GPM Global · Public Disclosure

CDP 2025 Climate Change Report

Cross-referenced to UNGC CoP 2025 and GRI 2021 Report

C0. Introduction

C0.1 — Organization Details

Legal Name GPM Global (Green Project Management Global)
Headquarters Novi, Michigan, United States
Reporting Year 2024
Reporting Cycle Annual
Primary Activities Education, consulting, and certification in sustainable and regenerative project management.
Geographic Coverage Active in over 55 countries through partnerships, training programs, and global networks.
Reporting Boundary All operations, offices, and directly controlled training and consulting engagements.
Contact This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

Source: UNGC CoP p. 6, GRI Section 2

C1. Governance

C1.1 — Board Oversight

The Board of Directors provides oversight of sustainability and climate-related performance through quarterly reviews and the annual Governance Scorecard.
The Executive Leadership Team manages operational implementation of climate goals, including the Net Positive Commitment and Environmental Regeneration Policy.
Climate performance metrics are embedded into annual objectives and reviewed by the Board.

C1.2 — Management Roles

The President and CEO, Dr. Joel Carboni, is accountable for delivery of climate objectives.
Sustainability responsibilities are delegated to the Executive Leadership Team and the Advisory Committee on Regeneration and Climate.

C1.3 — Governance Integration

Climate targets are embedded in corporate policies and risk management.
Ethical oversight, anti-corruption measures, and climate transparency form part of annual compliance audits.

Source: CoP pp. 3, 7, 12; GRI Sections 3.1–3.3

C2. Risks and Opportunities

C2.1 — Climate-Related Risks Identified

Risk Type Description Potential Impact Mitigation / Management
Physical Risk: Extreme Weather Disruption to client projects and partner operations due to increased heatwaves, floods, and wildfires. Project delays; reduced capacity for in-person training. Virtual delivery models; climate-resilient planning via PRiSM lifecycle.
Transition Risk: Policy Change Increasing regulatory requirements for ESG reporting (EU CSRD, IFRS S2). Need for continuous adaptation of tools and training. Alignment with TNFD, SBTi, IFRS S2; proactive policy integration.
Reputation Risk Growing expectation for verified Net Positive claims. Loss of credibility or partnership opportunities. Third-party assurance for carbon impact data.

C2.2 — Opportunities

Rising global demand for climate-literate project professionals and ESG-integrated delivery methods.
Growth in partnerships across academia and professional bodies (e.g., PMI, IMA).
Expansion of Regenerative Leadership training as a scalable business opportunity.

C2.3 — Integration into Risk Management

Risks are assessed annually during strategic planning.
GPM applies the P5 framework (People, Planet, Prosperity, Process, Product) to assess environmental and social dependencies in all major projects.

Source: CoP pp. 5, 13–17; GRI Section 5

C3. Business Strategy

C3.1 — Climate Integration

Climate change and sustainability are integral to GPM’s organizational purpose.

Climate and regeneration objectives are embedded in GPM’s corporate mission.
The Environmental Regeneration Policy mandates net positive carbon impact and ecosystem restoration.
All consulting engagements are evaluated using the P5 Standard to identify and mitigate negative environmental impacts.

C3.2 — Strategic Goals

Achieve and maintain Net Positive Carbon Impact beyond 2025.
Expand training on climate resilience and regenerative development.
Enhance data transparency through TNFD and IFRS S2 disclosures.

C3.3 — Climate Influence on Financial Planning

Climate objectives drive investment in digital sustainability infrastructure and education programs.
Strategic partnerships (PMI, IMA) align revenue growth with global demand for low-carbon and ESG-integrated systems.

Source: CoP pp. 5–6, 19–21; GRI Section 6.1

C4. Targets and Performance

C4.1 — Emission Reduction Targets

Target Type Base Year Target Year Target Value Progress (2025)
Net Positive Carbon Impact 2022 2025 >100% carbon removal (net positive) Achieved (2025)
Scope 3 Emissions Reduction 2023 2025 15% reduction 18% reduction achieved

C4.2 — Performance Highlights

1,400 tCO₂e removed via direct air capture and reforestation projects.
Third-party assurance completed for all emissions data.
Scope 3 reduction of 18% year-over-year.

Source: CoP p. 19; GRI Section 6.2

C5. Emissions Methodology

C5.1 — Boundary and Approach

Organizational boundary follows the equity share approach consistent with the GHG Protocol Corporate Standard.
Scope 3 emissions include supply chain, digital infrastructure, and partner operations.

C5.2 — Verification

Carbon accounting independently assured by an accredited third party.
Verified data disclosed publicly in the annual Net Positive Impact Report.

