Your Questions About
Our Services Answered
Understanding Our Services
Find clear answers about our services, processes, and sustainability approach
This FAQ section addresses common questions about sustainability, climate action, impact measurement, environmental assets, and the digital tools we develop at Greendata.
If you have additional questions, feel free to contact us.
Carbon & Nature-Based Projects
What is a nature-based project?
Nature-based projects include activities such as agroforestry, reforestation, avoided deforestation, regenerative agriculture, and landscape restoration. Their aim is to generate measurable environmental and social benefits.
How do carbon projects generate credits?
A carbon project generates credits when it can prove — through verified methodologies — that it either reduces emissions or increases carbon sequestration beyond a baseline scenario.
What certifications exist for carbon and nature-based projects?
Common certification standards include Verra (VCS), Gold Standard, Plan Vivo, ART-TREES, and national registries.
How long does it take to develop a carbon project?
Most land-based projects require 12–18 months to complete feasibility, baseline studies, modelling, validation, and registration.
Environmental Footprinting
What is an environmental footprint?
An environmental footprint measures the impact an organization, farm, or product has on climate, water, biodiversity, and resources.
What is the difference between carbon footprint and GHG inventory?
A carbon footprint estimates total emissions, while a GHG inventory provides a detailed breakdown of sources across scope 1, 2, and 3.
Which standards guide footprint calculations?
The main standards include the GHG Protocol, ISO 14064, ISO 14067, and sector-specific guidelines (e.g., FAO EX-ACT).
Carbon Credits & Environmental Assets
What is a carbon credit?
One carbon credit represents one metric ton of CO₂-equivalent reduced or removed from the atmosphere.
What are environmental assets beyond carbon?
Emerging assets include biodiversity credits, water credits, soil carbon units, and ecosystem service certificates.
How do buyers ensure credit quality?
High-quality credits demonstrate additionality, permanence, correct baseline definition, strong monitoring, and social integrity safeguards.
ESG & Sustainability Strategy
What does ESG mean for companies?
ESG evaluates a company’s environmental, social, and governance performance, shaping risk management and investor expectations.
Why is ESG disclosure becoming mandatory?
Regulations such as CSRD, SFDR, and global taxonomies require transparent reporting on sustainability performance and risks.
How does ESG differ from impact?
ESG focuses on risks to the company; impact focuses on the company’s effects on society and the environment.
Impact Measurement & Reporting Frameworks
What is impact measurement?
Impact measurement determines the real environmental and social outcomes of a project, investment, or organization.
Which frameworks guide impact reporting?
Common frameworks include IRIS+, IMP (Impact Management Platform), GIIN guidelines, SDG alignment tools, and national reporting standards.
What are common pitfalls in impact reporting?
Typical issues include lack of baselines, unclear attribution, weak indicators, and outputs mistaken for outcomes.
Digital Tools & Green Tech
What digital solutions does Greendata provide?
We offer carbon management software, project feasibility and management tools, and platforms for impact measurement and reporting.
Why use digital tools in sustainability?
They improve accuracy, ensure traceability, reduce costs of data collection, and strengthen transparency for stakeholders.
Can tools be customized?
Yes — Greendata tools can integrate client datasets, geospatial layers, sector-specific modules, and customized indicators.