Monthly ESG briefings and updates from the OneStop ESG team and our partners.
NewsletterLEGO is investing $1.4B to cut plastic, reduce emissions, and build a sustainable future—one brick at a time, with transparency, innovation, and long-term impact.
NewsletterThe explosive Trump–Musk fallout in June 2025 reveals deep governance challenges—exposing how political influence, regulatory power, and national security can be weaponized. With Musk’s ventures under threat and billions in federal contracts at stake, ESG professionals must now confront rising risks tied to vendor dependence, transparency gaps, and the erosion of public–private boundaries.
NewsletterUnilever has long been seen as a global ESG leader—but is it still delivering? In this feature, we break down the company’s latest progress: a 72% emissions cut, 55% women in leadership, and living wages across its workforce. We also look at revised plastic targets, nature restoration projects, and how Unilever is adapting its goals to stay effective. With clear data and honest reflection, this is a case study in doing ESG at scale—flaws and all. Read on for what’s working, what’s changing, and what it means for the rest of us.
NewsletterSustainability-linked bonds (SLBs) offer a powerful alternative to green bonds by tying general financing to clear sustainability targets—rewarding success and penalizing failure. After an initial boom, global SLB issuances dipped due to concerns over greenwashing. Yet, a resurgence in credible, science-aligned SLBs—particularly in Europe, Asia-Pacific, and Latin America—signals renewed investor trust. High-emitting sectors are embracing SLBs, widening ESG access, while regulators push for transparency and robust verification. Landmark issuances, such as Uruguay’s sovereign SLB and Snam’s Scope 1–3 bond, show growing ambition. If implemented rigorously, SLBs could play a transformative role in global decarbonization efforts. Authenticity and ambition remain key.
NewsletterThis 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.
NewsletterTesla’s removal from a major ESG index brought global attention to the inconsistencies in ESG ratings. This article explores why companies often receive conflicting scores from different agencies, breaking down the main causes—differences in scope, measurement, and weighting. It also highlights how this divergence impacts investor trust and corporate strategy.
NewsletterSatellites and AI are transforming forest conservation by enabling real-time monitoring and predictive analytics to combat deforestation. From Colombia to Cameroon, indigenous communities and environmental groups use this tech to receive alerts, deploy drones, and intervene quickly—cutting forest loss by up to 50%. Projects like Gabon’s Forest Foresight even forecast illegal activity before it happens. Yet, nature tech isn’t a silver bullet. It requires empowered local communities, strong enforcement, and global citizen engagement. While AI and satellites are powerful tools, true forest protection hinges on human will, action, and sustained support from governments, consumers, and conservation partners worldwide.
NewsletterExtreme weather is now a permanent fixture in global supply chain risk assessments. From heatwaves and floods to hurricanes and wildfires, climate change is disrupting operations, damaging infrastructure, and pushing businesses to rethink their logistics models. In 2024 alone, natural disasters caused $368 billion in damages, with severe hits to agriculture, manufacturing, and shipping routes like the Panama Canal. Companies are responding by diversifying suppliers, increasing inventory buffers, using predictive analytics, and embedding sustainability into operations. As weather volatility intensifies, supply chain resilience is emerging as a key factor in corporate performance, insurance, investment decisions, and policymaking worldwide.
NewsletterCarbon credits are vital for tackling climate change, representing one metric ton of CO2 reduced or removed. They enable businesses to offset unavoidable emissions by supporting projects like reforestation or renewable energy. Compliance markets, like the EU ETS, drive industrial emission cuts (47% since 2005), while voluntary markets help companies like Microsoft achieve carbon negativity. Buyers include corporations, governments, and airlines; sellers are project developers. Standards like Verra ensure credit quality through rigorous verification. Despite criticisms of over-reliance, credits complement decarbonization, with global markets expanding via initiatives like CORSIA and Paris Agreement’s Article 6, fostering innovation and sustainability.
NewsletterAs the world accelerates its transition to clean energy, a new scramble for critical minerals is unfolding deep beneath the oceans. Deep-sea mining promises access to metals essential for the future — but risks disrupting ecosystems we barely understand. Companies, countries, and conservationists are now locked in a global debate over how, when, and whether to exploit these new frontiers. The outcome will shape not only environmental futures but the geopolitics and economics of a rapidly changing world.
NewsletterSmall farmers across the world are finding an unexpected ally against climate change: artificial intelligence. From predicting rain to protecting crops, AI is helping them stay one step ahead of an increasingly unpredictable world. In this story, we meet the farmers, explore the breakthroughs, and look at what it really takes to make technology work in the fields. Because when the climate shifts, survival often comes down to better decisions — and better tools.
NewsletterAs climate awareness goes mainstream, the language of saving the planet has been polished, packaged, and sold — often to those who can afford it most. In this piece, we explore how sustainability became a lifestyle brand, why that matters, and what it really takes to keep climate action real and inclusive.