Category: Blog

  • The Complete Buyer’s Guide to Carbon Accounting Software in Australia (2026)

    The Complete Buyer’s Guide to Carbon Accounting Software in Australia (2026)

    The best carbon accounting software for ASRS reporting stands up to audit scrutiny, cuts manual data entry, and becomes a source of business value, not just compliance cost.

    For most mid-market and enterprise reporters under AASB S2, that means a platform with a real audit trail from source document to reported figure, annually updated emissions factors, and local support that understands both ASRS and New Zealand’s CRD regime. It also means a system that holds up across multiple reporting years. A spreadsheet that coped with year one starts to creak by year three.

    This complete buyer’s guide covers what the software does, when to switch from spreadsheets, how to choose, what auditors look for, how the main platforms compare, and what it costs, including where we fit and where we do not.

    We make BraveGen, so we’re not exactly neutral here. We tend to do best with organisations that have a large built environment and complex reporting obligations. Having carbon accounting and building optimisation on one platform means operational savings typically offset a good chunk of the cost, making for a more compelling business case than alternatives.

    In this guide

    What is carbon accounting software, and do you need it?

    Carbon accounting software measures, tracks, and reports an organisation’s greenhouse gas emissions across Scope 1, 2, and 3, in line with the GHG Protocol, and turns that data into audit-ready disclosures for frameworks like ASRS and AASB S2. In practice it does four jobs: it ingests activity data (energy bills, fuel, travel, supplier spend), applies the right emissions factors to convert that data into CO2 equivalent, produces the reports a regulator, auditor, or board needs to see, and shows where you can cut emissions and cost.

    You need it once your reporting has to stand up to assurance. A voluntary footprint for your website can live in a spreadsheet. A mandatory AASB S2 disclosure carrying director liability is a different matter. You can get assurance on a spreadsheet, but doing it defensibly is expensive: the version control, audit trail, and annually updated emissions factors that assurance demands take far more staff time and auditor effort to maintain by hand. It is the same logic as financial accounting. You could keep the books in a spreadsheet, but at scale almost nobody does, because the cost and risk outweigh the saving.

    Spreadsheets vs software: when to make the switch

    Switch from spreadsheets to software the moment your emissions data needs to survive scrutiny, which for mandatory reporters is now. Spreadsheets feel free, but they carry three risks that get expensive under assurance.

    They are error-prone. Studies have found a large majority of complex spreadsheets contain errors, and in the 2023-24 reporting cycle Australia’s Clean Energy Regulator found that simple data-entry mistakes and incorrect emissions factors drove a significant share of compliance interventions. One wrong factor copied down a column distorts the whole inventory.

    They fragment your data. Metrics scattered across tabs, inboxes, and shared drives make consolidated reporting slow and make the audit trail nearly impossible to reconstruct when someone asks where a number came from.

    They eat your team’s time. The manual grind of chasing records, re-keying invoices, and reconciling versions is exactly the work sustainability managers tell us they want to escape, so they can spend time on reduction instead of data entry. For a small team, that grind is the difference between a strategic function and a reporting one.

    If you are a Group 1, 2, or 3 ASRS reporter, an NGER reporter, or you simply find audit season swallowing whole weeks, you are past the point where a spreadsheet is worth the staff time and audit cost it carries.

    What actually matters when choosing carbon accounting software for ASRS?

    Five things separate software that survives mandatory reporting from software built for a voluntary footprint on your website. Get these right and which vendor you pick matters far less than the marketing suggests.

    1. An audit trail that survives assurance. AASB S2 reporting carries director liability, and assurance moves from limited to reasonable over time, much like a financial audit. The moment an auditor asks “show me the source document for this number,” your software needs to trace every figure back to its origin, log every change, and record the rationale behind each emissions classification. If it cannot, you will rebuild that evidence by hand, under deadline and the pressure of the audit process. This is the single most important capability, and the tools that are not audit-proven tend to be weak on.

    2. The right emissions factors, updated annually. NGER uses AR5 global warming potential values; AASB S2 requires AR6. That is not a footnote, it changes your reported numbers. If you are an NGER reporter pulled into ASRS Group 2, you need software that produces both outputs without running parallel calculations in a spreadsheet.

