FAQs

Requesting data? Hundreds of organizations request or engage their suppliers, portfolios, and other stakeholders to report key environmental data each year.

Find out more about requesting data through CDP

General disclosure information

Companies, cities, states and regions disclose their environmental information through the CDP Portal.  

Each organization or entity can have several user types, with the Disclosure Submission Lead being the key contact point for CDP (formerly known as “Main User”). The ‘Disclosure Submission Lead’ has control access rights and can add or remove users to an organization. They are responsible for submitting their entity’s response and paying the admin fee. 

Learn more about how to disclose including the key dates in the disclosure cycle.  

You can also read more about specific steps in the disclosure process by visiting the Help Center.

Stakeholders are increasingly requesting environmental data through CDP. These requesters include capital markets, large purchasing organizations who are Supply Chain members, Banks program members, and membership/initiatives such as RE100 and The Net Zero Asset Managers initiative (NZAM). Requesters use this data to inform decisions and drive environmental action. 

Requested organizations can see which entities have asked them to disclose their environmental data in the CDP Portal.

Through CDP-ICLEI Track, cities can report simultaneously to multiple climate initiatives such as: 

  • ICLEI 

  • C40 

  • WWF One Planet City Challenge 

  • The Global Covenant of Mayors for Climate & Energy 

 

Cities can also measure their progress against UN-backed climate campaigns such as Race to Zero and Race to Resilience.

Note, this is not relevant to Japan.

CDP believes that state and regional governments play a vital role in driving climate action and delivering sustainable economies. We provide a global platform for sub-national governments to measure, manage and disclose their environmental impact.

CDP's questionnaire is aligned with the global standard of the Task Force on Climate-related Financial Disclosures (TCFD), showcasing your state or region's leadership in climate-related risk planning and strengthening opportunities to engage with investors and the private sector.

Companies disclose data on the impact their business activities have on environmental issues or themes such as climate change, deforestation and water security. Companies can do this through CDP's streamlined corporate questionnaire or SME questionnaire, depending on which is most relevant to them. Disclosing companies only see questions relevant to the issues they have been requested to disclose on, and can respond across multiple issues in a single place. 

Questionnaires are made up of modules such as: 

  • Governance; 

  • Business Strategy; and 

  • Environmental Performance. 

 

Some modules are sector-specific, some are issue-specific, and some are integrated, or multi-issue. 

If a Self Selected Company (SSC) meets the eligibility for the SME questionnaire based on the revenue and headcount they enter in the questionnaire setup, they can choose between the SME and full corporate questionnaire. SSCs can also select whether they intend to disclose on forests and/or water in the questionnaire setup.

The CDP Cities and States and Regions questionnaires request qualitative and quantitative environmental data for the following themes: 

  • Governance;

  • Climate hazards, Adaptation;

  • City-wide emissions  (cities only); 

  • Emissions reduction, Opportunities;

  • Local Government emissions;

  • Energy, Buildings, Transport;

  • Urban planning;

  • Forests (selected states and regions only);

  • Food, Waste; and 

  • Water security.

 

As a guide, you can view the Cities questionnaire and reporting guidance for the 2024 cycle. 

All companies are asked to respond to climate change questions. All companies responding to the full corporate questionnaire are asked supplementary questions on plastics and biodiversity. Companies are only asked to respond to forests and water datapoints if at least one of the following conditions is met for forests and/or water security respectively:  

  • Request: you have been asked to disclose by a requester (eg a Capital Markets Signatory member, a Supply Chain member, a Banks program member etc.).

  • Industry impact classification: the environmental impact of your CDP Activity Classification System (CDP-ACS) activities on forests and/or water, as established by the CDP industry impact classification. Note, this is not applicable to organizations responding to the SME questionnaire.

  • Self-assessment: based on whether you have indicated that you have identified substantive forests- and/or water-related issues in your questionnaire setup. Note, this is not applicable to organizations responding to the SME questionnaire.

  • Opt-in: if none of the above conditions are met but your organization chooses to disclose on forests and/or water security.  

