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Mastering the 4 Types of Financial Statements | Evercomm Guide

Date

25/06/2026

Category

Financial Reporting & Disclosures

The Core Four: An Overview of Essential Financial Statements

If you are a CFO, Finance Director, or accountant working in manufacturing, semiconductors, steel, or petrochemicals across Asia, you already know that a financial statement is more than a compliance document. It is a decision-making tool, a communication channel with investors, and increasingly, a window into how your organisation manages environmental risk and sustainability performance.

Understanding the four core types of financial statements is foundational to everything else that follows, whether you are preparing for an audit, responding to a regulator, or presenting your decarbonisation investment case to the board. Each statement serves a distinct purpose, and together they form a complete picture of your company’s financial health.

The four essential financial statements are:

  • The income statement (also known as the profit and loss statement), which reports revenues, expenses, and profitability over a defined period
  • The statement of financial position (commonly referred to as the balance sheet), which presents assets, liabilities, and equity at a specific point in time
  • The cash flow statement, which tracks the actual movement of cash through the business across operating, investing, and financing activities
  • The statement of shareholders’ equity, which details changes in the owners’ stake in the business over the reporting period

These four statements are interconnected. Net income from the income statement flows into retained earnings on the balance sheet and into the statement of shareholders’ equity. The ending cash balance from the cash flow statement appears as an asset on the balance sheet. Understanding these relationships is essential for producing accurate, consistent financial reports and for interpreting what the numbers are telling you about the business.

For industrial enterprises in Singapore, Taiwan, Thailand, Indonesia, and Malaysia, the regulatory framework governing these statements is well established. Singapore uses Singapore Financial Reporting Standards (SFRS), which are based on International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS). Taiwan’s Financial Supervisory Commission requires listed companies to report under IFRS as adopted in Taiwan. Thailand, Indonesia, and Malaysia have all converged their local standards with IFRS to varying degrees. This convergence means that the fundamental structure and content of each financial statement are consistent across the region, enabling comparability and transparency.

However, the context in which these statements are prepared is changing rapidly. The emergence of mandatory sustainability disclosures, carbon pricing mechanisms, and ESG-linked financing means that a financial statement today must tell a broader story than it did even five years ago. We will explore these changes in detail later in this article, but first, let us examine each of the four statements individually.

Deep Dive: The Income Statement and Profitability Tracking

The income statement is arguably the most familiar financial statement for business leaders. It answers a straightforward question: did the business make money during this period? The income statement summarises revenues earned, expenses incurred, and the resulting profit or loss over a specific timeframe, typically a month, a quarter, or a financial year.

Structure and key components

A well-structured income statement follows a logical progression from top-line revenue to bottom-line net income. The main components include:

  • Revenue or turnover: The total income generated from the sale of goods or services during the period. For a semiconductor fab, this might include wafer fabrication revenue. For a petrochemical plant, it would include the sale of refined products and chemical feedstocks.
  • Cost of goods sold (COGS): The direct costs attributable to producing the goods or services sold. This includes raw materials, direct labour, and manufacturing overheads such as energy and utilities.
  • Gross profit: Revenue minus cost of goods sold. This figure indicates the basic profitability of the company’s core operations before considering indirect costs.
  • Operating expenses: Indirect costs such as research and development, selling and marketing, and general and administrative expenses. For energy-intensive industries, energy costs are often a significant component of both COGS and operating expenses.
  • Operating profit or EBIT: Earnings before interest and tax. This measures the profitability of the company’s core operations, excluding the effects of financing and tax.
  • Finance costs and income: Interest expense on borrowings, interest income on cash deposits, and other financing-related items.
  • Tax expense: The income tax charge for the period, calculated based on applicable tax rates and any adjustments for deferred tax.
  • Net income or net profit: The bottom-line figure, representing the profit attributable to shareholders after all revenues, expenses, financing costs, and taxes have been accounted for.
Why the income statement matters for Asian industrial companies

For capital-intensive industries operating across Asia, the income statement carries particular significance. Energy costs, raw material prices, and regulatory charges can have a substantial impact on profitability, and these factors vary significantly across markets.