    3. Scope 3 that you can actually defend. Scope 3 is roughly 85 to 90% of most organisations’ footprint, and “access to data” is the top barrier companies report. Good software combines supplier-collected activity data with spend-based estimates to fill gaps, and labels clearly which figures are measured and which are estimated. Scope 3 becomes mandatory from your second reporting period, so start early.

    4. Automation that removes the data-collection grind. The goal, in the words of one sustainability manager we work with, is that “you don’t want a full-time employee solely for data collection.” Look for automated ingestion from utility PDFs, smart meters, loggers, and APIs, plus anomaly detection that flags outliers before they reach a report. Centralisation and automation are what make audit season routine rather than a scramble.

    5. Local support that knows the regime. ASRS is modelled on IFRS S1 and S2 but carries Australian-specific paragraphs, thresholds, and timelines. A provider who understands the local context, and who has already been through New Zealand’s CRD regime, will save you a lot of back-and-forth over what “working towards” versus “commitment” means in a disclosure. The language matters as much as the numbers when directors carry the liability.

    BraveGen Carbon Accounting Dashboard

    What do auditors actually want to see?

    Auditors care about a documented chain of evidence from source document to reported figure. They want to see version control, a logged history of every change, the rationale recorded for each classification, and a clear calculation breakdown from raw data to final number. A polished dashboard counts for little if it cannot produce that.

    A platform can produce a beautiful dashboard and still leave you exposed if it cannot answer the auditor’s questions with documentation. When we built BraveGen, our founding product manager was an auditor, so traceability and easy audit processes were designed in from the start rather than bolted on. The practical test for any tool you are evaluating: ask the vendor to show you exactly how a single number on the final report traces back to the invoice or meter reading it came from. If that demo is smooth, the tool is doing the job.

    For a fuller breakdown of what assurers ask for and the evidence to have ready, see our ASRS audit guide.

    The real job: what does a sustainability manager’s week actually look like?

    Software lists rarely describe the person using the software. But the fit between the tool and the job is what determines success. Here is the reality for the mid-market and enterprise sustainability managers we work with.

    The role has shifted towards compliance. Since climate statements became mandatory and directors picked up legal liability (with fines and, in serious cases, personal consequences), a lot of the week now goes to reporting up: quarterly updates to leadership, the CEO, and sometimes the board. But the managers we talk to do not want to stop at compliance. They want to use the same data to make the business case: cutting operating costs through energy and efficiency gains, building resilience against climate and supply-chain risk, and turning a credible sustainability position into revenue and access to capital. As one manager put it, the challenge is “how to make sure that we are not just ticking boxes and actually putting strategy and activity first.” The job is to clear compliance with the least drag on the business, then get on with the work that pays for itself.

    Then there is audit season. The recurring phrases we hear are telling: “a lot of it is spreadsheets and data,” “following up and chasing people,” “not having to work through heavy, slow, horrible spreadsheets.” The teams are small, often two full-timers plus a part-time analyst borrowed from finance. When the software does the calculation and stores everything sensibly, the feeling people describe is “relief.” When it is hard to use, it is “frustration,” and when an audit question lands and the evidence is not there, it is “fear.”

    Teams several years into mandatory reporting describe the work changing shape. Audit stops being one end-of-year scramble and becomes an ongoing cycle.

    It’s less of a timeline, it’s more of a cycle. We’re almost constantly preparing for audit.

    Claire Pont, Environment and Sustainability Manager, Spark New Zealand

    So the real brief is simple. Take the data-collection grind off the team. Make the audit defensible without a last-minute scramble. Give back the hours so the people responsible for emissions can actually work on reducing them: the risk, the strategy, the projects with operating divisions. The best tool is the one that, in the words of one manager, “becomes another team member.”

    The best carbon accounting software platforms in Australia, compared

    We reviewed the platforms most active in the Australian market as of 2026, focused on mandatory ASRS and AASB S2 reporting. Several of these are good, they suit different organisations, and the right answer depends on your size, your data, and whether you carry a property portfolio. Here is where each fits.

