Ashley Buchalter, manager of global membership development, AMER at Cascale, recently joined a panel of industry experts at Texworld in New York to discuss increased pressure on brands and manufacturers to uphold sustainability commitments. The conversation focused on the challenges of navigating rising costs, evolving regulations, and ongoing supply chain disruptions. Panelists also explored practical strategies companies can adopt to build resilience in this complex environment, without compromising their long-term sustainability goals.

The “Sustainability Under Pressure: Leading Through Uncertainty” panel was moderated by Edward Hertzman, chief executive officer of Hertzman Global Ventures and founder of Sourcing Journal, and included Lisa Diegel, director of global sustainability, Faherty Brand.

Speaking on the United Nations 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development and the feasibility of achieving SDG targets, Buchalter acknowledged the significant challenges companies face in this endeavor. However, she emphasized the importance of persistence and maintaining a long-term vision. She also highlighted the critical role of data-backed science for companies to set baselines and reach targets.

Buchalter went on to highlight the vital role of executive leadership in driving sustainability commitments, noting Cascale’s membership, which offers companies valuable opportunities to access the support needed to engage and influence leadership toward taking meaningful action.

Buchalter concluded by highlighting priority sustainable development goals for apparel brands, specifically Affordable and Clean Energy (SDG 7) to ensure access to affordable, reliable, sustainable modern energy and increase the share of renewable energy globally. She also noted Decent Work and Economic Growth (DGS 8) as another priority goal, which would promote sustained, inclusive economic growth with full, productive employment and eradicate forced labor, modern slavery, and child labor.

Companies that lead with clarity and compassion — who stay anchored in their values while responding to the moment — are the ones shaping a better future for us all. At Benevity, we know the challenges impact leaders are facing. The stakes are high. The expectations are higher. There are real, authentic conversations to be had and perspectives to be heard. We explore all of that and more in Season 3 of Speaking of Purpose by Benevity — a podcast that brings together voices from across the purpose movement to share what’s working, what’s changing and what’s next.

Hosted by Sona Khosla, Chief Impact Officer at Benevity, each episode embraces conversations grounded in real-world experience, fresh insights and new ideas. These are the stories behind the strategies — from people leading with courage and conviction, working to create lasting and meaningful change. Here are a few of the things we’re talking about this season:

Ep.1: Cracking the code of impact measurement Featuring: Jason Saul, CEO and Founder, Impact Genome.

Watch and listen on YouTube, Spotify and Apple

In this episode, Jason Saul, CEO of Impact Genome, helps us unpack what it takes to create a common language around social outcomes. It’s not about data for data’s sake — it’s about giving corporate social responsibility and nonprofit leaders the clarity they need to act with confidence and conviction. With a push toward standardized reporting in CSR, understanding impact data is no longer a nice-to-have — it’s a necessity. The conversation explores how clearly quantifying and communicating impact can lead to stronger funding, internal alignment and strategic clarity – potentially unlocking billions in giving.

Data from the Benevity 2025 State of Corporate Purpose confirms that 63% of companies are considering adoption of standardized reporting measures. For leaders focused on long-term value creation, the association between purpose and profit is measured in both social impact and business impact, and having standardized data helps tell that story.

Ep.2: The power of purpose as a business strategy Featuring: Brian Tippens, Chief Social Impact and Inclusion Officer, Cisco.

Watch and listen on YouTube, Spotify and Apple

When purpose and business goals are aligned, companies create real, lasting change. Cisco is a powerful example of that alignment in action, bringing mindful, authentic alignment of their purpose goals with their business goals.

In this special episode recorded at Benevity Live! 2024, Brian Tippens, Chief Social Impact and Inclusion Officer at Cisco, talks about the role of empathy in corporate leadership, the strategic value of social investment and the importance of showing up — especially when it’s hard. The conversation explored how to connect community impact to business value, how he and his team strategize about impact leadership and the important role that empathy plays when finding that perfect alignment.

The Benevity Impact Labs Executive CSR Report showed that among companies planning to increase CSR investment over the next 12 months, close to half (43%) of senior leaders say their organizations are boosting resourcing because investments made in CSR initiatives deliver direct business ROI. They’re not soft metrics — they are strategic decisions that drive trust, loyalty and long-term growth.