Please note that organizations that have received the CDP Letter to the Board can review their initial assessment of environmental issues they are requested to disclose on – please note, this initial environmental issue assignment is subject to change. Further details on thresholds determining whether an organization is requested to respond to forests and/or water security questions can be found in the Industry Impact Classification methodology.  

Additionally, if you have been requested to disclose by a Supply Chain member, Banks program member or Private Markets program member, your requester may request you to respond to a specific environmental issue. Organizations are welcome to volunteer to disclose on environmental issues, whether they have been requested to do so or not.  

The streamlined corporate questionnaire doesn’t mean that all companies have to answer datapoints on all environmental issues.  

Questions on water and forests will continue to be presented to companies based on how relevant these issues are to their business and activities. The relevance of these questions is assessed using the CDP-ACS methodology, following the same process CDP has used to determine requests to large public companies for the last decade.

There is no minimum amount of data that cities need to report and the response is completely voluntary at all stages. 

However, if your city is committed to the Global Covenant of Mayors for Climate & Energy or a C40 city, certain requirements should be met. In order to pass the lowest scoring band of ‘disclosure’ according to CDP's scoring methodology, you must provide a fairly complete response to the CDP Cities questionnaire. 

CDP provides a variety of materials to help companies, cities, states and regions throughout disclosure. 

The CDP Portal contains the latest: 

  • Questionnaires; 

  • Scoring methodologies, which outline the number of points available for each question; and 

  • Reporting guidance for each questionnaire to provide clarity around questions, terminology and requirements. 

 Additionally, you can: 

 

*Companies only. 

Yes, a company can volunteer to disclose as a self-selected company (SSC) if they haven’t been requested to do so by an organization. They will need to apply to CDP to become an SSC.  

The same policies for companies requested by capital markets apply to SSCs:  

  • SSCs must pay the admin fee to disclose;

  • Capital Markets Signatories have access to SSCs’ response, which can be shared more widely if they make this public; and  

  • SSCs receive a score if they submit their response by the scoring deadline.  

If an SSC doesn't end up disclosing, they won’t receive an ‘F’ score and they won't be mentioned on CDP’s website or in CDP’s datasets.  

To sign up as an SCC, please complete the Register to Disclose form

Disclosure of environmental data is essential to make critical decisions and build resilience as well as to drive and track progress towards organizational and global goals.  

Learn more about the benefits of disclosing.

Disclosure admin fee

Note, only companies pay the admin fee.

The CDP admin fee is the fee that companies and other entities pay in order to disclose through CDP.  The following entities must pay the CDP admin fee: 

  • Companies requested to disclose by CDP’s Capital Market Signatories

  • Self-Selected Companies (ie companies who wish to disclose even if they have not been requested to do so by Capital Market Signatories or customers); and 

  • Public authorities. 

 

 Cities, states and regions don’t need to pay the admin fee*. 

 

We offer three fee options for disclosers, with our enhanced fee option offering the most benefits: 

1. Enhanced fee

Benefits (note, may vary by region so please check this with the relevant regional office): 

  • Report through the CDP Portal

  • Use CDP's suite of tools, including disclosure frameworks and guidance

  • Enjoy communications opportunities resulting from disclosing through CDP

  • Receive a CDP Supporter badge to use in your organization’s external communications

  • Get your organization’s name listed as a CDP Supporter on CDP’s website

  • Receive a pre-paid/priority registration for two people and organization recognition at regional CDP events, where applicable

  • Receive a quote from a CDP Director to use in your sustainability communications 

  • Get increased access to 100 company responses of your choice

  • Receive a detailed Comparative Analysis Report to compare your company with 10 peer companies of your choice

  • Receive a tailored introduction to a CDP Accredited Solutions Provider

  • Get a screening of your top 50 suppliers to understand environmental action in your supply chain

 

2. Foundation fee 

Benefits: 

  • Report through the CDP Portal

  • Use CDP's suite of tools, including disclosure frameworks and guidance

  • Enjoy communications opportunities resulting from disclosing through CDP

  • Receive pre-paid entry/priority registration to one regional CDP event, where applicable

 

3. Essential fee 

Benefits: 

  • Report through CDP's Portal

  • Use CDP's suite of tools including reporting frameworks and guidance

  • Enjoy communications opportunities resulting from disclosing through CDP

 

Note, this fee option is only available to disclosing organizations headquartered outside of North America, the United Kingdom, Europe (including Türkiye), Japan, South Korea, Southeast Asia, Taiwan (China), Hong Kong (China), Australia, New Zealand, Bermuda, and Guernsey. 

