Blog Archive

Monday, June 29, 2026

Scientific Fact-Checking and Quality Control: Guidelines and Trends Amid Rampant Fraud

 

  

     As someone who has done science and who writes about science, I know the importance of accuracy in reporting events or results. Sometimes, as a writer, one gets things from sources that may not be reputable or have not done enough due diligence on their own sources. Thus, there is always the risk of that. I don’t always double-check sources and may make mistakes at times. There is always a risk in science itself that results may be misinterpreted, and facts unknowingly conveyed incorrectly. Science is self-correcting by nature, always seeking to refine understanding, typically in light of new data. There is also the possibility of deliberate misrepresentation of science for various reasons.

     Freelance science journalist Dalmeet Singh Chawla has written about factchecking scientific journals for Undark Magazine and Chemical & Engineering News. In Undark Magazine, Chawla tells the story of a doctoral student at the Australian National University who found that guidelines and standards for concentrations of lithium, potassium, sodium, calcium, and magnesium in drinking water that were often cited as coming from the WHO and EPA, in fact, did not come from the WHO and EPA since they did not produce those guidelines and standards. This is a case of incorrect information being passed on and repeatedly cited without being true. Chala notes that the researchers found twenty papers that cited the false numbers. The above case precedes the proliferation of generative AI, so that is not a likely culprit. However, in some other cases, AI is a culprit:

In today’s world, the immediate culprit that comes to mind is generative AI, which is widely known to make up citations when it hallucinates. Some researchers are using AI to draft, edit, or academic papers, which could lead to corruption in the scientific publishing process.”

     Chawla also mentions the messy and shady corruption that is paper mills, which I wrote about last year as fraudulent scientific research. In some cases, the factual errors can be attributed to what I was describing in the first paragraph, such as using values without checking primary sources, a practice that has been referred to as “cold citing.” Chawla argues that scientific journals:

“…should hire dedicated paid fact-checkers whose remit it is to rigorously check all claims — including references — made in academic papers before they go live. That would be an additional round of quality control in addition to peer review.”

     Chawla thinks that many scientific journals are profitable enough to pay factcheckers just as many media sources do:

In a world marred with disinformation, misinformation, and information overload, science could and should lead the way. Science should pride itself in providing rigorously checked factual information that has been manually scrutinized by a human, who uses automated tools at their disposal. This approach is especially crucial amid fears that fake science could be becoming harder to spot.”




     In C&E News, Chawla writes about Leslie McIntosh, vice president of research integrity and security at the scholarly analytics firm Digital Science. McIntosh believes data-driven approaches are crucial to the scientific sleuthing she does to find fraudulent science, and she hopes to formalize the process to some extent. Chawla calls people like McIntosh ‘research integrity practitioners.’ Some of these practitioners think that standards for sleuthing should be established, while others believe it is the responsibility of the whole scientific establishment to weed out fraud. McIntosh explains why she sleuths in addition to her full-time job:

Science is a pillar of democracy which needs to be defended and strengthened.”

     McIntosh favors data-driven approaches to spot patterns across a large number of studies and calls the practice ‘forensic scientometrics.’

McIntosh and colleagues recently reported on a pattern of suspicious activity that implicated hundreds of researchers. In a study published in February on arXiv, where researchers post papers that haven’t been peer-reviewed, the team found that more than 120 papers list the name of a fictitious organization called the Pharmakon Neuroscience Research Network as a funder or affiliation for at least one author. These papers were coauthored by more than 300 authors working at 230 institutions, primarily between 2019 and 2022.”

     Such fakeries should incense all of us. Some of these compromised (fake) researchers are drawing funding from institutions like the NIH and NSF. Some authors are unaware that they may be involved in research that has fraudulent elements. Small groups of research integrity sleuths are meeting up, have some funding, and are working toward developing standards. They are working to combat the paper mills.

     McIntosh notes:

This is not just for publicity. The declaration highlights forensic scientometrics as a distinct field that could and should attract funding, she says, noting that most sleuths don’t get paid for flagging nefarious activities or faulty papers.”

     Chawla writes in C&E News:

McIntosh is also in the process of putting together a code of ethics that lays out standards to which sleuths should adhere when digging into papers. She says she’s developing the code in part because she worries that sleuthing is being weaponized to serve political agendas. For instance, a few people deliberately highlight only papers authored by researchers of certain ethnicities, backgrounds, or genders.”

Another aim of the sleuthing community is to shield the scholarly literature from interference by governments, McIntosh says. “I don’t think that it is beyond certain countries to play a long game in manipulating what goes into the scientific literature,” she says. “I think we underestimate science and the power of it in our society if we think that other people aren’t trying to also control and direct where information is going.”

     Some of these sleuths, like Elizabeth Bik, examine papers one at a time, looking for fraudulent research groups. Bik thinks that there needs to be a society for sleuths and funding for sleuths who can receive legal threats or get sued. The goal, of course, is to expose and filter out fraudulent papers.

