Corporate sustainability obligations are expanding – and most organizations are only tracking part of the picture.
Most organizations are piecing together static information from disclosure tools, consultants, and point-in-time monitoring sources –
without a consolidated view of the operative regulations their company is actually required to act on.
Reports might go out. Operative regulations still slip.
sustainability domains
jurisdictions covered
in-house legal and domain experts
years of regulatory expertise
Simplify. Standardize. Collaborate. Scan.
Enhesa Corporate Sustainability serves as your single source of truth for 26 sustainability domains – from early horizon intelligence through in-force obligations, organized by the teams that own the work.
Simplify: Expert-led, AI-enhanced analysis that turns legalese into clear, actionable requirements.
Standardize: A single taxonomy across jurisdictions so teams compare like-for-like and move faster.
Collaborate: Comment and share updates with Legal, Finance, HR, and Operations instantly.
Horizon-scan: Proactively monitor emerging regulations and trends so you can anticipate change, not react to it.
Close the gap on what the law requires – with Enhesa Corporate Sustainability
Sustainability Forecaster
Stay ahead of emerging corporate sustainability regulations to address within your business – before they become obligations.
Legal foundations
Access and search the complete expert-interpreted in-force regulatory record – featuring plain-language analysis, amendment history, and source links.
Requirement Center
Understand your obligations at a glance and get notified of major changes that could affect compliance or applicability.
What sets Enhesa Corporate Sustainability apart
Operative law, not just disclosure
We cover the full body of law your company must act on – 26 domains across sustainability regulation. The regulations behind the disclosures, not just the disclosures themselves.
Expert-led, AI-enhanced
160+ in-house legal and domain experts across 40+ countries research and maintain every regulation – source-linked, provided in English with links to local language documents, and updated continuously as the landscape changes.
One platform, every team
Unlimited users included. Legal, Sustainability, HR, Finance, EHS, and Procurement all access the same intelligence – no per-seat costs, no access restrictions.
Get started with Corporate Sustainability in three simple steps
Discovery call
Share your challenges and priorities with one of our experts.
Scope & fit
We configure the right mix of services, jurisdictions, and approach to meet your goals.
Onboard with experts
Activate your access, set up workflows, and meet your dedicated analyst team for ongoing guidance.
Ready to stay ahead of compliance challenges?
See what’s next in sustainability
Prepare for Evolving ESG Regulations with Confidence
Download the ESG trends eBook to understand the regulatory shifts transforming sustainability in the EU, US, and APAC.
Navigating ESG change in the EU and US
Watch our ESG webinar to get the latest sustainability trends across the EU and US from Enhesa experts.
CARB preliminary compliance list must-knows
Discover what the California Air Resources Board’s preliminary SB 253 / SB 261 compliance list could mean for your business
Frequently asked questions (FAQ’s)
What’s the difference between the Sustainability Forecaster and the Regulatory Forecaster?
They serve different teams. The Regulatory Forecaster sits within EHS Intelligence and focuses on upcoming EHS requirements affecting your sites and operations. The Sustainability Forecaster sits within Corporate Sustainability and focuses on ESG and sustainability reporting obligations — CSRD, CSDDD, ISSB, supply chain due diligence, and similar. Both give you forward visibility on regulation before it lands; they just cover different regulatory domains.
Does Enhesa cover voluntary standards as well as mandatory regulations?
Yes. The Requirement Center covers both country-specific mandatory sustainability regulations and voluntary standards, so you can track obligations across the full landscape rather than just what’s legally required today. Many voluntary standards are becoming mandatory quickly, having visibility of both means you’re not caught out when that shift happens.
What does the Sustainability Forecaster predict?
It gives you early visibility of sustainability regulations that are proposed, in consultation, or moving toward adoption – before they come into force. That includes ESG reporting frameworks, supply chain due diligence requirements, climate disclosure rules, and other sustainability obligations across the jurisdictions you operate in. The goal is to give your team enough lead time to prepare, rather than responding after a regulation has already landed. Find out more on the Sustainability Forecaster page.
How does Legal Foundations differ from just searching EUR-Lex or government websites?
EUR-Lex gives you the raw legal text for EU legislation. It doesn’t interpret what it means for your business, doesn’t cover the 50+ other jurisdictions where sustainability obligations apply, and doesn’t combine mandatory regulations with voluntary standards in one place. Legal Foundations is a searchable library that combines in-force sustainability regulations with expert analysis and direct links to source material — so your team gets the context alongside the text, across all relevant markets.
How does Corporate Sustainability connect to Enhesa’s other product lines?
Sustainability obligations rarely sit in isolation. CSRD reporting, for example, draws on data from your EHS operations, your chemical management practices, and your product compliance posture. Enhesa covers all four domains: EHS Intelligence, Chemical Intelligence, Product Intelligence, and Corporate Sustainability, the regulatory intelligence that underpins your sustainability reporting comes from the same expert-authored source as the rest of your compliance programme.
How is Enhesa different from ESG rating agencies?
Rating agencies assess and score your ESG performance against their own frameworks. Enhesa tracks the regulatory obligations that determine what you’re actually required to do and disclose, by jurisdiction and by framework. The two serve different purposes: ratings tell you how you look to investors, Enhesa tells you what regulators expect and what’s coming next. As ESG regulation tightens globally, regulatory compliance is increasingly what underpins a credible rating — that’s where the Requirement Center and Sustainability Forecaster come in.
We’re expanding into new markets. Can Enhesa show us the sustainability regulatory landscape before we enter?
Yes. The Requirement Center gives you country-specific sustainability requirements so you can understand what obligations apply in a new market before you’re operating there. The Sustainability Forecaster adds the forward view, showing what’s coming in those markets so your entry planning accounts for regulation that isn’t yet in force. The sustainability compliance challenge page has more on how this works in practice.
How does Enhesa help us prepare for a sustainability audit or regulatory inspection?
Auditors and regulators want to see that you know what applies to you, that you’re tracking changes, and that your documentation reflects current requirements. Legal Foundations gives you a searchable library of in-force regulations with direct links to source material, so your team can evidence compliance against specific requirements. The Requirement Center keeps your obligation register current as regulations change, reducing the risk of gaps appearing between audits.
Who authors the content – is it AI-generated or expert-written?
Enhesa’s regulatory content is authored by 160+ in-house legal experts and specialists, including qualified lawyers and ESG subject matter experts. AI is used to accelerate how content is surfaced, searched, and monitored, but the analysis and interpretation is human-authored. That distinction matters when your compliance programme is under regulatory scrutiny: AI-generated summaries of legal text aren’t a substitute for expert interpretation of what a regulation actually requires. More on Enhesa’s approach to AI and regulatory intelligence here.