Your Solution for complying with California SB 253 and SB 261
Are you ready for California’s climate legislation?
Stay ahead of the curve with data you can trust for your California SB 253 and SB 261 reporting requirements.
“I really find this a great and easy user-friendly system, easy to teach new users.”
Bill D
Senior Site Manager
“User friendly Chemical Inventory list with easy access to SDS.”
Remy H
Senior Engineer
“This is a must for any business.”
Mandy H
Health and Safety Manager
What will California SB 253 and SB 261 mean for your business?
These two California climate-related disclosures (known collectively as the California Climate Accountability Package or CCAP) require large companies to disclose their greenhouse gas emissions and their climate-related financial risks.


Don’t leave reporting requirements to the last minute
Collecting, calculating and analysing the data required for disclosure can be a months-long process. Getting started now means you’ll be better able to meet deadlines as they approach.
Stay ahead of any new California SB 253 and SB 261 reporting requirements with our ESG reporting software
Helping companies meet their sustainability reporting obligations with confidence for over 15 years.
- Precise, audit-ready data covering scope 1, 2, and 3
- Faster, more efficient physical climate risk disclosures with trusted, science-based data
- Get started quickly and collect data across the organisation, no expertise required

STEP BY STEP
Getting started is simple

Fill out the contact form
We’ll be in touch in the next 24-48 hours on weekdays to schedule a chat with one of our consultants.

Your personalised guided tour
You’ll get concierge-level service, with a customised tour to demonstrate how our software can help.

Start your journey towards a safer workplace
Discover how simple EHS can be when you’ve found the right solution for your organisation.
How our ESG software can help you comply
Expert Advice
Our expert analysts have experience helping customers meet various global sustainability reporting obligations.
Emission Factor Database
We source and verify the quality of emission factors in our constantly updated database, so you don’t have to.
Secure Central Storage for documentation
All your evidence files, data and associated documentation in one place, ready for audit.
Comprehensive support for leading sustainability frameworks

Put your business in the best place to meet your California SB 253 and SB 261 reporting challenges.
Get in touch with one of our in-house experts to explore how we can help streamline your California reporting needs to give you the tools to simplify your journey to climate reporting compliance.
20+ YEARS OF EXPERIENCE
Trusted by 11,000+ customers worldwide
With knowledge from 90 different industries, we have developed our platform to make sure it tailors to your needs.
Be in the know
Access industry-leading information
Frequently asked questions
The SEC released a proposed rule on climate disclosure in March 2022 affecting listed companies in the United States. The rule would bring in new requirements for greenhouse gas emissions tracking and climate risk reporting. It sets out to make reporting practices consistent and comparable to meet investor demand for decision-useful information.
The proposed rule is built around the Task Force for Climate-Related Financial Disclosures (TCFD) recommendations across the themes of Governance, Strategy, Risk Management, Metrics and Targets, as well as the Greenhouse Gas (GHG) Protocol for emissions reporting.
Listed companies in the U.S. would need to report their physical climate risks under various scenarios as well as scope 1 and scope 2 emissions, with scope 3 being phased-in for material sources.
The proposed rule sets out that SEC registrants would be mandated to include the climate-related disclosures in a separate section of Form 10-K annual reports. Finally, the requirements would apply to registration statements such as initial public offerings.
In December 2023, finalisation of the proposal was delayed until Spring 2024.
As of April 2025, the SEC ended its defence of climate-related disclosure rules.
Task Force for Climate-Related Financial Disclosures. The TCFD has developed a framework to enable companies to effectively disclose climate-related risks and opportunities through their existing reporting processes.
In GHG reporting and accounting, a year chosen as a basis against which future emissions are compared.
There are three emissions scopes, based of the Green House Gas Protocols (GHG) Corporate Standard. Scope 3 are indirect emissions which result from all other activities and sources that occur in the value chain of the reporting company not covered in scope 2. This includes business travel, commuting, waste, and 3rd party deliveries.
Reporting of all scope 3 emissions is typically not mandatory, unless the organisation is subject to a regulation such as the CSRD in the EU. This may become mandatory under the proposed SEC climate ready and SEC greenhouse gas emissions disclosure rules. They will become mandatory for companies that must comply with California SB 253 and SB 261 in 2027.