Cross industry News | ESG & Sustainability | OneStop ESG
1329 articles · Page 78 of 111
1329 articles · Page 78 of 111
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The circular economy is about reusing, repairing, and recycling to cut waste and keep products in use. From a small Amsterdam shop selling durable electronics and refurbishing returned devices to workshops designing fixable lamps or crafting furniture from reclaimed wood, businesses are finding smarter ways to work. By making products that last, offering repairs, or taking back old items for reuse, they save money, build customer loyalty, and help the planet. As resources dwindle and people demand sustainable options, this approach turns “trash” into opportunity, creating a practical, profitable way to do business that benefits everyone.

Ben & Jerry’s has intensified its legal dispute with Unilever, alleging that billionaire investor Nelson Peltz, a Unilever board member and Trump supporter, is influencing the company to censor the ice cream brand’s social mission. Filed in Manhattan federal court, the lawsuit claims Unilever’s edits to Ben & Jerry’s social media posts, including blocking a Trump-related post in January 2025, align with Peltz’s political views, threatening Unilever’s ESG leadership. The conflict, ongoing since 2024, involves Unilever’s alleged threats to dismantle Ben & Jerry’s independent board and block donations to Medical Aid for Palestinians. The dispute complicates Unilever’s plan to spin off its ice cream business, including Ben & Jerry’s, by July 2025, potentially impacting its valuation. Ben & Jerry’s seeks to protect its board’s autonomy and enforce $25 million in promised payments.

Blue Yonder, a digital supply chain solutions provider, acquired Pledge Earth Technologies on May 1, 2025, to enhance its emissions reporting capabilities. Founded in 2021 in the UK, Pledge offers a cloud-based platform that automates shipment data collection and calculates emissions across air, sea, inland transport, and logistics hubs, compliant with GLEC and ISO 14083 standards. The acquisition enables Blue Yonder customers to monitor their own and their partners’ emissions, supporting Scope 3 reporting and sustainability goals. Quotes from Pledge CEO David de Picciotto and Blue Yonder’s Chief Sustainability Officer Saskia van Gendt emphasize the technology’s role in reducing carbon footprints and optimizing supply chain efficiency. The integration strengthens compliance with regulations like CSRD and SBTi, positioning Blue Yonder as a leader in sustainable supply chain management.

The European Securities and Markets Authority (ESMA) has released draft Regulatory Technical Standards (RTS) under the 2024 ESG Rating Regulation, introducing strict requirements for ESG ratings providers in the EU. These include authorization, transparent disclosure of methodologies, and robust conflict-of-interest safeguards, with operational separation required for firms offering advisory services. A public consultation is open until June 20, 2025, with final rules expected by October 2025. Additionally, ESMA’s new Guidelines on Enforcement of Sustainability Information strengthen oversight of sustainability reporting, aligning it with financial standards. The risk-based approach targets greenwashing and double materiality, with coordinated EU-wide enforcement. Companies face increased scrutiny, requiring enhanced governance and compliance to meet these rigorous ESG data and reporting standards.

A new study from Sun Yat-sen University reveals that warming in the Antarctic Peninsula, which is heating up five times faster than the global average, is influenced by sea surface temperature changes in the Tasman Sea, thousands of miles away. Recorded temperatures reached 18.8°C (65.8°F) at Seymour Island in February 2020, raising concerns about ice melt and sea-level rise. The research highlights how warmer Tasman Sea waters trigger atmospheric patterns, like the Pacific–South American pattern, that steer heat toward Antarctica. High-resolution climate models better capture this link, though gaps in data and model inaccuracies pose challenges. The findings suggest broader climate impacts, potential feedback loops, and the need for improved ocean monitoring to enhance predictions and protect coastal communities.

A Nature study, published April 30, 2025, confirms a genetic link between the Picuris Pueblo tribe and ancient inhabitants of Pueblo Bonito in Chaco Canyon, New Mexico. Analyzing DNA from 13 modern Picuris members, 16 ancient Picuris individuals (1300–1500 A.D.), and prior Pueblo Bonito remains, the Picuris-led research validates their oral histories tying them to the UNESCO World Heritage site. Initiated to counter marginalization in Chaco preservation discussions, the study, controlled by the tribe, highlights ethical Indigenous-scientific collaboration. It strengthens Picuris advocacy amid oil and gas drilling debates but does not challenge other tribes’ connections to Chaco.

