Analysis, field notes, and updates from our ongoing research into brand disclosure.
Every major apparel brand tracks supply chain emissions globally. None break it down by country. This means the climate cost borne by Pakistan — a country producing less than 0.5% of historic global emissions — remains invisible in the world's most powerful sustainability reports.
Read full piece →We tracked every public statement brands made after the 2022 floods. Then we looked for receipts. The gap between language and action is wider than expected.
A Pakistani manufacturer with a $100M renewable energy commitment and more transparent climate reporting than most of its North American buyers.
A full account of our methodology: which data sources we use, how we verify claims, and why we mark non-disclosures as facts rather than criticisms.
The Pakistan Accord on Health and Safety was a meaningful step. One brand in our tracker has signed it. Here's what it requires and why adoption remains low.
When brands report Scope 3 emissions as a global aggregate, they erase the difference between a Swiss headquarters and a Lahore garment district.
We're extending our research beyond Pakistan. Here's what we've learned so far about disclosure patterns across South and Southeast Asian manufacturing regions.