    PlatformBest suited toNotable strength
    BraveGenMid-market and enterprise, especially with large property portfolios, reporting across ANZAuditor-built traceability; dual ASRS and NZ CRD coverage; Building Optimisation
    AvarniFinance-led teams focused on Scope 3 and supplier engagement at scaleMachine-learning Scope 3 analysis and large-dataset handling
    Unravel CarbonOrganisations seeking an AI-based approach across the workflowAgent-style automation and a large emissions-factor library
    GreenbaseMining, energy and utilities with complex NGER obligationsLong-standing NGER and regulatory reporting depth
    SumdayAccountants and advisors delivering reporting for clientsBuilt around accounting workflows and advisor delivery
    NetNada / Climate Zero / TraceSmall and medium businesses starting out, or brand-led climate actionAccessibility, quick set-up, customer-facing storytelling
    PathzeroInvestors and private equity assessing financed emissionsPortfolio-level emissions exposure and disclosure
    Generate ZeroBanks and financial institutions reporting financed emissions, especially in NZPCAF-accredited financed emissions; strong ANZ banking adoption
    Workiva CarbonLarge multinationals consolidating ESG with financial disclosureIntegration with broader financial and ESG reporting
    WatershedLarge global multinationals with complex value chains and mature in-house teamsEnterprise-grade automation, data lineage, multi-framework global reporting
    PersefoniFinancial institutions needing investor-grade, PCAF-aligned disclosureFinanced emissions and assurance-grade carbon ledger

    Where BraveGen fits, and where it does not

    We built BraveGen for mid-market and enterprise organisations carrying real reporting obligations across Australia and New Zealand, and we are the strongest fit when two things are true: you need audit-grade reporting you can defend, and you have a sizeable owned or tenanted property portfolio.

    The substance behind that: more than two decades of carbon accounting experience, billions of sustainability data rows processed for leading ANZ businesses, and hundreds of Big 4-tested, assurance-grade audits supported. Because our founding product manager was an auditor, transparency and traceability are defaults, not add-ons. We cover AASB S2 and ASRS for Australia and the Climate-related Disclosures regime for New Zealand, which matters if you report on both sides of the Tasman. And our Building Optimisation product solves a problem most carbon tools ignore: capturing utility data from difficult building systems and hard-to-reach tenant meters, then making it actionable. Clients including commercial real estate services firm Colliers, asset manager Centuria and retirement living leader Levande use the suite for exactly this.

    Where we are not the right fit: if you are a small business doing a first voluntary footprint for your website, a lighter, cheaper tool like Trace or Climate Zero will get you there faster. If your need is purely financed-emissions disclosure, Pathzero and Generate Zero are purpose-built for that. We will tell you that upfront. The value shows up most for teams with real complexity to manage.

    Investors money tree and commercial buildings

    What about the global enterprise platforms?

    Three global names come up in most enterprise shortlists, and they are strong platforms, so it is worth being clear about when they make sense for an Australian reporter.

    • Watershed is a US-built enterprise platform (named a leader in the 2026 Verdantix Green Quadrant) suited to large multinationals with complex global value chains, mature in-house sustainability teams, and many systems to integrate. If your footprint is dominated by a sprawling international supply chain and you report across CSRD, SEC, and ISSB as well as ASRS, it is a serious option.
    • Persefoni is built for financial institutions and investor-grade disclosure, with a PCAF-aligned engine strong on financed emissions. It overlaps with Generate Zero and Pathzero on the finance use case.
    • Workiva Carbon (in the table above) suits finance-led organisations consolidating carbon with broader financial and ESG filings in one assured system.

    The trade-off with the global platforms is local fit. They are built for the world, not for the specifics of AASB S2, NGER, and New Zealand’s CRD regime, and their pricing and implementation are pitched at large global programmes. For an ANZ-headquartered mid-market or enterprise reporter, especially one that reports on both sides of the Tasman or runs a property portfolio, a platform built for this market will usually mean less customisation, faster local support, and a team that already knows what an Australian auditor will ask. That local depth is the reason we exist, and it is the main thing to weigh a global platform against. If you operate at global-multinational scale, shortlist Watershed; if you are anchored in ANZ, weigh whether you are paying for global scope you will not use.

    Which carbon accounting software should you choose?