The article details a roundtable convened by C40 Cities, GCoM, and Bloomberg Philanthropies on April 28, 2025, focusing on scaling urban climate finance to meet a $4.5 trillion annual gap by 2030. MDBs pledged increased concessional funds, subnational lending, and risk mitigation to bridge the gap, which current financing ($830 billion annually) covers only 23% of the $800 billion yearly target. Mayors, following a 2024 open letter, urged MDBs to prioritize urban climate needs and direct funding. The dialogue, led by mayors from Tshwane and Kisumu, emphasized adaptation in the Global South and multilevel governance via initiatives like CHAMP. Challenges include limited adaptation finance and Global South funding gaps, but opportunities like the C40 Cities Finance Facility and Bloomberg’s programs offer hope for inclusive, resilient urban solutions.

A UBC study maps 506 fishmeal and fish oil (FMFO) factories across 63 countries, revealing their role in aquaculture. Peru, Mauritania, and Chile lead production, with 40% of FMFO from wild-caught fish, impacting marine ecosystems and coastal food security. Data gaps in China and West Africa persist. Solutions include processing waste, plant-based feeds, and better governance. The study urges transparency and research into emissions and labor for sustainable seafood.

ESG has evolved dramatically, moving from a voluntary, climate-focused effort to a mandatory, comprehensive framework critical for modern businesses. Initially, frameworks like TCFD, CDP, and GRI provided flexible, principles-based guidance, emphasizing carbon emissions and risk disclosure with little enforcement. Reporting was largely an internal exercise, often overlapping and lacking accountability. Now, regulations like the EU’s CSRD and Transition Plan Taskforce (TPT) mandate detailed disclosures on climate and nature-related risks, transition plans, and measurable sustainability outcomes. Jurisdiction-specific rules, legal enforcement, and unified global standards have replaced the earlier flexibility, with ESG reporting now directly shaping investment choices and regulatory actions. This shift responds to growing stakeholder demands for transparency amid worsening environmental and social challenges. While hurdles like compliance costs, complexity, and greenwashing risks remain, they also present opportunities for innovation and leadership. Companies that embrace transparency and robust metrics can build resilience and trust, turning ESG into a strategic advantage. This evolution marks ESG’s transition from an optional initiative to a vital business imperative, urging leaders to adapt and lead with purpose in a rapidly changing world.

Feeling overwhelmed by ESG metrics and frameworks? You’re not alone. The Sustainability Materiality Map is your guide to cutting through the noise, helping you focus on the ESG issues that truly matter to your business and stakeholders. This strategic tool pinpoints priorities—like water stewardship, data privacy, or governance—that drive long-term value and trust. By aligning sustainability with your core strategy, it transforms ESG from a reporting burden into an opportunity for innovation and resilience. Through stakeholder engagement and tailored analysis, the map highlights what’s material, whether it’s reducing emissions or fostering employee wellbeing. It’s not about doing everything—it’s about doing what counts. Learn how to build your map, prioritize impactful actions, and communicate transparently with stakeholders. With insights from OneStop ESG’s resources, including events, training, and marketplace solutions, this article shows how materiality can simplify complexity and spark meaningful change. Ready to navigate ESG with clarity? Discover why a Sustainability Materiality Map is the compass your company needs for a future-ready, trustworthy sustainability strategy.

U.S. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth has officially canceled the Women, Peace, and Security program—a pioneering law passed under President Trump to integrate women in global peace and security efforts. Though once hailed as a bipartisan achievement and international model, the program is now being dismantled by the very administration that launched it. The move reflects a broader rollback of inclusion-focused policies at the Pentagon and has drawn criticism from global institutions like the United Nations.

Nestlé and ofi have launched a cocoa agroforestry initiative aimed at reducing carbon emissions and deforestation. By engaging 25,000 farmers across Brazil, the Ivory Coast, and Nigeria, the initiative plans to convert farms to regenerative agriculture practices, including planting over 2.8 million trees and cultivating 72,000 hectares of agroforestry. The project is expected to cut over 1.5 million tons of CO2 over the next 30 years, supporting Nestlé’s net-zero emissions commitment by 2050.