CSRD isn’t just another reporting exercise. It’s a new bar for decision-useful, assured sustainability data—spanning climate, workforce, and governance topics, and forcing companies to stand behind what they publish.
Most “CSRD tools” solve one piece of the problem:
- a disclosure checklist
- a report-writing workflow
- a data collection portal
- or a generic ESG database
The bet solution is a platform that’s purpose-built for the hardest parts of CSRD at enterprise scale: getting the right data, tightening quality and controls, and producing disclosures you can defend under assurance—all on top of an enterprise-grade ESG data foundation.
Key takeaways for choosing a CSRD reporting platform in 2026
- CSRD readiness is a data and governance problem, not a reporting problem. The winners build an operating model with clear ownership, a unified data foundation, and evidence trails that stand up under assurance—not just a workflow for producing a document.
- Your double materiality assessment is the program blueprint. CSRD can feel overwhelming until you translate scope + DMA outputs into a prioritized set of ESRS topics, metrics, and narratives that are truly reportable for your business.
- Auditability and repeatability matter more than “CSRD coverage.” Many tools can map requirements to a report; fewer can help you defend every figure with lineage, approvals, and evidence—and make year two easier than year one.
- Scope 3 and supplier data collection is where most programs stall. Strong platforms support a pragmatic path from estimates to higher-quality primary data, with governance around what’s accepted and why.
- Maturity stage should drive the purchase. First-time reporters need guided workflows and fast time-to-baseline; assured reporters need controls, traceability, and flexibility at scale. Use the maturity journey and platform deep dive below to pick for where you actually are.
CSRD: what companies need to know
CSRD is built around the European Sustainability Reporting Standards (ESRS): cross-cutting disclosures plus topical standards across Environment, Social, and Governance. The practical implication is that “CSRD readiness” isn’t only a reporting exercise—it’s an operating model change, pulling sustainability data into the same world as financial reporting with clear definitions, ownership, and internal controls.
Preparation starts with scope and materiality. Companies need to understand whether (and when) they are in scope, then run (or refresh) a double materiality assessment so they know which ESRS topics are actually reportable—and therefore which metrics, narratives, and evidence they must stand behind. This step is what turns an overwhelming disclosure library into a prioritized program plan.
Finally, the fastest path to a defensible report is to treat data readiness as the core work: map required metrics to source systems, establish data lineage (methodology, transformations, and assumptions), and build an evidence trail that will hold up under review and assurance. Policy and guidance are evolving, so teams should plan for iteration—set up repeatable collection cycles and governance now so year two is easier than year one.
Further reading from Watershed: CSRD disclosures overview, our latest policy analysis in the Policy hub, and internal primers like CSRD glossary and Playbook: CSRD execution.
The maturity journey: which platforms for which stage
Most companies don’t buy “a CSRD tool.” They move through stages—from assembling baseline disclosures to building an assured, continuous reporting system.
Stage 1: First-time compliance (get a credible baseline)
The goal here is to get to a credible first CSRD-ready baseline without over-engineering the system.
Teams win by prioritizing speed, clarity on scope, and just enough structure to avoid spreadsheet chaos.
What’s hard: scoping, data collection, and building a realistic plan without boiling the ocean. What you need: readiness workflows, clear ownership, and fast time-to-first-report.
Typical tooling patterns:
- A platform that helps establish the measurement + reporting foundation (and reduces spreadsheet chaos)
Stage 2: Controls + assurance readiness (make the numbers defensible)
This is where CSRD starts to feel like financial reporting: governance, documentation, and repeatability become non-negotiable.
The focus shifts from “can we produce the report?” to “can we stand behind it under review and assurance?”
What’s hard: evidence, governance, approvals, and repeatability under assurance scrutiny. What you need: traceability, documentation, review controls, and clear data lineage.
Typical tooling patterns:
- Systems that embed auditability and controls into day-to-day data operations (not just at report time)
Stage 3: Value-chain scale (Scope 3 coverage that improves every year)
At this stage, the program’s bottleneck is external: supplier engagement, data quality, and methodological consistency.
Success looks like coverage that improves year over year, with governance around what’s accepted and why.
What’s hard: supplier data quality, coverage, and consistency across a complex value chain. What you need: scalable supplier workflows, structured submissions, and governance for what’s accepted.