    Choose based on your reporting obligation, your data sources, and your team’s capacity, in that order. A short decision guide:

    • Mandatory ASRS reporter with property assets, reporting across ANZ: shortlist platforms with auditor-grade traceability and building data capture. This is our home ground, so include BraveGen.
    • Finance-led team where Scope 3 and supplier data is the whole game: look closely at Avarni and Unravel Carbon for supplier engagement and automation depth.
    • Heavy NGER obligations in mining, energy or utilities: Greenbase has the regulatory depth for complex facility reporting.
    • Advisor or accountant reporting on behalf of clients: Sumday is built for that delivery model.
    • Small business or voluntary footprint: NetNada, Climate Zero or Trace will get you started without enterprise overhead.
    • Investor or financial institution assessing financed emissions: Pathzero is purpose-built for portfolio exposure, and Generate Zero is a strong fit for banks and lenders needing PCAF-accredited financed emissions, particularly in New Zealand. Persefoni is the global equivalent for investor-grade financial-sector disclosure.
    • Large global multinational with complex international value chains: shortlist a global enterprise platform like Watershed, and weigh its scope and cost against a local platform if most of your obligation sits in ANZ.

    Whatever you shortlist, run the same three tests in every demo. Ask them to trace one final number back to its source document. Ask how Scope 3 gaps are handled and disclosed. Ask what your team will still do by hand after go-live. The answers will tell you more than any feature list, including this one.

    We significantly increased the number of tenants we were collecting data for, at the same time as we brought BraveGen on. So I’m spending less time on it than before, while covering significantly more tenant data. It’s a fraction of the time spent requesting data from tenants.

    Auditors can explore the BraveGen system themselves. The questions we get now are about calculation methodology and bespoke things like passenger commuting, not ‘where’s this invoice, what was that?’ That’s been one of our biggest benefits.

    BraveGen is a great product. It’s been great for us. We’re loving it.

    Josh McIvor, Sustainability Manager, Wellington Airport

    Frequently asked questions

    What is the best carbon accounting software for ASRS in Australia?

    There is no single best platform for every organisation. The right choice depends on your reporting group, your data sources, and whether you carry a property portfolio. For mandatory AASB S2 reporters that need audit-grade traceability and report across Australia and New Zealand, BraveGen is a strong fit. Finance-led teams focused on Scope 3 often shortlist Avarni or Unravel Carbon, and small businesses doing a first footprint are usually better served by a lighter tool such as Trace or Climate Zero.

    Do I legally need carbon accounting software for AASB S2?

    Software is not legally mandated, and you can produce an assured AASB S2 disclosure from spreadsheets. The catch is cost. The version control, granular audit trails, and documented chain of evidence from source document to reported figure that assurance requires are labour-intensive and expensive to maintain by hand. Given that directors carry legal liability for the accuracy of disclosures, most large entities move to purpose-built software to cut that cost and risk.

    When does my organisation have to start ASRS reporting?

    ASRS is phased. Group 1 entities report from financial years starting on or after 1 January 2025, Group 2 from 1 July 2026, and Group 3 from 1 July 2027. You can also be pulled in automatically if you already report under NGER, regardless of size. Scope 3 emissions reporting becomes mandatory from your second reporting period.

    What is the difference between ASRS and New Zealand’s CRD regime?

    Both lift climate disclosure standards, but ASRS is modelled closely on IFRS S1 and S2 and is more detailed and prescriptive, with broader scope and a phased move toward reasonable assurance and director liability. New Zealand’s Climate-related Disclosures regime is more principles-based and climate-specific. If you report on both sides of the Tasman, software that handles both regimes saves running two processes.

    What should I look for in an audit trail?

    You want every reported figure to trace back to its source document, with every change logged, a recorded rationale for each emissions classification, and a clear calculation breakdown from raw data to final number. In any demo, ask the vendor to trace a single final number all the way back to the invoice or meter reading it came from. If that is smooth, the audit trail is real.


    About the author. This guide was written by the BraveGen team. BraveGen has more than two decades of carbon accounting experience and supports hundreds of Big 4-tested, assurance-grade sustainability audits for mid-market and enterprise organisations across Australia and New Zealand. We make Carbon Accounting and Building Optimisation software built for ASRS, AASB S2, and New Zealand’s CRD regime.

