How to build a lean corporate climate program, fast

wavy road

Companies are facing mounting pressures to create effective climate programs. But doing so from scratch is difficult, especially if you’re in a complex business with many different systems, tools, and data sources.

A good starter program should be lean: built around affordable infrastructure that unlocks tangible outputs from day one—like audit-ready carbon footprints and credible emissions reductions plans—in a way that can also seamlessly scale with your climate ambitions.

This guide is about how to build a high-impact, cost-effective foundation—one that doesn’t require a dedicated internal team, army of consultants, or large locked-in investment.

Watershed helps companies—from global firms like Walmart to regional startups like Kainos—measure, report, and act on their emissions. We support customers at every stage of their climate journey, ensuring they have the right tools and support to move their climate programs—and their businesses—forward. 

Leadership’s role

Leaders have a crucial job to do, which is best done before anything else: identifying an in-house climate champion.

You don’t need a large internal team to start a high-impact climate program. Several of our customers run successful programs through a single climate lead—supported by our carbon data and compliance experts on an a la carte basis. Your lead doesn’t even need to be full-time on climate—or even have a background in climate science or policy—so long as they’re able to communicate with their colleagues in a way that inspires real action.

This individual might grow into a full-time role, or start up an internal team, or ultimately pass the torch to a dedicated hire down the road. But to begin you just need someone, and identifying interested candidates can be as easy as sharing posts like this in your company Slack.

The climate lead’s role

If you’re a new climate lead—or a prospective climate lead looking to pitch your company on creating a formal role—the first step is fleshing out an effective program proposal.

There are two winning considerations to doing this well:

1. Make buy-in easy

The benefits of having a climate program are higher than ever: better financial performance, improved risk management, and talent retention, to name a few. Realizing this value begins with a program proposal that both highlights these positives and preemptively addresses executive concerns around resource limitations and the difficulty of building out new competencies.

While this post covers how to negate these concerns by starting lean, we also cover the dos and don’ts in more depth in our guide to building a high-impact climate program.

2. Start with software. Some climate programs are initially built on the work of consultants—who measure footprints, compile reports, and address problem areas on an on-demand basis. But while the right consultants can be invaluable in solving specific pain points, they’re expensive to rely on, and often leave limited infrastructure behind, like static PDFs or complex Excel sheets. A healthy climate program requires flexible, repeatable approaches that you can optimize over time.

A key element here: integrating software as early as possible. You don’t want to get trapped spending hundreds of thousands of dollars manually assembling your climate reports every year. Watershed’s software generates data summaries, audit-ready reports, and carbon reductions strategies all with a click—by continuously ingesting data from one-time integrations.

The lean climate program playbook

Once you have your climate lead in place, we recommend four steps:

#1 - Define your starting ambition

This often works backward from your most pressing concerns: Which regulations do you need to begin complying with ASAP? What data are your stakeholders seeking? What actions or commitments are your employees advocating for internally?

While the scientific consensus is that every company should commit to reaching net zero emissions by no later than 2050, every company starts somewhere. The only thing you need to ensure you’re doing out of the gate is building the right foundation for action to follow.

#2 - Measure your emissions

While there are multiple long-term approaches to measurement, you don’t need to invest in more sophisticated strategies on day one—you just need to: (1) satisfy your existing disclosure requirements, and (2) start unblocking real action.

For new programs, the best first step is usually a high-level footprint that x-rays your company—and your value chain—for carbon hotspots. (Watershed’s software does this automatically by importing data you already have.) You can then supplement this with more granular measurements that put your most carbon-intensive practices or units under the microscope—allowing you to identify quick-win reductions from supplier or process changes.

“We went from generic industry averages to a live model—built on our actual data—in just a few weeks. And this modelling opened up a thousand new routes to drive down emissions across our value chain.”
Stacy Kauk, Director of Shopify’s Sustainability Fund

#3 - Take action

Many companies worry that getting serious about emissions reductions is a budget killer. But there are a range of meaningful actions appropriate for day one—some of which are free, some of which can be funded creatively, and some of which actually drive real financial savings:

High-impact climate programs can often be run for a fraction of a percent of revenue. Watershed can help you estimate these costs and find the right mix for your immediate budget and goals.

#4 - Share your results!

Your investors, employees, and partners want a view into your progress—so they can celebrate milestones, identify obstacles to help with, and demonstrate to others that real action is happening. And of course regulators increasingly want more data too.

Watershed’s software makes this easy by offering dashboards with intuitive and customizable visualizations, along with preset exports for the most common use cases—including the exact formatting needed for SECR, CDP, and TCFD filings.

Support that scales

As your company and your climate ambitions grow, it’s important that your infrastructure scales with you in a cost-effective way—letting you pay for only what you still need, while always offering value that’s hard to replicate internally. This is why Watershed has various tiers, and why all human support is available ad hoc based on your needs and goals.

As you tackle thornier sources of emissions and prepare for more complex reporting requirements, your internal resources should be focusing on real action—and never be lost in spreadsheets, methodological studies, or legislative texts. Watershed is here to support your team, whatever its headcount, with everything that’s not core to your business—from energy sourcing to compliance guidance to identifying the highest-impact carbon reductions.

Product

image showing graph and words product update

September 2024 product updates

image showing graph and words product update

August 2024 product updates

image showing graph and words product update

July 2024 product updates

Guides

an image of the CSRD experts who spoke at Watershed's webinar

Tactical advice on the CSRD

Photo of UK flag on the left and TPT logo on the right

TPT: Everything you need to know about the UK Transition Plan Taskforce

Illustration of coins in a field

SEC ESG fund rules: Everything you need to know

Customer stories

coyuchi product

How Coyuchi gets product-level carbon insights from Watershed

houses next to solar panels

How Aon automated its carbon footprint measurement

kroll and watershed and cdp logos

Kroll on using Watershed to save time reporting to CDP

Climate news

Natural imagery with the CSRD logo

EU Commission adopts the finalized ESRS under the CSRD

blog header image showing five new solar plants in Michigan partially funded by Block, Braze, DoorDash, Match Group, and Unity

Fixed-price Virtual Power Purchase Agreement funds five new Michigan solar plants

Watershed HQ

Sylvie Goulard, a new member of Watershed's Policy Advisory Board

Welcoming Sylvie Goulard to our Policy Advisory Board

Climate curve with text "Series C"

$100M for climate

2023 with a world for the 0

Watershed's 2023 year in review

SEC

Illustration of coins in a field

SEC ESG fund rules: Everything you need to know

the California capitol where SB253 and SB261 were passed

California SB 253 and SB 261: a guide for companies

Welcoming Mary Schapiro to the Watershed Policy Advisory Board

Welcoming Mary Schapiro to our Policy Advisory Board

Legal

watershed and latham and watkins law firm logos next to an image of the SEC

How to prepare for mandatory climate disclosure - advice from Betty M. Huber of Latham & Watkins

ropes and grey logo with the California flag, watershed logo and text: Guide

Michael Littenberg of Ropes & Gray on California’s SB 253 and 261

EU Flag plus Covington logo

What is the EU's Green Claims Directive? Full Guide with Covington experts