Featured & Deep Dives News | ESG & Sustainability | OneStop ESG
387 articles · Page 10 of 33
387 articles · Page 10 of 33
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In 2026, sustainability risks directly shape business resilience, compliance, and competitiveness. Understanding exposure, readiness, and control is essential to managing ESG risks as a core part of enterprise risk management.

Omnibus I narrows EU sustainability rules, but underlying ESG and supply-chain risks remain unchanged. Regulatory scope shifts; corporate exposure and responsibility do not.
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As ESG risks become central to enterprise risk management, companies need a structured way to manage sustainability with the same rigour as financial risk.

As ESG reporting becomes more regulated, double materiality is redefining how companies identify what truly matters.

Carbon takes many forms: black, brown, blue, green, red, and grey, each shaping climate risk, mitigation strategies, and ESG reporting priorities.
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ESG heat maps help companies visualise supply-chain risks, identify high-risk zones, meet regulations, and move from reactive to proactive ESG management.

Double materiality reshapes ESG in 2026, requiring firms to assess financial risks and real-world impacts to strengthen governance, strategy, and reporting.

Unilever’s ESG journey shows how a global consumer giant is cutting carbon, reducing plastic, strengthening supply chains, and improving product safety while balancing ambition with practical action.

The SDGs are built on interconnected pillars that balance human well-being, economic growth, environmental protection, governance, and innovation. Understanding these foundations helps organisations align sustainability strategies with long-term resilience and future-ready growth.

As ESG scrutiny intensifies, blockchain is emerging as a key tool for improving transparency, traceability, and trust across supply chains. Its ability to create verifiable, tamper-resistant records can strengthen ESG reporting, while highlighting the need for strong data governance and supplier engagement.

By 2026, global carbon markets are set to become more regulated, transparent, and financially material for businesses. Rising carbon prices, stricter scrutiny of offsets, and closer links to ESG reporting will make carbon strategy a core business and risk management priority.
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AI is redefining ESG by replacing manual data collection with automated, real-time, and predictive intelligence. Advanced ESG analytics now help organisations improve data quality, anticipate sustainability risks, and make faster, more informed decisions in a tightening regulatory landscape.