Consider a steel manufacturer with facilities in both Taiwan and Thailand. The income statement will reveal how differences in electricity tariffs, natural gas prices, and local regulatory costs affect the relative profitability of each facility. This kind of insight is essential for capital allocation decisions, pricing strategies, and operational improvement programmes.

The income statement is also where carbon costs first appear. In Singapore, the carbon tax of SGD 45 per tonne of carbon emissions creates a direct operating expense for companies that emit above the specified thresholds. For a petrochemical plant or semiconductor fab with significant direct emissions, this can represent a material charge on the income statement, one that is expected to increase as Singapore’s carbon tax rate is scheduled to rise to SGD 50 to SGD 80 per tonne by 2030.

For CFOs and Finance Directors, the income statement is where the financial impact of decarbonisation investments becomes visible. Energy efficiency improvements reduce operating costs. Carbon tax liabilities decrease as emissions fall. The margin benefits of these improvements flow directly to the bottom line. This is why connecting carbon accounting data with financial reporting is not just an environmental exercise; it is a financial imperative.

Common pitfalls in income statement preparation

Several common issues can undermine the accuracy and usefulness of an income statement:

  • Revenue recognition timing: Under IFRS 15, revenue must be recognised when control of goods or services transfers to the customer. For complex manufacturing contracts, determining the appropriate timing and amount of revenue recognition requires careful judgement.
  • Expense classification: Misclassifying expenses between COGS and operating expenses can distort gross margin calculations and make period-on-period comparisons unreliable.
  • Provision and accrual estimation: Accurate estimation of provisions for warranties, environmental remediation, and employee benefits requires robust assumptions and consistent methodologies.
  • Carbon cost allocation: As carbon pricing becomes more prevalent, ensuring that carbon tax liabilities are properly measured, recognised, and disclosed is essential. Underestimating emissions leads to understated liabilities, which can result in subsequent restatements and regulatory scrutiny.

Using verified carbon accounting data, such as that produced by Evercomm’s NxMap platform, ensures that the emissions figures feeding into carbon cost calculations are accurate, complete, and auditable. This reduces the risk of misstatement and provides the foundation for reliable financial reporting.

Understanding the Statement of Financial Position (Balance Sheet)

While the income statement tells you how the business performed over a period, the statement of financial position tells you where the business stands at a specific moment. It is a snapshot of what the company owns, what it owes, and what belongs to its shareholders.

The balance sheet equation

The statement of financial position is built on the fundamental accounting equation:

Assets = Liabilities + Equity

This equation must always hold true. Every transaction the business undertakes affects at least two elements of this equation, ensuring that the balance sheet always balances.

Key components of the balance sheet

Assets are resources controlled by the company as a result of past events and from which future economic benefits are expected to flow. They are typically classified as:

  • Non-current assets: Assets expected to be used beyond one year. For industrial companies, this includes property, plant and equipment (such as manufacturing lines, furnaces, and reactors), intangible assets (such as patents and software licences), and long-term investments.
  • Current assets: Assets expected to be converted to cash or consumed within one year. This includes inventory, trade receivables, cash and cash equivalents, and short-term investments.

Liabilities are obligations of the company arising from past events, the settlement of which is expected to result in an outflow of resources. They include:

  • Non-current liabilities: Obligations due after more than one year, such as long-term borrowings, deferred tax liabilities, and provisions for environmental remediation.
  • Current liabilities: Obligations due within one year, including trade payables, short-term borrowings, current tax liabilities, and accrued expenses.

Equity represents the residual interest in the assets of the company after deducting all liabilities. It includes share capital, retained earnings, revaluation reserves, and other components of comprehensive income.

