ClearSky Limited

ClearSky Limited

Environmental Services

Integrated carbon emission solutions for your business

About us

ClearSky is an integrated environmental business that provides our clients with the tools and services necessary to make and achieve ambitious environmental goals to reduce their carbon footprint.

Industry
Environmental Services
Company size
2-10 employees
Headquarters
London
Type
Privately Held
Founded
2021

Locations

Employees at ClearSky Limited

Updates

  • View organization page for ClearSky Limited, graphic

    220 followers

    More and more organizations are pushing supply chains to start thinking about sustainability. If you’re not prepared now, you may not be prepared later. Start your sustainability planning now. ClearSky can help with vast products and services.

  • View organization page for ClearSky Limited, graphic

    220 followers

    Net Zero: Net zero refers to achieving a balance between the greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions produced and those removed from the atmosphere. Essentially, reaching net zero means that for every tonne of GHG emissions generated, an equivalent amount is extracted, resulting in no net increase in emissions. This balance is typically achieved through a mix of emission reduction efforts and carbon capture or removal strategies, such as planting new trees (afforestation), protecting existing forests (reforestation), and using technologies to directly capture CO2 from the air (direct air capture). Carbon Neutral: Carbon neutrality focuses specifically on carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions. To achieve carbon neutrality, an individual, company, or product must counteract their CO2 emissions by investing in projects that remove an equal amount of CO2 from the atmosphere. Examples of such offset projects include reforestation, renewable energy initiatives, and methane capture at landfills. Being carbon neutral involves taking responsibility for the CO2 emissions produced and actively working to offset them. Carbon Negative: Going carbon negative means going beyond carbon neutrality by removing more CO2 from the atmosphere than is emitted. A carbon negative status is achieved by capturing and storing more carbon than is released, thereby making a net positive impact on the environment. This can be done by investing in projects that absorb more CO2 than they emit or by employing advanced carbon capture technologies.

  • View organization page for ClearSky Limited, graphic

    220 followers

    Proud to be a part of this community. Happy to share our experience and help inspire others to make the transition. #sustainability #carbonfootprint #climateneutral

    View organization page for The Change Climate Project, graphic

    11,023 followers

    Earth Day. To some, it's a once-a-year reminder to thank Mother Earth. To us, it's the day that best represents our everyday mission – to take on climate change with unity, collaboration, and shared purpose. This Earth Day, join us in celebrating our certified brand community, their dedication to leading on climate action, and the way they are united in climate accountability. Last year alone, 347 Climate Neutral Certified brands measured 1,383,163 tonnes of GHG emissions, filled 480 reduction action plans – and then set 780 more, and invested $10,547,755 in verified carbon credit projects. These numbers are stories of a collective commitment to chart the path to a just, net-zero future. Join us as we celebrate our community and the incredible strides we've made together – and together, we will continue to drive positive change for our planet and future generations. Happy #EarthDay 💙🌍🌱

  • View organization page for ClearSky Limited, graphic

    220 followers

    At ClearSky, we are proud to be one of, if not the only, Climate Neutral Carbon Offset, and REC provider in the industry. It's important to lead by example, and by taking the necessary steps, it educates everyone on how to be better for the world we live in. We celebrate Earth Day with a lot of hope more companies will make sustainability a top priority for the coming years. #EarthDay #sustainability

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  • View organization page for ClearSky Limited, graphic

    220 followers

    The energy transition will take time, and most of all patience. Reduction is a key part in approaching climate change. When organizations take it seriously, you can see a dramatic change in emissions. Don't participate just because it's the new trend. However, it's what your employees, and what your customers want. A cleaner, better world.

    View profile for Alexia Kelly, graphic
    Alexia Kelly Alexia Kelly is an Influencer

    Managing Director, Carbon Policy and Markets Initiative

    I hear a lot of glib dismissal of cost considerations in the environmental community these days. As in, “who cares how much companies are paying to decarbonize, they caused this mess and they should pay to clean it up” and “anything we do to engage with fossil fuel companies gives them a license to pollute and “prolongs their life”. While I am sympathetic to this argument, it’s a dangerously counterproductive one if we’re actually interested in transitioning the global economy and delivering anywhere near the billions of tons of emissions reductions and trillions of dollars needed on an annual basis. As a crucial reminder about why the environmental community should very very much care about how much this transition costs- Larry Fink in his annual investment letter recently said: “that to ensure energy security while decarbonizing will extend the reliance on fossil fuels - “even the most climate-conscious among them saw that their long-term path to decarbonization will include hydrocarbons, albeit less of them, for some time to come.” This last point is the important one- we cannot wave a magic wand and remake the global economy in the next ten years. Believe me, I wish we could. The low carbon economy transition- if we’re actually going to succeed at it- is going to look a lot like various shades of brown to light green for a long long time to come. Our stubborn unwillingness to acknowledge the very real and dominant forces that *actually* drive business decision making in the real economy and the fact that the alternative for the vast majority of companies is to DO NOTHING, not to put themselves out of business voluntarily because “that’s what the science says” will doom us to losing the climate change war. The cost of this transition matters, A LOT. We need to start getting comfortable with the hard and uncomfortable compromises we’re all going to have to make in our ideology- FF interests and the far left NGOs especially- if we have a prayer of meeting global temperature goals. Cost matters, and that’s why cost containment and cost consideration cannot be dismissed as a “corporate talking point defending greenwashing practices”. That’s also why pricing the externality as comprehensively and as quickly as possible in as many parts of the globe as we possibly can is paramount. It’s why I refuse to give up on carbon markets. They work. They price carbon. They change business models. They contain and share more equitably the costs and benefits of the transition. Are they perfect? Nope. But they’re the best thing we have available today, so we need to make them work as well as we possibly can. The transition is necessarily going to messy, and incremental, and filled with setbacks. I’m ready to have a real conversation about what it’s going to take to transition the economy. It’s time for the “silent majority” to step up and start reclaiming the middle ground that is, in fact, our only viable path forward.

    Larry Fink’s Annual Letter: “ESG” out, “Energy Pragmatism” In

    Larry Fink’s Annual Letter: “ESG” out, “Energy Pragmatism” In

    esgandclimatenews.com

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