This option is aimed at small to medium sized enterprises (SMEs) and those with a limited budget. 

 

*Subject to change 

The CDP admin fee varies by region and fee option. See the table below for all 2024 fees, as a guide.   

Organization headquarters

Enhanced fee

Foundation fee

Essential fee

UK

£5,700

£2,325

n/a

Europe (including Türkiye)

€6,850

€2,825

n/a

Japan

¥740,000

¥310,000

n/a

China

CN¥51,500

CN¥20,500

CN¥8,250

Brazil

R$13,750

R$9,550

R$6,375

Latin America (excluding Brazil)

US$2,450

US$1,750

US$1,115

India

₹5,70,000

₹2,27,500

₹91,000

North America

US$7,300

US$3,100

n/a

Southeast Asia, South Korea, Australia or New Zealand

US$7,300

US$3,100

n/a

Hong Kong and Taiwan (China)

US$7,300

US$3,100

n/a

Other countries

US$7,300

US$3,100

US$1,115

 

Fees are exclusive of any applicable local taxes. Some fee levels are not available in regions ('n/a'). 

 

All overseas territories match the grouping of the country that they are part of. 

 

The following countries and areas fall under CDP's definition for Europe for corporate disclosure, and are therefore subject to European admin fees:  

Åland Islands, Albania, Andorra, Austria, Belgium, Bonaire, Sint Eustatius and Saba, Bosnia & Herzegovina, Bouvet Island, Cyprus, Czechia, Denmark, Estonia, Faroe Islands, Finland, France, French Guiana, French Polynesia, French Southern Territories, Germany, Greece, Greenland, Guadeloupe, Holy See, Hungary, Iceland, Ireland, Italy, Kosovo, Latvia, Liechtenstein, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Malta, Martinique, Mayotte, Monaco, Montenegro, Netherlands, New Caledonia, North Macedonia, Norway, Poland, Portugal, Republic of Moldova, Réunion, Romania, Saint Barthélemy, Saint Martin (French Part), Saint Pierre and Miquelon, San Marino, Serbia, Slovakia, Slovenia, Spain, Svalbard and Jan, Mayen Islands, Turkey, Sweden, Switzerland, and Wallis and Futuna Islands. 

Disclosers are exempt from paying the admin fee if they have only been requested to disclose by: 

 

If an organization has been requested to disclose by one of these and a Capital Market Signatory, they will need to pay the fee. 

Organizations based in Ukraine are currently exempt from paying the admin fee. Meanwhile we are not accepting the fee from companies based in Russia and Belarus. 

If you have any questions regarding admin fee eligibility, please speak to your Account Manager or contact the Help Center.

Global disclosure prices remained the same from 2016 until 2023 when we began reviewing our pricing annually. Any annual fee inflations are in line with current economic conditions and rising operational costs.

No, the fee amounts are the same regardless of which version of the questionnaire is submitted. 

No, the admin fee is not refundable. 

Disclosing

CDP’s Activity Classification System (CDP-ACS) was developed to allocate sector-specific questions to companies from 2018. The CDP-ACS framework categorizes companies by focusing on the activities from which they derive revenue, and associating these with the impacts across a company’s value chain from climate change, water security and deforestation.  

Questionnaire sectors are allocated based on the same percentages used to allocated CDP activities. All CDP activities – including those responsible for less than 20% of a company’s total revenue – are matched to the corresponding questionnaire sectors and the revenue percentages are summed by the questionnaire sectors. Any questionnaire sectors responsible for at least 20% of a company’s total revenue are allocated to the company. The questionnaire sector with the highest revenue percentage is assigned as the primary questionnaire sector and any remaining questionnaire sectors are assigned as additional questionnaire sectors.