How environmental factors affect the balance sheet

For companies in carbon-intensive industries, the balance sheet is increasingly affected by environmental considerations in several ways:

  • Asset impairment: Under IFRS, companies must assess whether there are indicators that an asset’s carrying amount may not be recoverable. If regulatory changes, such as an increase in carbon tax rates or the introduction of more stringent emissions standards, reduce the future cash flows expected from an asset, an impairment charge may be required. For a steel plant or petrochemical facility, this could mean writing down the value of high-emission equipment that may become economically unviable under future carbon pricing scenarios.
  • Provisions for environmental liabilities: Companies may need to recognise provisions for environmental remediation, decommissioning costs, or compliance investments. Under IAS 37, a provision should be recognised when there is a present obligation as a result of a past event, it is probable that an outflow of resources will be required to settle the obligation, and a reliable estimate can be made.
  • Carbon tax liabilities: Where carbon taxes are levied on actual emissions, companies may need to recognise an accrual for the estimated carbon tax liability based on measured emissions data. The accuracy of this accrual depends directly on the quality of the underlying emissions data.
  • Decarbonisation investments: Capital expenditure on energy efficiency upgrades, renewable energy installations, and cleaner production technology appears as additions to non-current assets on the balance sheet. These investments are typically evaluated based on their expected return, which is where financial simulation tools become essential.

The quality of emissions data is therefore directly linked to the reliability of the balance sheet. If a company’s reported carbon emissions are significantly understated, its carbon tax liability accrual will be too low, and the balance sheet will not accurately reflect the company’s obligations. This is precisely why verified, actionable data from platforms like NxMap is so important: it ensures that the environmental numbers feeding into the financial statements are trustworthy and audit-ready.

Decoding the Cash Flow Statement for Operational Health

The cash flow statement is often described as the most honest of the four financial statements. While the income statement includes non-cash items such as depreciation and accruals, and the balance sheet is a snapshot that can be influenced by accounting policies, the cash flow statement tracks actual money moving in and out of the business. For this reason, many experienced investors and analysts turn to the cash flow statement first when assessing a company’s financial health.

Three categories of cash flows

The cash flow statement is organised into three sections, each reflecting a different aspect of the company’s financial activity:

  • Operating cash flows: Cash generated or consumed by the company’s core business operations. This includes cash received from customers, cash paid to suppliers and employees, cash paid for taxes, and other operational cash movements. A positive operating cash flow indicates that the company’s core business is generating enough cash to sustain itself.
  • Investing cash flows: Cash spent on or received from the acquisition and disposal of long-term assets. This includes capital expenditure on property, plant and equipment, proceeds from asset sales, and investments in subsidiaries or joint ventures. Investing cash flows are typically negative for growing companies that are investing in their operations.
  • Financing cash flows: Cash flows related to the company’s capital structure. This includes proceeds from borrowings, repayment of debt, proceeds from share issuances, dividend payments, and share buybacks.
Why cash flow matters more than profit in certain contexts

It is entirely possible for a company to report a profit on its income statement while simultaneously facing a cash crisis. This can happen when revenue is recognised before cash is collected, when capital expenditure is high relative to depreciation, or when working capital requirements increase rapidly.

For industrial companies in Asia, cash flow management is particularly critical during periods of expansion or transition. A semiconductor manufacturer investing in a new fabrication facility may report healthy profits while consuming large amounts of cash for construction and equipment purchases. A petrochemical company undertaking a major decarbonisation programme may face a similar pattern.

The cash flow statement reveals whether the company’s operations are generating sufficient cash to fund these investments, or whether it needs to rely on external financing. A persistent pattern of negative operating cash flows, even when the income statement shows profits, is a warning sign that warrants attention.

Carbon costs and their cash flow implications

Carbon taxes and energy costs have direct implications for operating cash flows. In Singapore, where the carbon tax stands at SGD 45 per tonne, a large industrial facility emitting 100,000 tonnes of carbon emissions annually faces a cash outflow of SGD 4.5 million. This is a real, recurring cash cost that must be managed alongside other operating expenses.