  • Levande Selects BraveGen’s Sustainability Suite

    Levande Selects BraveGen’s Sustainability Suite

    BraveGen is pleased to announce that Levande selected BraveGen to provide a utilities and carbon data solution which will support its ambitious science-based emissions reductions and build an audit-ready foundation for AASB S2 greenhouse gas emissions and ASRS reporting.

    About Levande

    Levande is one of the largest retirement living operators in Australia with ~8,825 retirement units housing over 10,000 residents across 59 villages, in New South Wales, Victoria, South Australia, the Australian Capital Territory and Queensland.

    As the company pursued ambitious science-based emissions reduction targets and prepared for mandatory Australian Sustainability Reporting Standards (ASRS) disclosure, Levande needed reliable sustainability data proven for assurance grade audits, granular enough for action, and flexible enough to power their existing BI tools.

    They found that solution in BraveGen.

    The Challenge

    Gaining visibility on key environmental sustainability data across a large, distributed village portfolio is quite complex. Each village has different levels of data availability and for Levande’s sustainability commitments to be credible, and its reporting to withstand both external assurance processes and the scrutiny of mandatory ASRS disclosure, every data point needs to be accurate, traceable, and consistent.

    At the same time, Levande wanted its environmental sustainability data to do more than satisfy auditors. It needed to inform operational improvements and integrate seamlessly into the BI dashboards and management tools Levande’s teams already relied on.

    The Levande Implementation

    Levande is deploying BraveGen’s Carbon Accounting and Building Optimisation Suite across all 59 communities, creating a single, transparent foundation for environmental sustainability data ingestion and reporting (including ASRS reporting) across the entire portfolio.

    Key capabilities include:

    • Audit-ready emissions data with transparent processes, delivering both confidence in the data and its alignment with required climate related disclosures.
    • BraveGen’s Clive AI intelligent alerting that turns thousands of data points into actionable insights, helping Levande deliver continuous operational optimisation.
    • Direct integration into Levande’s existing BI dashboards and management tools, with no manual exports and no disconnected spreadsheets.
    • Real-time portfolio visibility that enables village teams to act on priority areas, manage risk, and reduce emissions.

    In Their Own Words

    “With a commitment to ambitious science-based emission reduction targets, access to data and data insights in real time enables us to take action in those priority areas to both manage our risk and deliver on opportunities to reduce emissions. We also require confidence that our datasets are robust enough for assurance processes – and the AI aspects of the BraveGen portal provided added confidence in this regard.”
    Colin RobertsHead of Sustainability, Levande

    Ready to learn more about BraveGen’s Sustainability Suite? Contact your BraveGen account manager or reach out to our team to learn more about how an integrated carbon accounting and building optimisation platform can streamline your carbon accounting processes.

  • New Spend Management Capabilities Now Live

    New Spend Management Capabilities Now Live

    1. Spend Management in Gen3 Carbon 

    We’re excited to share the newest capabilities now available in our third-generation Carbon platform. These developments represent significant advances in automated carbon accounting, designed to streamline your processes while maintaining the flexibility and reliability you expect from BraveGen.

    Code Free Automated Supplier Data Management

    The new Spend management features mean that you can automate data loading without complex API integrations. Simply map supplier data files for seamless automated loading and categorisation via an email process, available for both on-demand and through scheduled processes.

    Key features include:

    • Unique supplier email addresses for automated file processing
    • Support for complex, multi-format data feeds including multi-sheet Excel files and CSV formats
    • Built-in aliasing and lookup capabilities
    • Full task visibility and progress tracking
    • Direct integration with your CSR environment

    This automation significantly reduces manual data entry while eliminating the risk of data loss, giving you more time to focus on strategic carbon management decisions.

    New Built in Transformation capabilities

    The Gen3 Carbon Spend Module allows you to apply emission factors in the tool with key ANZ and global libraries available including:

    • EXIOBASE – Over 25,000 emission factors for spend-based calculations across diverse sectors and geographies
    • Motu – New Zealand-specific factors for local accuracy
    • Auckland Council – Regional emission factors
    • Thinkstep – Industry-standard factors
    • MfE – Ministry for the Environment factors

    This expansion ensures organisations operating in the ANZ region have access to locally relevant emission factors while maintaining comprehensive global coverage for international operations.