Typical tooling patterns:
- Platforms optimized for supplier engagement + data pipelines, with strong data quality and evidence management
Stage 4: Continuous compliance + decision advantage (sustainability as an operating system)
This is the maturity level where CSRD reporting becomes a business capability, not a compliance project.
Teams use the same governed datasets to satisfy disclosure needs and to drive decisions across procurement, product, and operations.
What’s hard: staying current as requirements evolve and using the data to guide decisions (procurement, product, operations). What you need: continuous refresh cycles, reliable foundations, and analytics that connect to real levers.
Typical tooling patterns:
- A unified platform that supports reporting and ongoing decision-making, with controls that keep the system stable over time
How to choose: a five-point framework
Here are five questions that reliably separate “looks good in a demo” from “works under CSRD assurance.”
1. Can you defend every number?
CSRD reporting is moving toward assurance, which means you’ll be asked to explain assumptions, sources, and ownership—not just provide an output.
If the platform can’t help you reconstruct the “why” behind a number quickly, every review cycle turns into a scramble.
Look for: line-level traceability, evidence management, audit exports, approvals, and clear ownership.
2. Is the data model built for the messy reality of enterprise data?
Real-world sustainability data is inconsistent: different units, partial coverage, changing org structures, and conflicting source systems.
The more your team has to “fix the data in spreadsheets,” the harder it is to scale and the easier it is to introduce risk.
Look for: normalization (units/currencies/time periods), structured ingestion, anomaly detection, and repeatable transformations.
3. Does it scale to Scope 3 without turning into an implementation project?
Scope 3 is the biggest CSRD pain point for most enterprises—it’s distributed, supplier-dependent, and methodologically complex.
Tools that work for a pilot often break when you need breadth, governance, and repeatability across categories and suppliers.
Look for: supplier workflows, coverage improvement over time, transparent methodologies, and a credible plan to reduce estimation risk.
4. Will year 2 be easier than year 1?
CSRD isn’t a one-off. Requirements evolve, assurance expectations rise, and the business changes continuously.
The right platform turns compliance into a repeatable operating rhythm, not an annual fire drill.
Look for: repeatable cycles, ongoing monitoring, minimal maintenance burden, and built-in governance—not a once-a-year scramble.
5. Does it help you act, not just disclose?
The goal isn’t just to publish a compliant report—it’s to use the underlying data to drive decisions and reduce risk.
Platforms that stop at disclosure can leave teams with “beautiful outputs” but no way to operationalize progress.
Look for: insights that connect to decarbonization levers (procurement, product, operations), and workflows that keep cross-functional teams aligned.
Deep dive: 8 platforms and what they’re honestly good at
Below is a straightforward look at the major platform categories buyers consider for CSRD programs. The goal isn’t to crown a universal winner—it’s to clarify fit.
CO2.ai
What it’s honestly great at: AI-assisted Scope 3 / product and procurement-oriented carbon analytics.
Where it tends to be strongest
- Activity and supply-chain data workflows that map well to procurement and supplier programs
- Large emission-factor libraries and automation for matching/mapping
- “Hotspot to action” views (simulate changes, prioritize interventions)
Where it’s typically weaker (for CSRD specifically)
- CSRD demands a broader, cross-functional program (E/S/G) with evidence trails and governance—not just carbon analytics
- “Last-mile” assurance workflows, documentation, and cross-team controls may require additional systems/process
Best fit for
- Companies prioritizing Scope 3 improvement through procurement/product levers, alongside a broader CSRD program managed elsewhere
Gravity
What it’s honestly great at: Carbon accounting and ESG data management for teams that want a pragmatic system of record with configurable workflows.
Where it tends to be strongest
- Flexible data capture and consolidation across many business units and data owners
- Configuration-heavy workflows that can map to internal processes (approvals, tasks, governance)
- Good fit for teams that want a tool + advisory-style implementation approach
Where it’s typically weaker (for CSRD specifically)
- CSRD assurance pressure raises the bar on defensible data lineage, evidence, and repeatable controls—which can be harder when the system relies heavily on manual configuration and process discipline
- Depth in audit-ready traceability and end-to-end readiness workflows can vary by implementation
Best fit for
- Companies that want a configurable ESG system-of-record and are willing to invest in setup/process to make it assurance-ready
IBM Envizi
What it’s honestly great at: Broad ESG data consolidation and reporting, with facilities/utility-style environmental data management for large enterprises.