As Singapore’s carbon tax is projected to increase, and as similar mechanisms are being considered or implemented in other Asian markets, the cash flow impact of carbon emissions will grow. Companies that reduce their emissions proactively can realise significant cash flow benefits through lower carbon tax payments and reduced energy costs.

This is where the connection between carbon accounting and financial planning becomes tangible. When a company uses NxMap to accurately measure its carbon emissions, it gains a clear picture of its current and projected carbon tax liabilities. This data can then inform investment decisions using NxPlan, which simulates the financial return on decarbonisation investments, including the cash flow impact of reduced carbon tax payments and lower energy consumption. By modelling these scenarios before committing capital, CFOs can make investment decisions with confidence, knowing the projected impact on both profitability and cash flow.

The Statement of Shareholders’ Equity Explained

The statement of shareholders’ equity is the fourth essential financial statement, and while it receives less attention than the income statement or balance sheet, it provides critical information about how a company’s net worth has changed over time.

What the statement of shareholders’ equity contains

The statement of shareholders’ equity details the movements in each component of the equity section of the balance sheet during the reporting period. The key components typically include:

  • Share capital: The nominal value of shares issued by the company. Changes in share capital occur when the company issues new shares, for example to raise capital or as part of an acquisition, or when it buys back and cancels existing shares.
  • Share premium: The excess of the proceeds from share issues over the nominal value of the shares.
  • Retained earnings: The cumulative profits of the company that have not been distributed to shareholders as dividends. Retained earnings increase when the company reports a profit and decrease when it pays dividends or incurs a loss.
  • Revaluation reserves: Arising from the revaluation of property, plant and equipment, or from fair value adjustments on certain financial instruments.
  • Other comprehensive income: Items that are recognised directly in equity rather than in the income statement, such as foreign currency translation differences, the effective portion of cash flow hedges, and certain actuarial gains and losses on defined benefit pension plans.

The statement reconciles the opening balance of each equity component with the closing balance, showing every transaction and event that caused a change. This transparency allows stakeholders to understand not just what the company’s equity is, but how it got there.

Why retained earnings matter for capital-intensive industries

For companies in manufacturing, semiconductors, steel, and petrochemicals, retained earnings are a critical source of funding for capital expenditure. These industries require significant ongoing investment in equipment, technology, and infrastructure, and the ability to fund these investments from retained earnings, rather than from additional borrowings, affects both the balance sheet and the cost of capital.

Decarbonisation investments represent a growing category of capital expenditure for these industries. Upgrading to more energy-efficient equipment, installing renewable energy capacity, and implementing cleaner production processes all require significant upfront investment. The return on these investments, in the form of reduced operating costs, lower carbon tax liabilities, and improved access to sustainable finance, flows through the income statement as cost savings and through the cash flow statement as reduced outflows.

Over time, successful decarbonisation strategies strengthen retained earnings by improving profitability. This creates a virtuous cycle: lower emissions lead to lower costs, which leads to higher profits, which leads to stronger retained earnings, which provides more capacity for further investment.

However, the reverse is also true. Companies that delay decarbonisation investments may face escalating carbon tax costs, higher energy prices, and reduced access to financing, all of which erode profitability and retained earnings over time. The statement of shareholders’ equity will eventually reflect these divergent outcomes.

Dividends and distribution decisions

The statement of shareholders’ equity also shows dividend distributions during the period. For listed companies across Asia, dividend policy is closely watched by investors and is often a factor in valuation.

When a company faces significant decarbonisation investment requirements, the board must balance the desire to maintain dividend distributions with the need to retain earnings for capital expenditure. This is a strategic decision that depends on the company’s financial position, its decarbonisation timeline, and the availability of external financing.

