How Clidapt fits the carbon and ESG needs of your sector.
Hotels and lodging businesses have a distinctive emissions profile: energy-hungry guest rooms, kitchens and laundries run around the clock, while occupancy swings sharply with the season. Increasingly, OTAs, tour operators and corporate travel buyers ask for per-room or per-night carbon data before they will list or book.
Manufacturers typically carry significant Scope 1 process and combustion emissions alongside a large, complex Scope 3 from purchased materials and components. Customers further down the value chain increasingly request product-level carbon data and decarbonization commitments as a condition of supply.
Retailers usually find the bulk of their footprint sits in Scope 3 — the goods they buy for resale — with store and warehouse energy and refrigeration close behind. Multi-site estates make consistent, comparable data the central challenge.
Agricultural producers deal with emissions most software ignores: fertiliser and soil N₂O, livestock methane, and land use, all overlaid with strong seasonal and weather variability. Buyers and cooperatives increasingly attach ESG conditions to supply agreements.
For professional services firms the footprint is dominated by office energy, business travel and purchased services rather than physical production. The recurring pressure point is client and tender ESG questionnaires that arrive with short deadlines.
Logistics and transport operators carry fuel-heavy Scope 1 fleets plus substantial subcontracted Scope 3 transport, with emissions best expressed per tonne-kilometre. Shippers and customers increasingly require carbon data alongside every quote.