CDP-ACS is a three-tiered system comprised of (from bottom-up) Activity, Activity Group and Industry. See the full list of classifications for the CDP-ACS.

The sector-based approach allows CDP to make more meaningful assessments of companies' responses, incorporating each sector's characteristics and nuances, and resulting in a score that reflects the company's progress in environmental stewardship while enabling better benchmarking against other companies.

Please note, companies are only scored on their primary questionnaire sector. This means that if more than one set of sector questions applies to a company, not all questions will be scored. Sector specific questions are labelled to indicate which sector(s) they apply to. However, we encourage companies to respond to all questions that apply to them. If you believe your ACS allocation needs to be changed, please contact our Support Team (selecting "Questionnaire Response" from the category dropdown). Note, to access My Support, you will need to sign in then return to the Help Center (new users will need to register).

The Cities Questionnaire is divided into three distinct pathways to streamline reporting, allowing disclosing cities to find the most appropriate questionnaire for their local context. Users are recommended a pathway during the questionnaire set-up process based on population, emissions per capita, and human development index (HDI). That said, users can select a different pathway to the one they are recommended, if they wish. Note, ICLEI Network Cities are encouraged to report to Pathway 3. Pathway 1 has 28 questions, Pathway 2 has 35 questions, and Pathway 3 has 45 questions. A complete breakdown can be found in the Cities questionnaire guidance. The pathway selected does not affect meeting the reporting requirements of the projects and initiatives the jurisdiction is participating in, and it does not affect CDP scoring or Global Covenant of Mayors badging.

The Total revenue figure and revenue breakdown you enter in the questionnaire set-up will not be shared with external stakeholders. This information is used to inform your questionnaire setup to ensure your organization receives the relevant questions. This information will also be included in CDP data products in an aggregated format. Your stakeholders will receive information on Primary ACS including Industry, Activity Group and Activity.  

There is an opportunity to disclose revenue in the questionnaire in questions 1.4.1 in the Full Corporate Questionnaire and 14.4.1 in the SME questionnaire. The data will be shared following the same policies that govern public and non-public responses and you can choose when submitting your response whether your response is public or non-public.

For more information about how we use disclosers' personal data, please refer to the “Data Protection” section of our terms of disclosure.

We are conscious of the key role that consultants play in supporting multiple disclosures at once including their different needs. Currently consultants can act as users, which means they can see all answers, support in inputting etc.  For more information about adding users, visit our Help Center.

The preferred approach is for parent companies to submit a consolidated response to CDP that includes all subsidiary data. 

We recommend that subsidiaries contact their parent organization to confirm whether its CDP response(s) will include data from the subsidiary organization. If a subsidiary organization falls outside this parent reporting boundary, it may disclose through CDP separately. 

Parents are provided the option to select which subsidiaries they are disclosing for.

In 2024, Financial Services (FS) datapoints were integrated into the CDP questionnaire via a financial services sector tag. 

Therefore, FS companies saw a tailored questionnaire with three types of questions: 

  • Questions shown to all sectors; 

  • Questions shown to all sectors with additional details and datapoints tailored to FS only; and 

  • FS-specific questions. 

   

We will confirm details for the 2025 cycle once these are available. 

It is possible to amend a previously submitted questionnaire(s) before the close of the cycle. You can do this via the self-service amendments feature on your response dashboard.

Scores and responses

Companies have the option to respond either publicly or non-publicly. The Disclosure Submission Lead for an organization (formerly the “Main User”) must select “public” or “non public” when submitting their response in the Portal. 

Public responses may be used by CDP in a number of ways including sharing these with requesting stakeholders and displaying these on the CDP website (although please note, that 2024 responses won’t be available on our website). 

Non-public responses are shared with requesting stakeholders, but are not listed on CDP’s website or sent to data users. 