    Accessible for Carbon CSR Gen2 users

    These improvements create a seamless workflow from financial data through to emissions calculations, with all results flowing directly into your existing CSR system.


    2. Advanced PDF Processing

    Our intelligent PDF ingestion technology is now available to all CSR clients. This feature delivers:

    • Automated data capture from utility invoices
    • Intelligent identification of missing data
    • Seamless integration into emissions reporting workflows
    • Significant reduction in manual data entry for utility management

    3. Continuous Development Commitment

    The Gen3 platform represents our commitment to staying ahead of the evolving carbon accounting landscape. With regular updates and improvements that respond to real-world challenges and customer feedback, you’re always working with cutting-edge capabilities.


    Next Steps

    Current customers: Contact your account manager about joining the Early Access Program to start using these advanced features and help shape their continued development.

    Prospective customers: These capabilities can be discussed and requested as part of your solution evaluation. We’d be happy to demonstrate how Gen3’s continuous development approach ensures you’re always equipped with the latest carbon accounting capabilities.

    Ready to explore these new capabilities? Contact your BraveGen account manager or reach out to our team to learn more about how these updates can streamline your carbon accounting processes.

  • Climate Change and Business Conference

    Climate Change and Business Conference

     

    Climate Change and Business Conference

    Viaduct Events Centre in Tāmaki Makaurau Auckland
    September 8-9, 2025

    New Zealand’s premier climate conference presents two days of critical discussions for sustainability professionals navigating the evolving landscape of climate action. A number of the BraveGen team will be attending, and here’s a quick preview of some of the sessions we’re excited about that address the challenges and opportunities facing organizations across Australia and New Zealand. In person registrations have ended but you can still attend the conference live stream.

    AI and Climate Change

    Monday, 3:10 pm – 3:20 pm Speaker: Oliver Bruce, Director, Uush Capital

    Explore how artificial intelligence is reshaping climate solutions, from energy optimization to emissions identification. Bruce will examine AI’s dual role – addressing its significant energy demands while unlocking its potential to accelerate climate action across complex operations.

    BraveGen customers have seen the value of AI with BraveGen’s Clive AI alerts. Find out more about AI in sustainability at this session.

    The Built Environment of the Future

    Monday, 11:30 am – 12:15 pm Speaker: Andrew Eagles, CEO, New Zealand Green Building Council

    Critical insights for organizations managing property portfolios. Eagles will address sustainable construction, building optimization strategies, and the integration of rating systems including NABERS, Green Star, and emerging frameworks that drive both compliance and operational value.

    With building operations representing 28% of organizational emissions, this session offers essential guidance for maximizing building performance alongside carbon reduction.

    Climate Disclosures: What Are They Good For?

    Tuesday, 1:00 pm – 1:45 pm (Sponsored by Atticus) Speaker: Amelia Sharman, Director Sustainability Reporting, External Reporting Board

    Move beyond basic compliance to understand how quality climate reporting drives business value and stakeholder confidence. Sharman will explore the real-world impact of disclosure requirements and what makes reporting truly effective.

    Essential viewing for organizations preparing for audit-ready disclosure processes.

    CBAM, CSRD, ISSB

    Tuesday, 1:50 pm – 2:30 pm Speaker: Aisha Daji Punga, CEO, Toitū Envirocare

    Navigate the complex landscape of international reporting standards and their implications for ANZ organizations. Daji Punga will address how global frameworks like the Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism, Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive, and International Sustainability Standards Board requirements translate to local implementation.

    Critical for organizations operating across international markets or supply chains.

    Making the Business Case for Adaptation Investment

    Monday, 2:05 pm – 2:45 pm Speaker: Prageeth Jayathissa, GM Sustainability, Vector Limited

    Learn how leading organizations build compelling business cases that move beyond environmental benefits to demonstrate quantifiable returns, risk mitigation, and competitive advantages from sustainability investments.

    Jayathissa will share practical approaches for securing executive buy-in and demonstrating measurable value.

    Driving Decarbonisation Across the Value Chain

    Tuesday, 11:20 am – 12:00 pm Speaker: Carolyn Cox, Sustainability Manager, City Rail Link

    Address the complexities of Scope 3 emissions and supply chain engagement. Cox will explore systematic approaches to comprehensive carbon reduction, including supplier engagement strategies and data collection across complex networks.