Ep.3: Unpacking the DEI backlash Featuring: Joelle Emerson, Co-Founder and CEO, Paradigm.

Watch and listen on YouTube, Spotify and Apple

Amid political and public debates, diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) initiatives are under scrutiny. Joelle Emerson, Co-Founder and CEO of Paradigm, helps unpack what’s making this a hot topic, stepping through what the charged acronym really means, who is driving the debate and what the data says about it. The conversation explores how companies can be grounded in their values and still respond to change without losing sight of their commitments and while building workplaces that work for everyone.

Uncertain moments can feel risky and managing reputation and compliance is a key factor for so many leaders today. The risk assessment matrix from Benevity can help companies adapt and guide their responses, it’s part of the CSR Resilience Playbook designed to help leaders manage through complexity and change and stay aligned with mission, values and long-term impact goals.

Keep Listening 

There’s so much to say, do and discover as the CSR industry evolves. Listen and learn from our growing community of impact professionals who are forging a path forward with empathy, resilience and resolve.

Subscribe to Speaking of Purpose by Benevity now on YouTube, Spotify or Apple to hear more about how business is being done differently

CNH brand, New Holland’s, IntelliSense™ bale automation’s precision in navigating different crop densities and creating evenly filled bales has captured farmers’ attention, with early adopters positive about its potential.

Farmers are appreciating how IntelliSense can optimise baling efficiency and provide a level of automation and precision not previously available in baling equipment.

Ryan Gault, Sales Manager with McIntosh & Son Narrogin, has been at the forefront of testing the IntelliSense technology in Western Australia’s Wheatbelt region.

Early trials on demonstration farms with local contractors are highlighting how automating key baler and tractor functions is delivering greater productivity, bale quality, fuel efficiency and operator comfort.

“IntelliSense uses a LiDAR [Light Detection and Ranging] system which allows the baler to speed up or slow down the tractor,” Ryan said.

“The system will automatically adjust speed based on different row conditions, even in areas where the rows aren’t consistently dense.

“IntelliSense will also auto-steer to the windrow, which feeds the baler evenly, reducing blockages and optimising bale quality.”

Ryan demonstrated a T8 tractor with IntelliSense paired to a 1290HD Baler for hay contractor Craig Cousins, who couldn’t believe the improved baling capacity.

“I was amazed by the system’s ability to automatically adjust baling speed and direction. The productivity gains were just unreal,” Craig said.

“IntelliSense allowed us to push the baler faster and more efficiently than I thought possible.

“Some of the rows weren’t actually that big, and then some spots were, but this was actually allowing for it and speeding up.”

Read the full story here.

At SLB, making a difference starts with collaboration. Through partnerships in local communities, our employees work hand in hand with others to drive sustainability projects that leave a lasting impact. The annual SLB Sustainability Impact Awards program allocates capital to teams around the world to deliver innovative, high-impact projects that enhance sustainability outcomes — both in SLB’s operations and in local communities.

Each project starts with a simple question: How can we make the most impact? These initiatives are designed to be scalable, replicable and deliver sustainable results.

Alongside climate action and nature initiatives, SLB’s community investments in 2024 supported socioeconomic impact across three key areas: science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM) education, inclusion and living conditions. Here are a few highlights:

Inspiring the next generation in STEM

SLB partnered with the She Is Foundation and NASA Space Center Houston on the She Is an Astronaut program. This initiative gave 24 girls from underserved communities in Colombia, Ecuador and Peru the opportunity to participate in a four-month virtual program that built their confidence and skills in STEM. The program culminated in a week-long trip to NASA’s Space Center in Houston, where the girls explored space science through hands-on learning.

Supporting workplace accessibility

The Including Talent, Reducing Inequality program provided job skills training to 90 people with disabilities in Brazil. SLB also hosted Brazil’s first fully accessible job fair in Macaé, which welcomed more than 520 attendees. Customers and training organizations took part, and over 40 SLB employees volunteered to support the event.

Strengthening healthcare access

SLB supported healthcare infrastructure in underserved regions of West Africa. In Nigeria, solar inverter systems were installed in 10 health centers, expanding healthcare access and improving the reliability of medical equipment. In Ghana, SLB helped build a pediatric ward at a hospital to address bed shortages and enhance healthcare services.

Learn more about these and other initiatives in SLB’s Sustainability Report.

View original content here.