You can read the terms of disclosure for the corporate questionnaire to learn more about how CDP uses these responses.

Some cities can choose to respond non-publicly. While data from non-public responses will still be used by CDP, ICLEI and our partners in aggregate format in our communications, it won’t be highlighted in our external communications, reports and CDP’s Open Data Portal. Cities cannot submit a non-public response if they are reporting to one of the following initiatives: 

  • C40 

  • Global Covenant of Mayors for Climate & Energy 

  • WWF’s One Planet City Challenge 

  • Cities Race to Zero initiative 

  • Cities Race to Resilience initiative 

  • NetZeroCities initiative 

    

States and regions must report publicly. 

The Disclosure Submission Lead for an organization (formerly the “Main User”) must select “public” or “non public” when submitting their response in the Portal. 

You can read the terms of disclosure for the cities, states and regions questionnaires to learn more about how CDP uses these responses. 

Disclosing entities receive a CDP score based on the information they disclose in their response, although they will need to meet certain criteria to be scored such as submitting their response to CDP before the scoring deadline. 

You can read more about CDP scores including what each score level means, our methodology and more. 

Please note: 

  • In 2024, companies received three separate scores for climate change, forests and water security despite these previous questionnaires being integrated into one. Also, while the questionnaire contained questions on plastics and biodiversity in 2024, these were grouped together as unscored questions. 

  • For companies responding to a questionnaire for the first time, CDP offers the option to keep this score private – this means it won’t be shared on the CDP website or with Capital Market Signatories. However it will be shared with requesters. 

  • Supply Chain scores are private by default, unless they’re an A. 

  • Financial Service’s scores for forests and water are also kept private – they are shared with responding organizations only. 

  • Cities, states and regions scores are private unless they achieve an A. 

   

We will update our 2025 disclosure timeline to confirm when scores will be released along with other key dates. 

Disclosing entities can get more insight to improve their scoring in the future, through score reports. These are provided to all disclosing companies following score release. 

There are also a number of score feedback call options available. Learn more about these by contacting your local CDP office or My Support via the Help Center. Note, to access My Support, you will need to sign in then return to the Help Center (new users will need to register). 

You can find the latest scoring methodology in the CDP Portal, or learn more about CDP scoring by referring to our terms and conditions.

Any company that is requested to disclose by Capital Markets Signatories but fails to respond to this request will receive an F score (Failure to disclose) on each environmental issue they did not disclose on. An ‘F’ indicates a failure to provide us with sufficient information to be evaluated. It is not a reflection of your environmental stewardship. 

This may also be communicated to investors, customers and other stakeholders through our reports, digital platforms and data products.

As mentioned above, cities’ response is voluntary at all stages. However, if your city is reporting to the Global Covenant of Mayors for Climate & Energy or C40 Cities, certain requirements will need to be met. You must provide a fairly complete response to the CDP Cities questionnaire in order to pass the lowest scoring band of ‘disclosure’ according to CDPs scoring methodology.

In 2024, forests and water security for Financial Services companies were scored privately in 2024 – for water, this was the first time it was scored for FS companies. 

Also, the climate change score for FS companies wasn’t impacted by these scores. 

We will confirm details for the 2025 cycle once these are available. 

Contacting CDP and giving feedback

Please refer to our contact page for details on how to contact our global offices and teams depending on your query. 

Note, if you require disclosure support, you can contact us via My Support on the CDP Help Center. You will need to sign in then return to the Help Center to access My Support. New users will need to register.

To provide feedback on the content of our questionnaires and supporting materials, please complete our general feedback form. You can also submit feedback directly through the Portal.

Please note, you will not receive a reply to your feedback although all submissions are reviewed. If you represent a responding organization and would like to request a response, please get in touch with your local CDP contact.

Glossary

1.5 degrees celsius 

The target set by the 2015 Paris Agreement as the global average temperature compared with pre-industrial history. Scientists generally agree that global temperatures must be kept well below 2 degrees – ideally 1.5 degrees celsius – to avoid the worst impacts of climate change. 

