
The Entrepreneur article highlights how Eduardo Gomez, Product at Green Project Technologies, is turning corporate carbon measurement into actionable decarbonization at scale, especially in supply chains where the largest emissions occur.
Eduardo Gomez, Green Project says:
"I want supply chain decarbonization to move from fragmented tools and compliance-driven activity into a coordinated economic system that aligns buyers, suppliers, and capital around real emissions reductions. Today, decarbonisation is still treated as a reporting exercise that rarely changes how money flows through supply chains.
Over the next decade, I expect three shifts. First, companies will stop chasing perfect data upfront and instead use emissions heatmaps to focus effort where it unlocks leverage. Directionally correct, action-oriented data will replace theoretical precision. Second, supplier enablement will move to the centre of Scope 3 strategies, replacing compliance-heavy requests with tools, insights, and commercial signals. Third, we will see collective buyer action. When buyers coordinate demand, they can shift unit economics for lower-carbon materials, energy, and logistics, just as power purchase agreements did for renewables.
I am contributing to this through my work at Green Project Technologies. This combination connects supply chain emissions measurement directly to renewable energy procurement and financing, leveraging infrastructure that sourced more than 200 TWh of renewable energy last year. Success over the next few years looks like companies moving seamlessly from understanding emissions, to engaging suppliers, to executing reductions through cleaner materials, logistics optimization, and renewable energy. If we get this right, supply chains will decarbonize not because they are told to, but because it is the fastest way to stay competitive."
Read the full article on the Entrepreneur website.