LINCOLN, Neb., August 14, 2025 /3BL/ – New polling data from the Arbor Day Foundation revealed people are feeling the effects of severe weather, and they’re looking to trees to help.

In the Foundation’s second annual Canopy Report, over six in 10 people said they have personally experienced a natural disaster where they live, ranging from extreme heat and wildfires to hurricanes and tornadoes. Sixty-two percent of people said they’ve seen those natural disasters cause significant impacts to their local tree canopy. Americans also recognized trees are part of making communities stronger after natural disasters, with 90% of people agreeing replanting trees after a natural disaster is an important part of recovery.

“Our environment is changing, and people are feeling the consequences in a personal way. But this year’s Canopy Report reminds us that Americans see trees as part of the solution,” said Dan Lambe, chief executive of the Arbor Day Foundation. “Trees make us happier and healthier, while also rooting our communities in resilience. These findings are an incredible affirmation of how crucial our work is at the Arbor Day Foundation as we seek to shape a better future through trees.”

Other key themes emerged from the Foundation’s 2025 Canopy Report including a strong desire amongst Americans for increased access to green space, a surprising gap in planting know-how, and an interest for more businesses to make a positive difference in the environment. To view the full report, visit arborday.org/canopyreport, and for every download the Arbor Day Foundation will plant a tree in a forest of greatest need.

The Canopy Report was developed in collaboration with The Harris Poll, a nationally recognized consumer research firm.

Survey Methodology: 

This research was conducted online by The Harris Poll on behalf of The Arbor Day Foundation from March 4 – March 21, 2025, among 2,025 U.S. adults ages 18 and older.​ It also references findings from the first year of The Canopy Report, conducted from March 8 – March 14, 2024, among 2,006 U.S. adults ages 18 and older. ​

Respondents for this survey were selected from among those who have agreed to participate in our surveys. The sampling precision of Harris online polls is measured by using a Bayesian credible interval. For this study, the sample data is accurate to within +/- 2.8 percentage points using a 95% confidence level. This credible interval will be wider among subsets of the surveyed population of interest. ​

About the Arbor Day Foundation 

The Arbor Day Foundation is a global nonprofit inspiring people to plant, nurture, and celebrate trees. They foster a growing community of more than 1 million leaders, innovators, planters, and supporters united by their bold belief that a more hopeful future can be shaped through the power of trees. For more than 50 years, they’ve answered critical need with action, planting more than half a billion trees alongside their partners.

And this is only the beginning.

The Arbor Day Foundation is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit pursuing a future where all life flourishes through the power of trees. Learn more at arborday.org.

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To achieve net-zero carbon by 2050, Saint-Gobain North America must reach key milestones by 2030. In our latest episode of Journey to 2030, learn more about how Saint-Gobain is transforming the way people think about construction by creating circularity in our production.  

By diverting vinyl siding from landfills, our CertainTeed team is giving it new life!

About Journey to 2030

With approximately 37% of CO2 emissions coming from the built environment, we have a responsibility as the leader of light and sustainable construction to move towards net-zero carbon by 2050. But before we can get there, Saint-Gobain has milestones we’re trying to achieve by 2030. 

Join us on our Journey to 2030 and watch the entire video series on YouTube.

About Saint-Gobain

Worldwide leader in light and sustainable construction, Saint-Gobain designs, manufactures and distributes materials and services for the construction and industrial markets. Its integrated solutions for the renovation of public and private buildings, light construction and the decarbonization of construction and industry are developed through a continuous innovation process and provide sustainability and performance. The Group, celebrating its 360th anniversary in 2025, remains more committed than ever to its purpose “MAKING THE WORLD A BETTER HOME”.

€46.6 billion in sales in 2024
More than 161,000 employees, locations in 80 countries
Committed to achieving net zero carbon emissions by 2050

When disaster strikes, preparedness often takes center stage, but what happens after the crisis passes? Recovering from a disruptive event is more than restoring power or reopening your doors. It’s about caring for your people, rebuilding operations, and creating lasting resilience for the future.

In our recent webinar, “Disaster Recovery & Resilience: What to Do After the Crisis,” Antea Group experts Alizabeth Aramowicz Smith, Environment, Health & Safety Practice Leader; Tracy Taszarek, Senior Consultant; and John Ruksenas, Senior Manager; led a powerful discussion exploring recovery strategies through the lens of Human and Organizational Performance (HOP), business continuity planning, and trauma-informed leadership.