Using financial simulation tools to project the cost savings and returns from decarbonisation investments can help boards make more informed decisions about the appropriate level of dividend distribution. If a decarbonisation investment is projected to deliver up to 15% OPEX reduction and up to 30% CAPEX reduction through optimised investment sequencing, the case for retaining earnings to fund that investment becomes compelling.

How Carbon Taxes and Energy Costs Are Reshaping Financial Statements

The relationship between environmental performance and financial reporting has strengthened considerably in recent years. What was once a separate, supplementary narrative in the annual report is now becoming embedded in the core financial statements themselves. For companies operating in Asia’s industrial heartlands, understanding this integration is no longer optional.

Singapore’s carbon tax: a case study in financial impact

Singapore introduced its carbon tax in 2019, initially at SGD 5 per tonne of carbon emissions. The rate increased to SGD 25 per tonne in 2024 and stands at SGD 45 per tonne in 2025. The government has signalled further increases to between SGD 50 and SGD 80 per tonne by 2030, creating a clear and predictable trajectory that companies must plan for.

For a large petrochemical complex emitting 500,000 tonnes of carbon emissions annually, the current carbon tax liability is approximately SGD 22.5 million per year. If the rate reaches SGD 80 per tonne by 2030, that liability could rise to SGD 40 million or more, even before accounting for any growth in production volumes. This is a material sum that appears directly on the income statement as an operating expense and creates a corresponding liability on the balance sheet.

The impact extends beyond the direct tax cost. As carbon-intensive operations become more expensive, the relative competitiveness of cleaner alternatives improves. Companies that invest in decarbonisation today will face lower operating costs in the future, while those that delay will face a widening cost disadvantage. This dynamic affects not just current profitability but also the long-term value of assets on the balance sheet.

Carbon pricing developments across the region

Singapore is not alone in introducing carbon pricing. Across Asia, several jurisdictions are developing or implementing mechanisms that put a price on carbon emissions:

  • Taiwan is developing its own carbon pricing framework, with the Environmental Protection Administration working towards a carbon fee system that will affect major industrial emitters. Taiwan’s manufacturing sector, which includes the world’s most advanced semiconductor fabrication facilities, will need to account for these costs in their financial planning.
  • Indonesia implemented a carbon tax in 2022, initially applied to coal-fired power plants, with plans to expand coverage to other sectors. The rate is set at a minimum of IDR 30,000 per tonne, with adjustments expected as the scheme matures.
  • Malaysia has committed to implementing a carbon tax as part of its climate commitments, with details being developed through the Ministry of Natural Resources and Environmental Sustainability.
  • Thailand is exploring carbon pricing mechanisms as part of its Long-Term Low Greenhouse Gas Emission Development Strategy, which targets carbon neutrality by 2050 and net zero emissions by 2065.

For companies with operations across multiple Asian markets, the carbon pricing landscape presents both complexity and opportunity. Different rates, different implementation timelines, and different scope of coverage mean that financial planning must be nuanced and market-specific.

Energy costs as a strategic financial factor

Beyond carbon pricing, energy costs themselves are a significant factor on the income statement for energy-intensive industries. Electricity prices, natural gas costs, and fuel expenses can represent a substantial proportion of total operating costs, and these prices are subject to volatility driven by global commodity markets, geopolitical factors, and local regulatory changes.

For a semiconductor fabrication facility, where precision manufacturing requires stable and reliable power supply, energy costs are not just an expense. They are a critical input that affects production yield, product quality, and competitiveness. For a steel plant, where electric arc furnaces consume enormous quantities of electricity, energy price fluctuations can be the difference between profit and loss.

The integration of energy and emissions data into financial planning is therefore essential. When a company has accurate, real-time data on its energy consumption and carbon emissions, it can make more informed decisions about energy procurement, efficiency investments, and production scheduling. This is the kind of actionable data that turns environmental reporting from a compliance exercise into a source of competitive advantage.