 

Adaptive capacity 

The ability of systems, institutions, humans and other organisms to adjust to potential damage, to take advantage of opportunities, or to respond to consequences. 

 

A List 

CDP provides the leading scoring system for companies, cities, states and regions taking action on the environment. The best performing organizations are awarded a place on CDP’s annual A List, to celebrate their work on climate change, deforestation and/or water security. A CDP score is a snapshot of a company’s environmental disclosure and performance. 

 

Biodiversity 

The biological diversity of flora and fauna species on Earth, a complex web of life that underpins the natural life processes on the planet. Human-caused environmental damage reduces biodiversity, and creating a healthy, sustainable society requires increasing biodiversity. 

 

CBD (Convention on Biological Diversity) 

The United Nations’ initiative to protect and preserve biological diversity on Earth for future generations. 

 

CDP 

CDP is a global non-profit that runs the world’s environmental disclosure system for organizations including capital markets, companies, cities and governments to assess their impact and take urgent action to build a truly sustainable economy. For over 20 years we have a system that has resulted in unparalleled engagement on environmental issues worldwide. 

 

CDP full corporate questionnaire 

CDP’s multi-environmental issue questionnaire for large organizations. In 2024, this replaced CDP’s three separate questionnaires focused on climate change, forests and water security. 

 

CDP SME corporate questionnaire 

A shorter, simplified version of CDP’s corporate questionnaire for Small and Medium-sized Enterprises (SMEs). From 2024, this replaced both the CDP minimum version questionnaire and pilot Private Markets SME questionnaire. 

 

City 

A range of authorities, varying in size and type, can report as a “city” to CDP-ICLEI, including local authorities (e.g. City of Manchester), combined authorities (e.g. Greater Manchester Combined Authority), and city cohorts (e.g. Chicago Metropolitan Mayors Caucus). Cities are at the epicenter of climate change, as they are responsible for 70% of carbon emissions and 93% report facing climate hazards that put their people and infrastructure at risk. 

 

Climate change 

See also: global warming. The altering of the planet’s climate due to an increase in greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions from human activity. Effects of climate change include rising temperatures, leading to increased extreme weather such as heatwaves, floods, droughts and storms, and resulting in reduced water and food security and social stability. 

 

Climate change adaptation 

Policies and measures which make societies and companies more resilient to the impacts of climate change such as flooding and heatwaves. 

 

Climate change mitigation 

Policies and measures which aim to reduce greenhouse gases from companies and governments with the intention of lessening the global impacts of climate change, such as reducing the amount and intensity of fossil fuel burning. 

Company 

A commercial business. Through disclosure, a company proactively demonstrates to capital markets, purchasers and consumers that it is committed to tackling environmental risks. 

 

COP (Conference of Parties) 

The decision-making body of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) which meets annually to assess and encourage intergovernmental policy on climate change and track progress. 

 

CRVA (Climate risk and vulnerability assessment) 

An assessment of the likelihood of current and future climate hazards. It is a critical process for local authorities to understand the environmental and social impacts that climate change will have on their jurisdiction. 

 

Deforestation 

The process of harvesting forests for natural resources or to clear land for agriculture or construction. Deforestation that occurs faster than forests are able to recover causes environmental damage such as loss of biodiversity and climate change. 

 

Disclosure 

The process in which a company submits requested information relating to the impact their business activities have on environmental areas such as climate change, deforestation and water security. Capital markets and purchasing organizations use data submitted through the disclosure process to make informed decisions. 

 

Environmental reporting 

The disclosure of a company, city, state or region’s impact on the environment. See also: disclosure. 

 

Forest risk commodity 

A commodity for the production of which forest is being converted to agricultural use. The seven commodities responsible for the majority of agriculture-related deforestation are: timber products, palm oil, cattle, soy, rubber, coffee and cocoa. 

 

GHG (greenhouse gases) 

Greenhouse gases, such as carbon dioxide and methane, which trap and hold heat in the atmosphere and contribute to climate change. Much of human activity emits greenhouse gases, such as burning fossil fuels for energy and transport, farming land for food production, and deforestation. 