Where it tends to be strongest
- Centralizing ESG data across many sites, business units, and metrics (especially environment + operations)
- Dashboards and reporting modules across multiple frameworks (including CSRD) with workflow/approvals
- Enterprise IT alignment (especially for orgs already standardized on IBM tooling)
Where it’s typically weaker (for CSRD specifically)
- Implementation can be heavier when teams need fast time-to-value
- Depth of calculation rigor, line-level traceability, and “show your work” expectations can vary by setup and data model
Best fit for
- Very large, facilities-heavy organizations that want a broad ESG system of record and can invest in setup/ongoing administration
Persefoni
What it’s honestly great at: Carbon accounting for teams that want a carbon-led platform with finance-style controls, particularly for financial services use cases.
Where it tends to be strongest
- Carbon measurement and disclosure workflows, with “ledger” framing and audit concepts
- Financial services / financed emissions positioning and alignment
- A clean UX for teams that want a focused carbon platform (vs a broad ESG suite)
Where it’s typically weaker (for CSRD specifically)
- CSRD is broader than carbon: non-carbon ESRS topics, cross-functional governance, and evidence expectations often sit outside a carbon-first tool
- Many enterprises still need stronger automation, data quality controls, and repeatable, end-to-end readiness workflows to make CSRD sustainable year over year
Best fit for
- Carbon-first teams (especially in finance) that want an accounting-oriented experience and are willing to layer additional CSRD program tooling/process around it
Salesforce Net Zero Cloud
What it’s honestly great at: Embedding sustainability data collection and workflow into the Salesforce ecosystem for organizations that are already deeply standardized on Salesforce.
Where it tends to be strongest
- Workflow + data capture inside an existing Salesforce operating model
- Good fit when the primary requirement is consolidation within Salesforce
Where it’s typically weaker (for CSRD specifically)
- Carbon/sustainability can be a “module” rather than a purpose-built climate + disclosure engine—depth of methodologies, evidence workflows, and audit readiness can require more customization and partner support
- Risk of higher implementation/maintenance burden if the team must build and maintain the calculation logic and controls
Best fit for
- Companies that want to keep sustainability data and workflows inside Salesforce and can support a more configurable, IT-led implementation
Sweep
What it’s honestly great at: Collaboration-oriented sustainability workflow, especially when a company wants a flexible UI for distributed stakeholder participation and supplier engagement.
Where it tends to be strongest
- Cross-functional workflows and “engage the business” usability
- Supplier collaboration / engagement experiences
- Teams that want configuration flexibility and are comfortable managing rules and setup
Where it’s typically weaker (for CSRD specifically)
- CSRD assurance pressures shift the burden toward repeatable controls, rigorous methodologies, and defensible data lineage—areas where manual configuration can become a drag
- If the organization needs fast time-to-value with high confidence in the numbers, rule-building approaches can slow implementation and increase maintenance
Best fit for
- Teams optimizing for workflow adoption and collaboration first, with governance and assurance controls supplemented by process and/or additional tooling
Watershed
What it’s honestly great at: Enterprise-grade climate + disclosure programs where auditability, data quality, and repeatability matter—especially when the organization needs to defend numbers under assurance.
Where it tends to be strongest
- A governed climate data foundation that supports CSRD reporting and cross-functional alignment
- Audit-ready traceability, evidence, and controls designed for assurance realities
- Scalable value-chain data collection that improves coverage and quality over time
- Repeatable operating model (so year 2 is easier than year 1)
Where it’s typically weaker
- If a team only needs a lightweight disclosure checklist or a simple one-off report workflow, a full enterprise platform can be more than necessary
Best fit for
- Enterprises treating CSRD as a durable capability (not a one-time deliverable) and prioritizing defensible numbers, strong controls, and long-term maintainability
Workiva
What it’s honestly great at: “Last-mile” reporting, collaboration, and governance for complex disclosure documents—especially for organizations already using Workiva for financial and regulatory reporting.
