Data Services  Enterprise

Accelerate Reporting, Reducing and Climate Finance

Use GLYNT’s Data-as-a-Service

Operationalize the Sustainability Journey

PREPARE

How GLYNT automates sustainability data

 

It all starts with great data

REPORT

How GLYNT date enables compliant reporting

 

REDUCE

How GLYNT data enables efficient reductions

 

MANAGE RISK

How GLYNT data identifies financial risk exposure

 

FINANCE

How GLYNT data connects to financing opportunities

 

GLYNT’s Enterprise Sustainability Data

Speed insights and answers with accurate, updated data

GLYNT Data is High Value and Low Risk

Actual, granular data from GLYNT meets reporting needs and prepares the way for reduction planning. Automated harmonization of disparate data sources – backed by audit trails – decreases data errors

Build the Business Case for Reductions

Use GLYNT’s granular data to identify the biggest operational savings

A Fast Path to Automated Data Flows

1.

“Taste of GLYNT”

A live sample of
your data

2.

Risk Free Trial

End-to-end data flows for your first sites

Buy GLYNT on AWS or Azure Marketplace

OR Contract with GLYNT

3.

Onboarding

Quickly load all your sites into GLYNT

Automated Sustainability Data

Always accurate, always updated.

A single data stream for all global sites

GLYNT Makes It Easy

We have solutions for those frustrating wrinkles in sustainability data

Automated Utility Bill Capture from Sites

Data for Bill Payment

Global Coverage

Single Solution for All Document Types

Integrated IoT Data

All Sustainability Commodities

Data Aligned with Long-Term Value Creation

Reporting and Strategy

“One of the biggest problems in the area of sustainability strategies is the lack of uniform emissions data. What is needed are accurate, reliable, auditable measures of emissions.”

Strategic Finance

Valuation and Impact

“Better information alone will help in the struggle against global warming. By revealing more accurately which firms pollute, it will help the public understand what really makes a difference to the climate.”

The Economist