 

Global Biodiversity Framework 

The conclusion of the 15th Conference of Parties to the UN Convention on Biological Diversity saw the adoption of the Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework (GBF). 

Amidst a dangerous decline in nature threatening the survival of 1 million species and impacting the lives of billions of people, the GBF aims to halt and reverse nature loss. The framework consists of global targets to be achieved by 2030 and beyond to safeguard and sustainably use biodiversity. 

 

Global Plastics Treaty 

The UN Environment Programme (UNEP) is leading the development of the Global Plastics Treaty, intended as an international legally binding instrument on plastic pollution, including in the marine environment. The Treaty is set to be finalized by the end of 2024. 

 

Global warming 

See also: climate change. The increasing of the Earth’s average temperature due to a greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions from human activity. Effects of global warming include but are not restricted to increased extreme weather events, decreased water security, and rising sea levels. 

 

Greenwashing 

The practice of falsely promoting an organization’s environmental efforts or spending more resources to promote the organization as green than are spent to actually engage in environmentally sound practices. (Source

 

Hazard 

The potential occurrence of a natural or human-induced physical event or trend that may cause loss of life, injury, or other health impacts, as well as damage and loss to property, infrastructure, livelihoods, service provision, ecosystems and environmental resources. 

 

IPCC (Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change) 

An intergovernmental body of the United Nations dedicated to researching and advancing knowledge of climate change. Internationally regarded as the leading scientific authority on climate change, and the author of reports that advise policymakers on the impacts of, and solutions to, climate change. 

 

LA/JA (Landscape approaches / Jurisdictional approaches) 

A landscape approach is a place-based management approach that involves stakeholders collaborating in a landscape to advance shared sustainability goals and build resilience. It aims to reconcile and optimize social, economic and environmental objectives across many economic sectors and land uses. Such approaches are implemented through land-use plans, policies, initiatives, long-term investments and other interventions. 

Jurisdictional approaches differ in that they are aimed at advancing shared sustainability goals in landscapes defined by administrative boundaries of subnational governments. Also, this approach is implemented with a high level of government involvement compared to landscape approaches. 

 

Nature-based solutions 

Actions to protect, conserve, restore, sustainably use and manage natural or modified terrestrial, freshwater, coastal and marine ecosystems, which address social, economic and environmental challenges effectively and adaptively, while simultaneously providing human wellbeing, ecosystem services and resilience and biodiversity benefits. 

 

Nature-positive 

Behaviour and actions which overall increase biodiversity and the number of species in nature, as opposed to causing them to decline. 

 

NDCs (Nationally Determined Contributions) 

A nationally determined contribution (NDC) is a non-binding national plan highlighting climate change mitigation, including climate-related targets for greenhouse gas emission reductions. These plans also include policies and measures governments aim to implement in response to climate change and as a contribution to achieve the global targets set out in the Paris Agreement. 

 

Net-zero 

The overall balance between emitting and absorbing carbon in the atmosphere. The outcome of limiting catastrophic climate change requires companies and countries to become net-zero, and many policies are based on achieving that within certain time frames. 

 

Paris Agreement 

A legally binding international treaty on climate change, adopted at COP21 in Paris in 2015. Its goal is to limit global warming to well below 2, preferably to 1.5 degrees Celsius, compared to pre-industrial levels. 

 

Plastic pollution 

Broadly, all emissions and risks resulting from plastics production, commercialization, use, end-of-life management and leakage (OECD, 2022). 

 

Plastic waste 

Material discarded at any point in the value chain, which contains as an essential ingredient a polymer (a large chain molecule with repeating molecular units) which can be moulded into a finished product - examples include thermoplastics, polyurethanes, elastomers, thermosets, adhesives, coatings and sealants, and PP fibres (including synthetic rubber) (adapted from ISO 2022, and EMF’s The New Plastics Economy). 

 

Region 

A devolved area of a larger country, usually with its own government, for example Prešov Region, Slovakia. State and regional governments play a vital role in driving climate action and delivering sustainable economies. 