Where it tends to be strongest
- Collaborative report authoring, structured review/approval, and disclosure workflow management
- Consolidating narrative + tables into a controlled reporting process
- Strong fit when the core problem is assembling and publishing complex reports with governance
Where it’s typically weaker (for CSRD specifically)
- CSRD success depends on the substance behind the report—measurement methodologies, data quality controls, and line-level traceability—which often require a dedicated climate data engine
- Many teams still need an underlying platform to produce audit-ready, decision-useful sustainability data (especially Scope 3)
Best fit for
- Companies that want a robust reporting “hub” and pair it with a specialized climate data and measurement platform (often alongside broader program readiness work)
Why leading companies choose Watershed for CSRD compliance
Watershed for CSRD is built to take you from “what do we need to disclose?” to “we can defend every number”—without stitching together point solutions or chasing spreadsheets across the business.
Here are the key features that set Watershed apart.
1. End-to-end CSRD readiness (not just reporting)
A CSRD report is the output. Readiness is the work: aligning stakeholders, scoping what’s material, understanding ESRS requirements, and operationalizing data collection and governance.
Watershed helps teams move from ambiguity to a concrete plan:
- Double materiality + ESRS scoping support so teams can translate what’s material into what must be measured and disclosed.
- Gap assessment workflows that identify what data you already have, what you’re missing, and what needs stronger process and controls.
- Clear ownership and accountability across sustainability, finance, legal, procurement, and business functions—so CSRD doesn’t live in one person’s spreadsheet.
Why it matters: Point solutions often jump straight to “write the report.” Watershed helps you build the repeatable system behind the report.
2. A unified ESG + climate data foundation
CSRD requires companies to connect sustainability disclosures to the reality of the business: operations, purchasing, people data, and more. That falls apart when ESG data is scattered across disconnected tools.
Watershed is built around a governed data foundation that makes cross-functional reporting possible:
- A single source of truth for sustainability and climate data—designed to support enterprise reporting and ongoing updates.
- Structured, normalized data that reduces manual transformations (units, currencies, time periods, and definitions).
- Cross-team collaboration on shared datasets so finance, sustainability, procurement, and internal audit aren’t reconciling different versions of the truth.
Why it matters: CSRD compliance requires consistency, documentation, and repeatability. A unified data foundation reduces rework—and makes assurance realistically achievable.
3. Audit-ready evidence and controls by design
CSRD is pushing sustainability reporting into the same world as financial reporting: documentation, internal controls, and external assurance.
Watershed is built for auditability from day one:
- Traceability from disclosure back to source data so teams can answer “where did this number come from?” quickly and confidently.
- Evidence management that attaches supporting documentation to metrics and assumptions, not to someone’s inbox.
- Review and approval workflows to implement governance that stands up under assurance and reduces last-minute fire drills.
Why it matters: Alternatives often stop at “generate a report.” Watershed is designed so you can defend the report—including methodologies, assumptions, and the evidence behind every figure.
4. Scalable value-chain (supplier) data collection
For most large companies, the hardest CSRD data is outside their walls—in the supply chain. Supplier emissions and activity data can be incomplete, inconsistent, and slow to collect.
Watershed makes value-chain data collection scalable:
- Supplier data request workflows that help suppliers submit primary data in a structured way.
- Tools to increase coverage and quality over time—so you can move from estimates to better data, year over year.
- Governance built in so supplier submissions are reviewable and defensible, rather than “accepted by default.”
Why it matters: Many platforms treat supplier data collection as a survey. Watershed treats it as a controlled, governed data pipeline—which is what the CSRD demands.
5. Continuous compliance, not a once-a-year scramble
CSRD is not a one-time implementation. Requirements evolve, assurance expectations rise, and business changes constantly. The companies that succeed won’t “do CSRD” once per year—they’ll run a continuous reporting system.
Watershed is designed for continuous compliance:
- Ongoing monitoring and refresh cycles so disclosures can be updated without rebuilding the entire dataset.
- Repeatable workflows that reduce dependence on external consultants and heroics from internal teams.
- A platform that scales with regulatory change so you can adapt as guidance and expectations shift.
Why it matters: The best CSRD solution is the one that makes the second year easier than the first—and turns compliance into a durable capability.
In summary
Watershed combines CSRD readiness workflows, an enterprise-grade climate data foundation, and audit-ready governance—so companies can publish CSRD disclosures with confidence and defend them under assurance. But depending on your company’s unique needs and challenges, there are plenty of options for platforms to help scale CSRD reporting.
Request a demo to see how Watershed can address your specific CSRD needs.