    Valuable insights for organizations tackling their full carbon footprint beyond direct operations.

    Climate Risk, Insurance, and Liability

    Monday, 12:20 pm – 1:05 pm Speaker: Emily Grace, Principal Policy Advisor, New Zealand Planning Institute

    Examine how climate risks are reshaping insurance markets and liability landscapes. Grace will address risk management strategies and the evolving regulatory environment affecting business operations.

    Important context for organizations developing climate adaptation and resilience strategies.

    The Net Zero Transition: What Role is Finance Playing?

    Tuesday, 10:10 am – 10:50 pm Moderator: Joanna Silver, Head of Sustainable Finance, Westpac

    Understand how financial institutions are adapting to support the net-zero transition. The panel will explore ESG investment trends, sustainable finance products, and how financial markets are balancing climate risks with investment opportunities.

    Key insights for organizations seeking climate-focused funding or managing financial climate risks.

    Voluntary Markets for Carbon and Nature

    Tuesday, 11:20 am – 12:00 pm Speaker: Anne Haira, Deputy Secretary, Ministry for the Environment

    Anne will explore opportunities in carbon and nature markets, including voluntary carbon credits and emerging nature-based solutions. She’ll address market developments and regulatory frameworks affecting participation.

    Relevant for organizations considering carbon offsetting strategies or nature-based investments.

    Parliamentary and Ministerial Addresses

    The conference features addresses from key political leaders including:

    • Hon Chris Hipkins, Leader of the Opposition (Monday, 4:00 pm)
    • Hon Simon Watts, Climate Change Minister (Tuesday, 3:50 pm)

    These sessions will outline policy directions and government priorities affecting business climate action across New Zealand.

    International Keynotes

    Pacific Leadership Perspectives (Monday, 8:50 am): Hon Ralph Regenvanu, Vanuatu’s Climate Change Minister, and Cynthia Houniuhi, President of Pacific Islands Students Fighting Climate Change, offer crucial regional perspectives on climate justice and global responsibility.

    Mobilising Finance for Low-Carbon Future (Tuesday, 9:00 am): Lord Adair Turner, Chair of the Energy Transitions Commission, will share insights on financing the net-zero transition and unlocking capital for clean technology.

    Networking Opportunities

    • Monday Networking Luncheon: 1:05 pm – 2:05 pm
    • Monday Evening Drinks: 5:40 pm – 6:30 pm
    • Tuesday Networking Luncheon: 12:00 pm – 1:00 pm

    Why Attend

    The conference addresses the critical intersection of policy, technology, and business strategy in climate action. For sustainability professionals, it offers essential insights into:

    • Emerging regulatory requirements and compliance strategies
    • Technology integration opportunities in sustainability management
    • Business case development and ROI demonstration
    • Supply chain and value chain decarbonization approaches
    • Financial sector trends affecting climate investment
    • International framework implementation in ANZ context

    The program reflects the maturing sustainability landscape, where organisations are moving from basic compliance to integrated strategies that deliver both environmental and business value.

     

    BraveGen team members will be participating throughout the conference, available for discussions on integrated approaches to carbon accounting and building optimisation.
  • Carbon Action not Carbon Admin: How BraveGen’s Suite Simplifies ANZ Sustainability

    Carbon Action not Carbon Admin: How BraveGen’s Suite Simplifies ANZ Sustainability

    We’re excited to launch our new website – the first step in rolling out evolved brand messaging that better reflects our expanded capabilities as a comprehensive sustainability suite. Our updated positioning emphasises what makes us unique: the only audit-proven, scaled sustainability suite with both carbon accounting and building optimisation specifically designed for Australia and New Zealand.

    Climate Action Not Carbon Admin

    After two decades of developing sustainability solutions for the region, BraveGen has refined its message around a simple but powerful principle: “Climate Action Not Climate Admin.” This tagline captures our mission to transform sustainability from a compliance burden into a strategic advantage for businesses across Australia and New Zealand.

    “We’ve been listening to our clients, and the message is clear. Organisations don’t want multiple systems and vendors – they want a single provider focused on delivering meaningful results. Our evolved messaging reflects what we’ve always delivered: audit-proven software that turns sustainability compliance into competitive advantage.”