Below are four essential takeaways to help your organization not only recover but grow stronger after a crisis.

Find the full webinar here: Watch On-Demand

 

1. Rethink Investigations with HOP Principles

In the wake of disaster, organizations are under pressure to respond quickly, especially when incidents involve injuries or operational breakdowns. Traditional investigation tools like the Five Whys often miss the bigger picture, leading to oversimplified conclusions and misplaced blame.

Human and Organizational Performance (HOP) reframes how we investigate. It encourages us to understand why an employee made a decision based on their environment and pressures, rather than assuming they failed to follow procedure.

An example discussed during the webinar shared how HOP-enabled interviews, conducted after a tornado, revealed critical system failures that would have been missed by traditional approaches. By prioritizing psychological safety and empathy, an organization can learn more, respond better, and strengthen its safety systems.

Key takeaway: In times of crisis, shift your focus from blaming individuals to learning from the event to improve the system. Train your teams in HOP principles before an event occurs.

 

2. Activate Your Business Continuity Plan—Early

Statistics show that 40% of businesses without a continuity plan never reopen after a disaster. A well-designed Business Continuity Plan (BCP) is your roadmap to recovery, and it must be more than a static document.

Using the tornado example scenario mentioned earlier, here are some steps leaders should take immediately following an event: gather updates from the scene, assess employee safety and infrastructure, coordinate emergency communications, and identify critical functions that must be restored first (e.g., payroll, IT, procurement).

Common pitfalls include failing to escalate quickly, not testing plans, or struggling with outdated contact lists and contractual agreements. Proactive planning, prepared with regular walkthroughs, desktop simulations, and role-play exercises, helps mitigate these gaps.

Key takeaway: Act quickly and don’t wait to activate your BCP. Regularly test it through integrated emergency drills and full recovery simulations. The more you train, whether through desktop or role-play, the more confident and capable your response will be.

 

3. Turn Recovery into Continuous Improvement

Recovery is not the final step; it’s the beginning of building back better. Every incident, no matter how severe, is a learning opportunity.

Post-disaster debriefs should include more than logistics. They must evaluate what worked, what didn’t, and what needs to change. This includes reassessing your maximum tolerable outages, reviewing contractor performance, validating contact info, and refining communications strategies.

One of the most overlooked reasons recovery plans fail? They’re never tested under pressure. Exercises like scenario-based simulations and post-exercise reviews give your teams the chance to build muscle memory—so they know how to respond when it really counts.

Key takeaway: Don’t file away your recovery plan once the crisis passes. Update it based on rea l-world lessons and stress-test it regularly to build resilience over time.

 

4. Make Compassionate Recovery Part of Your Safety Culture

After a disaster, one of the most powerful things a leader can do is acknowledge the emotional toll on employees. A serious injury, or the loss of a colleague, can leave teams grieving, disoriented, and fearful.

A trauma-informed recovery approach prioritizes people. It includes access to grief counseling or Employee Assistance Programs (EAP), compassionate communication from leadership, flexible time-off policies, and thoughtful reintegration of staff into operations. It also means pausing—not pushing—when employees need space to process.

A leadership team’s empathetic response to a tragic employee fatality, such as bringing in counselors, delaying the restart of operations, and holding a remembrance event, can have a profound and lasting impact on workforce trust and morale. These actions show employees that their well-being is a priority, helping to strengthen safety culture and build long-term resilience.

Key takeaway: How you respond in the aftermath of a crisis will define your safety culture. A human-centered approach builds not just recovery but long-term loyalty and resilience.

 

Frequently Asked Questions

Q: How can we build HOP principles into recovery exercises?

A: Integrate emotional scenarios into your desktop or live simulations, such as an injury or structural damage, so teams can practice asking better, more empathetic questions and avoid falling back into blame-based patterns.

Q: What makes a good debrief after a crisis?

A: Look beyond whether the “plan” was followed. Review if vendors met expectations, if communication tools worked, and if decisions were made quickly enough. In today’s hybrid work environment, evaluating your communication plan is critical—were messages timely, accurate, and received by the right people to enable decision-making? Also focus on key metrics like restoration time, data loss, and leadership response to truly gauge effectiveness.

Q: How can I ensure our business continuity plan will actually work?