From environmental data to financial reporting

The connection between environmental performance and financial reporting operates through several specific channels:

  • Operating expenses: Carbon taxes, energy surcharges, and environmental compliance costs appear as line items on the income statement. Accurate emissions measurement is essential for calculating these costs correctly.
  • Capital expenditure: Investments in energy efficiency, renewable energy, and cleaner production technology appear as additions to property, plant and equipment on the balance sheet. The expected returns on these investments must be modelled and evaluated.
  • Provisions and contingencies: Potential environmental liabilities, including remediation obligations and regulatory penalties, may require recognition as provisions under IAS 37.
  • Asset impairment: Changes in carbon pricing or regulatory requirements may trigger impairment assessments under IAS 36, particularly for long-lived assets in carbon-intensive industries.
  • Disclosure requirements: Under ISSB standards IFRS S1 and IFRS S2, companies must disclose sustainability-related risks and opportunities that could reasonably be expected to affect their cash flows, access to finance, or cost of capital.

Each of these channels requires reliable, verified environmental data. Estimates and approximations are not sufficient when the numbers are feeding into audited financial statements. This is why the quality of carbon accounting data matters not just for sustainability reporting, but for the integrity of the financial statements themselves.

Aligning ESG Metrics with Financial Reporting via Evercomm’s Platforms

The convergence of financial and sustainability reporting is one of the most significant trends in corporate disclosure. For Asian industrial enterprises, it creates both a challenge and an opportunity. The challenge is that financial and environmental data have traditionally been managed in separate systems, by separate teams, using separate methodologies. The opportunity is that by integrating these data streams, companies can produce more comprehensive, more reliable, and more decision-useful reports.

The data integration imperative

For a CFO reviewing the company’s financial statements, the question is increasingly not just whether the numbers are accurate, but whether they tell the full story. Traditional financial statements capture the monetary impact of business decisions, but they do not explicitly capture the environmental context in which those decisions are made.

The ISSB standards, IFRS S1 and IFRS S2, are designed to bridge this gap. They require companies to disclose sustainability-related information that is material to investors, using the same rigour and discipline that applies to financial reporting. This means that the emissions data, energy consumption figures, and decarbonisation targets that appear in a company’s sustainability report must be produced to the same standard of accuracy and verifiability as the financial data in the annual accounts.

For companies that have been managing their environmental data through spreadsheets and manual processes, this requirement presents a significant challenge. The data must be accurate, complete, consistent, and traceable. It must be produced using recognised methodologies, such as the GHG Protocol and ISO 14064. And it must be capable of being verified by an independent third party.

NxMap: Carbon accounting data that feeds into financial statements

Evercomm’s NxMap platform is designed to address this challenge by providing a robust, automated carbon accounting system that produces verified emissions data suitable for integration with financial reporting.

NxMap collects real-time data from IoT sensors and enterprise systems deployed across industrial facilities. This data is processed using GHG Protocol and ISO 14064 methodologies, applying appropriate emission factors to produce Scope 1, Scope 2, and Scope 3 emissions inventories. The platform maintains a complete audit trail from source data to reported figures, ensuring that every number can be traced back to its origin.

For the finance function, this means that the emissions data used to calculate carbon tax liabilities, estimate environmental provisions, and assess potential asset impairment is accurate, current, and independently verifiable. It eliminates the reliance on estimates and proxies that can introduce material errors into financial calculations.

NxMap is Bureau Veritas verified, and Evercomm holds ISO 14064 certification, providing additional assurance that the data and methodologies meet the highest standards. For companies preparing assured reports under ISSB or local exchange requirements, this level of verification significantly reduces the burden on both internal audit teams and external assurance providers.

NxPlan: Financial ROI simulation of decarbonisation investments

While NxMap provides the data foundation, NxPlan delivers the analytical capability to turn that data into investment decisions. NxPlan is Evercomm’s AI-powered simulation platform that models the financial return on decarbonisation investments.