 

SBTi (Science Based Targets initiative) 

The Science Based Targets initiative (SBTi) is a global body enabling businesses to set ambitious emissions reductions targets in line with the latest climate science. The SBTi’s goal is to accelerate companies across the world to support the global economy to halve emissions before 2030 and achieve net-zero before 2050. The initiative is a collaboration between CDP, the United Nations Global Compact, World Resources Institute (WRI) and the World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF) and is one of the We Mean Business Coalition commitments. The SBTi defines and promotes best practice in science-based target setting, offers resources and guidance to reduce barriers to adoption, and independently assesses and approves companies’ targets. 

 

Science-based targets 

Provide a clearly-defined pathway for companies and financial institutions to reduce greenhouse gas emissions in line with what the latest climate science deems necessary to meet the goals of the Paris Agreement. 

 

Scope 1, 2 & 3 emissions 

Scope 1 emissions refer to direct greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions that occur from sources that are controlled or owned by an organization. This includes all land-use emissions from companies that own or control land to produce agricultural and forest-risk commodities. 

Scope 2 emissions refer to indirect GHG emissions associated with any purchases of electricity, steam, heat, or cooling. 

Scope 3 emissions are the result of activities from assets not owned or controlled by the reporting organization, but that the organization indirectly impacts its value chain. This includes the emissions linked to downstream companies where sourced commodities are being produced from forest-risk products through the Agriculture, Forestry and Other Land Use (AFOLU) sector (GHG Protocol).      

Scoring 

Each year, CDP scores thousands of companies that disclose through CDP’s questionnaires on their environmental impacts, risks, opportunities, and actions across three themes: climate change, forests and water security. Scores awarded range from A to D-, with non-disclosers getting an F. 

 

SDGs (Sustainable Development Goals) 

17 social goals established by the United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs to promote prosperity while protecting the planet.

The goals are: no poverty; zero hunger; good health and wellbeing; quality education; gender equality; clean water and sanitation; affordable and clean energy; decent work and economic growth; industry, innovation and infrastructure; reduced inequalities; sustainable cities and communities; responsible consumption and production; climate action; life below water; life on land; peace, justice and strong institutions; and partnerships for the goals. 

 

State

An area of a country that has its own government and borders, for example New South Wales, Australia. State and regional governments play a vital role in driving climate action and delivering sustainable economies. 

 

Supply chain 

The multitude of companies involved in the entire process of creating a product or facilitating a service, for example manufacturers and providers of constituent ingredients used in a final product. Activities from a company's supply chain constitute its scope 3 emissions. 

 

Sustainability 

Maintaining a balance of resources extracted and resources restored. The 1987 United Nations Brundtland Commission defines it as “meeting the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs.” 

 

Taxonomy 

Sustainable finance taxonomies are one of the instruments that have been developed to support the redirection of financial flows towards environmentally (and socially) sustainable activities. According to the Bank for International Settlements, sustainable finance taxonomies are “set[s] of criteria which can form the basis for an evaluation of whether and to what extent a financial asset can support given sustainability goals”. The central goal of taxonomies is driving capital allocation towards sustainable activities, reducing greenwashing and enabling simpler comparison. 

 

Transition plan 

A time-bound action plan that clearly outlines how an organization will achieve its strategy to pivot its existing assets, operations, and entire business model towards a trajectory that aligns with the latest and most ambitious climate science recommendations, ie halving greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions by 2030 and reaching net-zero by 2050 at the latest, limiting global warming to 1.5°C. 

 

UNFCCC (United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change) 

The United Nations entity tasked with supporting the global response to the threat of climate change. The parent treaty of the 2015 Paris Agreement. CDP is an accredited observer to the UNFCCC. 

 

Water security 

The capacity of a population to safeguard sustainable access to adequate quantities of acceptable quality water for sustaining livelihoods, human wellbeing, and socioeconomic development, for ensuring protection against water-borne pollution and water-related disasters, and for preserving ecosystems in a climate of peace and political stability (from UN Water). Reduced water security is an impact of climate change. 

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