A: Test it. Start with a simple walkthrough, then evolve into full scenario simulations. Review contracts, contact details, and access to backup locations or systems. Ensure your leaders know how and when to activate the plan.

 

Looking Ahead

True disaster recovery goes beyond patching holes. It’s about rebuilding with purpose and listening to your employees, testing your systems, and learning with humility. By integrating HOP principles, activating and updating your continuity plans, and leading with compassion, your organization can emerge from crisis not just operational, but stronger, safer, and more united than ever.

 

Need help building a resilient recovery plan or training your leaders in HOP? Reach out today! We’re here to support your people and your process.

At Covia, we are committed to meeting or exceeding environmental compliance requirements by creating environmental awareness, proactively managing environmental risks, promoting more efficient use of resources, encouraging wildlife and habitat conservation, maintaining strong stakeholder relationships, and responsibly managing the land under our care.

We strive to be good neighbors by:

  • Protecting air quality
  • Improving waste management
  • Reducing noise pollution, vibration, and light
  • Limiting road congestion
  • Implementing Community Action Plans
  • Protecting indigenous communities

Our dedication to environmental responsibility is more than a promise—it’s reflected in the tangible actions we take across our operations. For example:

Reducing Dust Emissions at Lampazos, Mexico Plant

To proactively tackle the persistent issue of dust emissions when filling large flexible intermediate bulk containers in our industrial mineral operations, we installed a sealing sleeve at the discharge point at our Lampazos site. This sealing sleeve effectively secures the neck of the bulk bag under pressure, significantly reducing dust emissions and enhancing the safety and cleanliness of the work environment.

Improving Waste Management at Canoitas, Mexico Plant

This past year, we implemented a hopper system, a versatile steel dumpster used in conjunction with a forklift, in our warehouse in Canoitas, Mexico. This system allows us to group four types of waste through a smart management plan and has led to a significant reduction in waste volumes, smoother waste-storage operations, savings on containers, lower transportation and disposal costs, and a reduction of safety risks.

For more information on our approach to environmental stewardship, please see our Responsible Operations Statement.

This year marks 30 years of corporate responsibility reporting for AMD – a milestone that reflects our continued commitment toward fostering deep collaboration across technology and the semiconductor industry that drives real, measurable impact on the economy, the environment and human potential. In partnership with our customers, developers and partners, we are advancing open standards, accelerating product energy efficiency and expanding access to high-performance computing and AI.

AMD has a long legacy of purpose-driven innovation, developing high-performance and adaptive computing products that help solve the world’s most important challenges. No area of high-performance computing is more important today than AI. The next wave of AI breakthroughs holds tremendous promise, from advancing scientific discovery and accelerating medical research to transforming how we work and live. But these advances bring new demands on global energy systems, challenging the pace of responsible innovation. At AMD, we are committed to enabling AI in a responsible and ethical manner. Through energy-efficient innovation, transparent practices and a dedication to sustainability, we support a more resilient future for both society and the planet.

In 2025, we exceeded our 30×25 AI energy efficiency goal, achieving a 38x improvement in node-level energy efficiency for AI training and high-performance computing since 2020. This amounts to a 97% reduction in energy use for the same performance. To build on that progress, we set a new energy efficiency target aiming to achieve 20x rack-scale efficiency improvement by 2030. Achieving our goal means that by 2030, a typical AI model that needs over 275 racks to train in 2025 could be trained using less than one fully utilized rack.

Beyond our products, we continue to focus on the environmental impacts of our operations, and in 2024 we achieved a 28% reduction in our operational (Scope 1 and 2) greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions compared to 2020. We continue to make progress on renewable energy, with about half of AMD’s global electricity coming from renewable sources in 2024.

Through the AMD University Program and STEM education initiatives, we have donated technology to more than 800 institutions in 2024. To date, these efforts have benefited more than 84 million people, empowering students and researchers to advance science, accelerate AI research and expand teaching and training initiatives.

We are investing in our workforce to support employee growth and foster an environment where the best minds can do their best work and make the largest impact. In 2024, we expanded our global AMD Mentoring Programs, including dedicated programs for technical and non-engineering talent, career development and members of Employee Resource Groups. Our mentorship programs continue to drive significant engagement and skills development. You can read more about our progress and priorities throughout this report.

