SAP sees growing demand for sustainability software despite U.S. climate disengagement


Figurines with computers and smartphones are seen in front of SAP logo in this illustration taken, February 19, 2024. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration/File Photo

(Reuters) - Germany's SAP sees a growing global demand for software to manage and document companies' sustainability efforts despite a trend of weakening climate protection targets in the United States, its chief financial officer, Dominik Asam, said in an interview with Reuters.

This week, the United Nations said the U.S. will withdraw from the Paris climate agreement on Jan. 27, 2026, after Washington formally notified Secretary-General Antonio Guterres of President Donald Trump's decision to quit.

"The topic of sustainability will not disappear from investors' discussions," Asam said, adding that he expects companies to still need reliable figures and analysis tools to make decisions on the topic.

"I spoke to many investors at the World Economic Forum in Davos who are concerned with sustainability. They are very optimistic despite the recent U.S. elections," he adds.

In this context, he sees potential for SAP's fledgling Green Ledger software that he said helps companies make their sustainability reporting as verifiable as a financial balance sheet, which will be required from 2028 in the framework of the European Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive (CSRD).

Apart from chemical firm Covestro, it's mainly SAP using the software, but the CFO expects contracts to be signed. "A lot will happen in the second half of this year," he said.

(Reporting by Hakan Ersen, writing by Paolo Laudani, editing by Miranda Murray)

Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!

Next In Tech News

Amazon's Chile data center moves ahead after residents lose environmental challenge
Uber-backed Lime reveals revenue surge in US IPO filing
Cloudflare's slowing growth disappoints investors betting on AI boost
Google has bit more time to address concerns in EU investigation, EU Commission says
Logitech bets on AI, gaming and business users as it raises spending, CEO says
Sony, Nintendo grapple with memory price surge as AI boom constrains supply
The scam services 'helping' people to check in for flights – for fees
Sony, TSMC plan new Japan joint venture for next-generation image sensors
Samsung Electronics' union says to enter mediation over wage dispute
Colleges around the world see web outages after vendor hack

Others Also Read