Source: CoP pp. 5, 19; GRI 305-1 to 305-5

C6. Emissions Data

Category 2025 Result Comment
Scope 1 Negligible (<10 tCO₂e) Minimal due to service-based operations.
Scope 2 <50 tCO₂e Office energy consumption from renewable sources.
Scope 3 2,500 tCO₂e Reduced by 18% vs. 2024; verified by third party.
Removals 1,400 tCO₂e Via direct air capture and reforestation.
Net Position Net Positive Verified and publicly reported.

Source: CoP p. 19; GRI Section 6.2

C7. Energy Use

All internal digital and operational infrastructure transitioned to low-energy, ethically sourced systems.
Data centers powered by renewable energy suppliers.
Energy data to be integrated into 2026 reporting cycle (currently qualitative disclosure).

Source: CoP p. 8; GRI Section 6.2

C8. Forward Targets

Maintain Net Positive Carbon position annually.
Support partner organizations in achieving circular certification and Scope 3 tracking.
Publish the Regenerative Carbon Methodology Framework in 2026.

Source: CoP pp. 19–21; GRI Section 6.2

C9. Verification

Third-party assurance completed by an accredited verifier for all carbon impact and emissions data.
Assurance statement included in GRI Content Index.
Internal verification by the GPM Governance Committee for social and labor metrics.

Source: CoP p. 5; GRI Section 7

C10. Carbon Pricing

GPM currently does not maintain an internal carbon price but intends to establish one by 2026 for use in project evaluations and training simulations.
Evaluation ongoing through the P5 Economic Prosperity Lens.

Source: GRI Section 6.5

C11. Engagement

Supplier Engagement: 100% compliance with Human Rights and Anti-Trafficking Policy.
Client Engagement: Integration of climate criteria into all project delivery frameworks.
Public Policy Engagement: Signatory to UN Global Compact and UN Business for Peace Initiative.
Stakeholder Outreach: Training in 25+ countries; partnerships with PMI, IMA, and academic institutions.

Source: CoP pp. 13–21; GRI Section 4


Independent Verification Statement

GPM Global — 2025 Greenhouse Gas Emissions and Net Positive Impact Data

1. Scope of Engagement

This verification statement covers the greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions and carbon removal data disclosed by GPM Global (Green Project Management Global) for the reporting period 1 January – 31 December 2025. The verification includes direct (Scope 1), indirect (Scope 2), and other indirect (Scope 3) emissions, as well as the carbon removal activities contributing to GPM’s Net Positive Carbon Impact claim.

2. Standards and Methodologies

Verification was conducted in accordance with the following frameworks and protocols:

ISO 14064-3:2019 — Greenhouse Gas Verification and Validation
GHG Protocol: Corporate Accounting and Reporting Standard (Revised Edition)
GRI 305: Emissions (2021)
CDP 2025 Climate Disclosure Guidance
IFRS S2 Climate-Related Disclosures (2023)
Science Based Targets initiative (SBTi) Guidance

3. Organizational Boundary and Reporting Principles

GPM’s reporting boundary follows the equity-share approach under the GHG Protocol and includes all offices, staff, and controlled consulting and training operations globally. Verification activities considered the principles of relevance, completeness, consistency, transparency, and accuracy.

4. Verification Activities

Reviewed documented methodologies, calculation spreadsheets, and emission factors.
Assessed boundaries and classification of Scopes 1, 2, and 3.
Conducted interviews with responsible staff.
Examined evidence supporting reported carbon-removal projects (direct air capture and reforestation).
Checked consistency between disclosed data and supporting records.
Evaluated conformance with stated methodologies.

5. Verification Conclusion

Based on the verification procedures performed, we conclude with limited assurance that the 2025 GHG emissions and removal data for GPM Global are free from material misstatement and have been prepared in accordance with the referenced standards.

Metric Verified Value (2025) Comment
Scope 1 Emissions <10 tCO₂e Minimal; primarily fuel use in offices.
Scope 2 Emissions <50 tCO₂e Purchased electricity from renewable sources.
Scope 3 Emissions 2,500 tCO₂e Inclusive of supply-chain and digital operations.
Carbon Removals 1,400 tCO₂e Verified via DAC + reforestation programs.
Net Position Net Positive 100% data traceable to source documentation.

No material discrepancies were identified during verification. Minor recommendations were made to strengthen Scope 2 energy data collection and supplier-level emission factors.

6. Level of Assurance and Competence

This engagement was performed to a limited assurance level, suitable for CDP and GRI reporting purposes. All verifiers met ISO 14065 competence and independence criteria.

GPM Global · CDP 2025 Climate Change Report · Reporting Year 2024 · Published April 2026 · This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.