For a CFO evaluating whether to approve a multi-million dollar energy efficiency upgrade at a semiconductor fab in Taiwan, or a fuel switching project at a steel plant in Thailand, NxPlan can simulate the expected outcomes based on the facility’s actual operational data. The platform models the projected reduction in carbon emissions, the resulting decrease in carbon tax liabilities, the energy cost savings, and the payback period for the investment.

The value of this capability extends beyond individual project evaluation. NxPlan can develop optimised decarbonisation roadmaps that sequence investments to maximise financial returns. By prioritising the projects that deliver the highest ROI first, companies can achieve up to 30% CAPEX reduction and up to 15% OPEX reduction compared to unoptimised investment approaches. At the same time, these optimised roadmaps can deliver up to 30% CO2 reduction, demonstrating that environmental and financial objectives are not in conflict but are, in fact, mutually reinforcing.

For the financial statements, the implications are clear. Decarbonisation investments that are carefully planned and optimised generate stronger returns, which flow through the income statement as cost savings and through the cash flow statement as reduced outflows. The capital expenditure is deployed more efficiently, improving the return on assets. And the reduced carbon tax liability improves both profitability and cash flow.

Building an integrated reporting framework

The ultimate goal is an integrated reporting framework where financial and environmental data are managed as a unified dataset, each informing the other. In this framework:

  • Verified emissions data from NxMap feeds directly into carbon tax calculations, environmental provisions, and asset impairment assessments in the financial statements
  • Financial simulation outputs from NxPlan inform capital budgeting decisions and are reflected in the depreciation, amortisation, and return on asset calculations in the accounts
  • Sustainability disclosures in the annual report are based on the same verified data that underpins the financial statements, ensuring consistency and reducing the risk of discrepancies
  • Assurance providers can verify both financial and sustainability data from a single, auditable data pipeline

This integrated approach is where the industry is heading, and the companies that build these capabilities early will be better positioned to meet evolving disclosure requirements, access sustainable finance, and demonstrate the connection between their environmental performance and their financial results.

Practical steps for finance leaders

For CFOs, Finance Directors, and accountants in Asia’s industrial sectors, the practical steps towards integrating ESG metrics with financial reporting include:

  1. Audit your current data quality: Assess the accuracy, completeness, and traceability of your existing emissions and energy data. Identify gaps where estimates or proxies are being used in place of actual measurements.
  2. Invest in verified data infrastructure: Deploy IoT monitoring and carbon accounting platforms, such as NxMap, to capture real-time operational data and produce verified emissions inventories that meet the standards required for financial reporting.
  3. Model decarbonisation scenarios: Use financial simulation tools, such as NxPlan, to evaluate the return on potential decarbonisation investments and develop optimised transition roadmaps.
  4. Engage with assurance providers early: Involve your external auditors and assurance providers in the design of your integrated reporting framework, ensuring that the data and processes meet their requirements from the outset.
  5. Align with ISSB and local requirements: Ensure that your sustainability disclosures are structured to satisfy IFRS S1 and IFRS S2, as well as local exchange requirements such as SGX Sustainability Reporting Rules, and that they use the same verified data that underpins your financial statements.
  6. Communicate the financial value of sustainability: Use your integrated data to demonstrate to the board, investors, and other stakeholders how decarbonisation investments are delivering measurable financial returns, including reduced operating costs, lower carbon tax liabilities, and improved access to sustainable finance.

Evercomm is a certified B Corporation with a B Impact Score of 94.6, reflecting our commitment to using business as a force for good. We are ISO 14064 certified and Bureau Veritas verified, ensuring that the data and methodologies we provide meet the highest standards of accuracy and integrity. We work with industrial enterprises across Singapore, Taiwan, Thailand, Indonesia, and Malaysia, helping them bridge the gap between environmental performance and financial reporting.

If you are ready to integrate your carbon accounting data with your financial reporting framework, we are here to help. Visit https://evercomm.io to learn more about how NxMap and NxPlan can support your journey towards integrated, verified, and actionable reporting.

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