Sustainability advice
Our services
- Development of a sustainability strategy and sustainability objectives
- Development of sustainability standards for your company
- Support with the green transformation towards a functioning circular economy
- Preparation of a meaningful database and a list of concrete measures for improving environmental balance
- Development of a reporting system and stakeholder management
- Support with ongoing evaluation and monitoring of results
Your benefits
Saubermacher has lived sustainability for decades and helps companies with the active management and communication of the social and ecological effects of what they do. Companies can take advantage of our special expertise and speedy, focused implementation.
- The benefit of decades of experience in environmental and sustainability management
- Facilitation of access to capital and funding through carefully considered ESG performance
- Promote trust amongst your customers and stakeholders
- Raise awareness amongst employees
- Practical and implementation-oriented advice
- Future-proof
You want to use our service?
We are looking forward to your enquiry!
Frequently asked questions
Sustainability reporting is more than a legal obligation and also serves as a means of communication that ensures that stakeholders receive vital information. It promotes transparency about the activities and impacts of a company and can also be used as a management tool to assess ESG performance.
More and more companies are required to prepare a sustainability report. Whether or not your company is required to prepare a CSR report is dependent on factors such as the number of employees and turnover. We would be happy to advise you, please contact our customer service team.
The Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive (CSRD) affects:
Large companies that meet two of the following criteria:
- More than 250 employees
- More than 40 million Euros in turnover
- More than 20 million Euros in total assets
Capital market-oriented companies that are listed on a regulated market, depending on their size.
Non-EU companies that operate in the EU and exceed certain turnover thresholds.
Public interest companies that operate in certain industries or receive public funding, irrespective of their size.