage across Governance, Sustainability, Environmental issues, International Development, and Social impact. At OneStopESG, we bring you sustainability news that matters from global policies to local initiatives driving real change.
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Carbon credits come in three types: Reduction, Protection, and Removal. Reduction credits cut emissions at the source, like energy efficiency, but may shift emissions, limiting global impact. Protection credits preserve carbon sinks—forests and oceans—preventing new emissions, offsetting 200 million tons of CO2e in 2024, per Verra. Removal credits actively extract CO2 via direct air capture or reforestation, absorbing 150 million tons in 2024, per Global Forest Watch, offering high impact. Each type supports climate goals differently, helping stakeholders choose credits that balance immediate reductions with long-term atmospheric CO2 removal.




Professionals seeking to build expertise in sustainable finance and ESG reporting can choose from several globally recognized certifications. The CFA Institute’s ESG Investing Certificate offers a foundational understanding of ESG integration. SASB’s FSA Credential emphasizes industry-specific financial materiality. GRI’s Certification focuses on sustainability reporting aligned with global standards. EFFAS’ CESGA equips analysts with practical ESG data integration tools. Each program differs in curriculum depth, duration, and regional focus, catering to students, analysts, and sustainability officers. Choosing the right credential depends on career goals—whether in investment analysis, corporate sustainability, or ESG compliance and reporting.
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In 2025, ESG is no longer a peripheral concern—it’s central to corporate survival and investment decisions. Five transformative trends are redefining the ESG landscape: mandatory reporting frameworks combat greenwashing; social responsibility takes center stage amid generational expectations; AI and tech reshape ESG data systems; biodiversity emerges as a critical business risk; and supply chain transparency becomes non-negotiable. Driven by global regulations and investor scrutiny, companies must embed ESG into core strategy—not just for compliance, but for competitive advantage. Those who lead with integrity and innovation will define the next era of sustainable business.

In 2025, global climate finance hit a record $1.3 trillion, a promising surge driven by private sector momentum and clean energy investment. Yet the progress masks deeper systemic challenges. According to the Climate Policy Initiative, investment needs to rise fivefold by 2030 to align with Paris Agreement goals. Crucially, only 1% of climate finance reached smallholder farmers, and adaptation funding continues to lag far behind mitigation. The growing disparity between developed and developing nations raises urgent questions about equity, access, and governance. While the capital flows are growing, they remain uneven, insufficient, and misaligned with the scale of the climate crisis.

This article explores how companies can meaningfully improve their ESG ratings through clear strategy, strong governance, better data, and transparent disclosure. Backed by global statistics and real examples, it offers practical guidance for turning ESG performance into long-term business value.



