Large organizations increasingly need environmental data from their suppliers, partners and contractors.
As a result, manufacturing and food processing SMEs are now being asked to provide Scope 1, 2 and 3 emissions information through procurement questionnaires, ESG requests, public tenders and supplier reporting platforms.
For many businesses, the challenge is not willingness — it is having a structured process and credible data available when those requests arrive.
Vertalys helps organizations establish clear carbon baselines, identify operational hotspots and build practical systems to track ESG performance over time.
Vertalys offers practical carbon footprint and sustainability tracking services tailored to the operational realities of Québec SMEs.
Each service is designed to solve a specific stage of the ESG reporting and sustainability management process.
A practical Scope 1, 2 and 3 carbon footprint assessment designed for food processors responding to retailer, lender or public-sector ESG requirements.
A structured operational carbon assessment designed for manufacturers facing supplier ESG requests, procurement requirements and reporting pressures.
A centralized dashboard system designed to help organizations monitor emissions, sustainability initiatives and recurring ESG reporting requirements over time.
Most organizations begin with a carbon footprint assessment and later transition toward ongoing ESG tracking and performance monitoring.
Establish a structured Scope 1, 2 and 3 emissions baseline and identify the most significant operational and supply-chain impacts.
Monitor your KPIs quarterly and always have current data ready for the next buyer request, tender, or financing review.
Year-over-year Show your buyers, investors, and stakeholders that your commitments are backed by consistent, independently analyzed data.
Vertalys works primarily with organizations that want to take a structured and practical approach to sustainability.
Vertalys focuses on pragmatic solutions adapted to organizational realities rather than theoretical sustainability strategies.