According to www.dfinsolutions.com, the ESG landscape underwent a significant transformation in 2025, shifting from optional, narrative-heavy sustainability disclosures to mandatory, metric-driven reporting anchored in internal controls and audit-ready documentation.
Key ESG Trends That Defined 2025
- Mandatory climate disclosure became reality, driven by California’s SB 253, SB 261, and AB 1305 — establishing a new national baseline for transparency on greenhouse gas emissions — alongside the SEC’s enhanced climate-related expectations. These rules aligned more closely with global frameworks including the ISSB standards and the EU’s Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive (CSRD).
- The rise of assurance and audit-like processes for ESG data saw organizations designing ESG workflows with SOX-style financial controls: traceability, documentation, and management sign-off. Limited assurance of Scope 1 and Scope 2 emissions became increasingly common, and boards expanded oversight responsibilities to meet investor expectations.
- A surge in climate litigation and greenwashing scrutiny intensified regulatory and investor pressure on claims such as “net-zero” or “carbon neutral.” California AB 1305, the FTC’s updated Green Guides, and SEC actions required companies to validate claims and ensure consistency across sustainability reports, investor decks, and website content.
- Expansion of Scope 3 measurement expectations emerged despite no universal mandate; stakeholders increasingly demanded value-chain emissions transparency. Companies invested in supplier engagement, modeling tools, and data platforms to improve accuracy — recognizing Scope 3 visibility as essential to credible ESG initiatives.
- A materiality shift toward financial impact and climate risk management reframed ESG discussions. More companies integrated climate scenario analysis into enterprise risk management, and risk factor sections in 10-K filings frequently expanded to include physical risks, transition risks, and operational dependencies.
- ESG investing evolved, not retreated: despite political narratives suggesting slowdown, ESG investing continued to grow with a sharper focus on financially material issues — governance strength, climate resilience, cybersecurity oversight, and human capital. Ratings agencies refined methodologies to reward measurable progress and reliable ESG performance.
What Supply Chain Professionals Must Prepare for in 2026
For global supply chain professionals, these developments carry direct operational implications. Mandatory Scope 3 reporting means procurement teams must now collect, verify, and standardize emissions data from Tier 1–3 suppliers — requiring new vendor questionnaires, digital onboarding protocols, and integration with ERP and ESG software platforms. Assurance-level requirements mean supply chain data flows must support traceability and audit trails — not just for carbon, but for labor practices, raw material sourcing, and circularity metrics. The rise in greenwashing litigation also means marketing claims about ‘sustainable logistics’ or ‘carbon-neutral shipping’ must be substantiated by verifiable, time-stamped data across all channels — from carrier contracts to customer-facing dashboards.
Moreover, the expected alignment of U.S. regulators with ISSB standards in 2026 signals that companies can no longer treat ESG reporting as siloed from financial reporting. Supply chain leaders must collaborate closely with finance, compliance, and investor relations teams to unify SASB, TCFD, CDP, and GRI disclosures into one coherent strategy — reducing duplication while increasing reliability. As clean energy manufacturing and large-scale data center expansion accelerate, supply chains supporting those sectors will face heightened scrutiny on energy sourcing, water use, and mineral provenance — especially for critical minerals like cobalt and lithium.
Source: www.dfinsolutions.com
Compiled from international media by the SCI.AI editorial team.