As our company grows and our impact on the world expands, we see meaningful opportunities for high-performance computing and AI to improve everyday life and contribute to solving global challenges. AMD remains committed to delivering computing solutions that are open, efficient and thoughtfully designed to support a more sustainable and connected world.

Dr. Lisa Su,
AMD Chair and CEO 

Originally published in AMD 2024-25 Corporate Responsibility Report.

AMSTERDAM, HONG KONG, and OAKLAND, Calif., August 14, 2025 /3BL/ – Cascale and Worldly have released the “Navigating Forest, Land, and Agriculture (FLAG) Emissions” report to offer a standardized method for estimating FLAG emissions for the apparel and footwear industry. The report uses data from Cascale’s Higg Index tools, exclusively available on Worldly, as well as guidance for companies to assess the relevance of FLAG emissions to their organizations.

FLAG emissions, which include land use change (LUC), land management emissions, and biogenic removals, represented 22 percent of all global emissions in 2019. However, because of ongoing data and methodological challenges, these emissions have often been partially excluded from corporate greenhouse gas (GHG) inventories. With regulatory momentum shifting, the Science-Based Targets initiative (SBTi) now requires companies with more than 20 percent of emissions from FLAG sources to set separate reduction targets. In parallel, finalized GHG Protocol guidance on FLAG emissions is expected by Q4 2025.

While tools like Cascale’s Higg Materials Sustainability Index (Higg MSI) already include many FLAG-related impacts, they currently do not include land use change data — an essential input for full FLAG reporting standards. In addition, land management emissions are often aggregated together with non-FLAG GHG emissions in the Higg MSI, while they must be separated to calculate a FLAG baseline.

Recognizing this gap and need for industry guidance, Cascale and Worldly conducted exploratory research to identify and evaluate key calculation methodologies and considerations specific to the sector. The outcome is a foundational framework designed to help companies take initial steps in FLAG emission estimations using consistent, sector-relevant methods.

“Accurately measuring and reporting FLAG emissions remains a significant challenge for many organizations,” said Joël Mertens, Director of Higg Product Tools at Cascale. “Data quality, availability, and alignment with evolving standards continue to be major hurdles. This framework offers a critical starting point for companies, enabling more consistent and harmonized reporting across the industry.”

“This report provides a robust methodology that enables Higg MSI users to calculate a credible FLAG emissions baseline,” said Paula Bernstein, Associate Director of Sustainability Science at Worldly. “Establishing this baseline is key to meeting emerging climate disclosure requirements. As FLAG data and standards evolve, we’ll continue collaborating with Cascale and the industry to refine methodologies and shape best practices that drive supply-chain decarbonization.”

The FLAG Emissions report can be accessed through Cascale’s website. Further discussion and member input on the guidance will take place during Cascale’s Annual Meeting and Worldly’s Customer Forum, both planned for September 2025.

 

ABOUT CASCALE

Cascale is the global nonprofit alliance empowering collaboration to drive equitable and restorative business practices in the consumer goods industry. Formerly known as the Sustainable Apparel Coalition, Cascale owns and develops the Higg Index, which is exclusively available on Worldly, the most comprehensive sustainability data and insights platform. Cascale unites over 300 retailers, brands, manufacturers, governments, academics, and NGO/nonprofit affiliates around the globe through one singular vision: To catalyze impact at scale and give back more than we take to the planet and its people. LinkedIn | X | Instagram | Facebook | YouTube

ABOUT WORLDLY

Worldly is the leading sustainability data and analytics platform for the consumer goods industry, empowering brands, retailers, and suppliers to turn primary data into strategic business action. Trusted by a network of over 40,000 global customers across apparel, footwear, home furnishings, outdoor sporting goods, and more, Worldly provides deep visibility into environmental and social impact—from carbon and water to chemicals and labor—at the product, facility, and value chain level.

 

Built on industry-leading standards including Cascale’s Higg Index tools, exclusively available on Worldly, and connected with partners like ZDHC and Bluesign, Worldly transforms raw data into actionable intelligence that helps companies reduce risk, boost operational efficiency, meet evolving compliance and regulatory requirements, and accelerate measurable impact. With the largest global network of engaged manufacturers and the most comprehensive library of materials and product impact data, Worldly enables businesses to lead with transparency, resilience, and accountability. www.worldly.io

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