    The Power of Integration: Why Dual Capability Matters

    BraveGen’s repositioning highlights a critical market insight: while carbon accounting and building optimisation software are valuable independently, their true power emerges when integrated. This joint value proposition addresses a gap in the sustainability software market, where businesses typically juggle multiple point solutions to manage their environmental footprint. This integrated approach transforms how businesses approach sustainability – enabling them to automate more processes and act faster on opportunities.

    Complete Data Pipeline: BraveGen offers the full range of data ingestion tools, from digitising PDFs and data file management to Smart Forms and other tools for engaging with suppliers. You can then categorise and validate your data quickly with our guided, automated process flows and adaptable hierarchies that fully align with your organisational needs. This all happens within our audit-ready, ISO- and GHG-compliant environment.

    Intelligence That Drives Action: Move beyond data collection to action with BI analytics and AI-powered alerts that spotlight new opportunities for reduction and efficiency. The integrated approach means building optimisation insights automatically inform carbon reduction strategies, while carbon data reveals building performance opportunities.

    Tangible Financial Impact: The combination of carbon accounting and building performance management delivers tangible savings, often in the six- and seven-figure range annually. With electricity, water, and gas costs rising, it’s critical that you operate your buildings as efficiently as possible to save money. Add the impact of factors like improved ratings on portfolio values, brand impact from carbon leadership, and reduced admin effort – the business case for the BraveGen Sustainability Suite is compelling.

    Local Expertise in a Global Market

    Our messaging evolution also reinforces BraveGen’s position as the only Australia-New Zealand specialist offering this dual capability. With deep understanding of local regulations – from New Zealand’s CRD mandatory climate reporting to Australia’s ASRS – BraveGen’s expertise spans over 20 years of regional market knowledge. Additionally, BraveGen brings deep knowledge of building ratings and optimisation, with expertise in NABERS, NABERSNZ, Green Star, GRESB, and more.

    Building operations account for 28% of company emissions – much higher for companies with large building portfolios. The ability to streamline the capture, transformation, and reporting processes, then easily drive action in building optimisation, delivers massive value for many companies.

    “ANZ is not a focus for most global providers, who lack basic knowledge about areas like critical local emission factor libraries. Equally, being supported by ANZ market specialists focused on continuous improvement makes sustainability and property managers’ lives much easier. Other local providers are new to the market, so they don’t have the deep expertise and software capabilities we’ve developed over years of working with customers. Our audit-proven platforms are built specifically for how businesses operate here – from Auckland office buildings to Sydney educational facilities.”

    Proven at Scale: The Audit-Proven Difference

    Central to BraveGen’s evolved messaging is the concept of “audit-proven” software – systems that have been successfully verified by independent auditors across complex property portfolios and carbon reporting requirements. This reliability factor addresses a critical pain point for sustainability managers who need confidence in their ability to complete audits quickly with minimal effort. BraveGen’s first product manager was an auditor, so being auditor-friendly is in the DNA of our software.

    This reliability is demonstrated through our track record of successful third-party verifications and clients achieving certification targets with streamlined audit processes. No other ANZ-focused provider has successfully completed as many assurance-level audits as BraveGen.

    Website Launch: The First Step

    This new website represents the first phase of our messaging rollout. Over the coming months, you’ll see this evolved positioning reflected across all our communications, from client interactions to industry presentations. The website showcases our integrated approach and makes it easier for prospects to understand the unique value of our dual expertise.

    Our rapid growth across Australia reflects the increasing demand for sophisticated sustainability solutions in the region, with increased emphasis on what we’re delivering for our Australian and Trans-Tasman customers. This messaging evolution clarifies our mission: making sustainability software that actually works for ANZ businesses.

    “We’re not just launching a new website – we’re clarifying our mission. Every feature we build, every client we serve, every insight we deliver is focused on making sustainability software that works for Australian and New Zealand businesses.”

    What This Means

    Our clients benefit from clearer communication about our suite’s integrated capabilities, while new prospects better understand the unique value of choosing a local specialist with dual expertise. Our expert support teams continue providing dedicated guidance through complex sustainability implementations, audits, and certifications.