     Lawsuits against publishers of fraudulent papers are becoming more common, and a recent one involved the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute agreeing to pay a total of $15 million, most of which will go to the NIH, which funded the research that was compromised. Sleuths can even become whistleblowers and be rewarded through the US False Claims Act. 

     Statistical manipulation and image manipulation are common fraudulent techniques. Sleuths found that a landmark 2006 paper on Alzheimer’s research was fraudulent, a paper later cited by thousands of other papers. More corrections and retractions of such papers are needed.

     A September 2024 article in Undark Magazine by Jessica Wapner gives some modern history of scientific fraud:

Scientific fraud has existed for as long as people have stood to benefit from it. In the early 1980s, Harvard Medical School heart researcher John Darsee faked data in animal research on heart attack treatments. Beginning in the early 1990s, Japanese researcher Yoshitaka Fujii, an anesthesiologist, fabricated more than 170 papers. And Massachusetts anesthesiologist Scott Reuben fabricated data in at least 21 studies dating back to the 1990s, several of which highlighted the benefits of pain medications made by Pfizer, which had supported much of his research.”

     Again, sleuths note that the journal publishers are very profitable and have little to no incentive to expose their own publications as purveyors of fake research. They say publishing is favored over scrutinizing the data that is published. The sleuths also noted that universities are often reluctant to investigate allegations of misconduct by researchers they employ. There is a disincentive since if they expose false research, they risk having future research defunded. With the possibility of getting sued for defamation, sleuths can be wary at times to call out certain researchers without very strong proof. Of course, whether certain researchers knowingly or unknowingly passed on fraudulent research is a factor as well. It also takes a lot of time and effort to investigate thoroughly.

Tim Kersjes, who leads the resolutions team within the publisher’s {Springer Nature} research integrity department, acknowledged that investigations can take a long time. “Ideally a concern comes in, we investigate it, and we can retract two weeks later,” he said. “But in practice that’s impossible.” Kersjes said that authors don’t always respond to emails or send explanations that require further review. Marcus noted that the peer review process isn’t geared toward catching images for signs of tampering or other types of misconduct. Jackson, at the Journal of Clinical Investigation, said that the fact that some scientists are willing to fake their data caught publishers off guard.”

     It is also a sticky issue whether a paper that contains some elements of fraud should simply be corrected or retracted. This mainly depends on whether the fraudulent elements lead to a change of conclusions or not.

In an email that Michael Stacey, head of communications for journals with Springer Nature Group asked to be attributed to a spokesperson, he wrote: “Our investigations follow an established process, which involves consultation with the authors and, where appropriate, seeking independent advice from peer reviewers and other external experts. Other factors, such as awaiting the outcome of institutional investigations, where appropriate, can also impact the length of time an investigation takes.”

     Juraj Vladika and Florian Matthes of the Department of Computer Science, Technical University of Munich, Garching, Germany, published a paper in the Findings of the Association for Computational Linguistics: ACL in 2023 that sought to better define scientific factchecking and its challenges. The abstract and figure below are from that paper, followed by an explanation of some specific challenges of scientific factchecking vs. general factchecking.








     They noted that challenges of scientific factchecking include evidence quality, reasoning and explainability, dataset size, external knowledge, multimodality and multilinguality, and human-centered factchecking. For evidence quality, scrutinizing the evidence in detail and with the most recent findings in the field of concern is needed. Sleuths need to analyze the reasoning utilized to arrive at conclusions and whether it is really explainable. Small datasets can be difficult to analyze and should ideally be combined with larger existing datasets. The complexity of scientific knowledge makes it “suitable for representation with structures like Knowledge Graphs (KGs) that model world knowledge in the form of entities and relations between them.” Images and fake videos are a common means of spreading misinformation. Scientific factchecking needs to occur in multiple languages as well. Regarding human-centered factchecking, they note:

Making the process of NLP-based fact-checking more human-centered is a promising future direction that will make it more reliable, trustworthy, and easier for wide-scale adoption.”

 

Factchecking in Scientific Reporting

     Knight Science Journalism at MIT runs the KSJ Fact-Checking Project. They give ten common ways in which mistakes are made in scientific reporting. 1) Correlation ≠ Causation – this is common and needs to be called out when it happens. 2) Numbers and Units – these simply need to be double-checked for accuracy, since they can be misleading at times and be entered incorrectly. 3) Absolute Risk ≠ Relative Risk – they explain this as follows, using a study that coffee increases cancer risk by 25%, but that 25% is relative, and the absolute risk increase is very small and likely negligible:

Risk communicates how likely it is that a certain harmful event will happen. For instance, an epidemiological study, also called an observational study, may show the likelihood that a particular material causes cancer, while a medical study on a new drug may show how often the drug reduces the risk of a disease.”

But studies often report these likelihoods in terms of relative risk, which compares two test groups. A reporter may confuse the relative risk as absolute, or the likelihood of that event happening in any scenario.”




4) Single Study Syndrome – if reporting cites a single study, especially when there are many other study conclusions that refute the conclusions in the single study. I have noticed this used by environmentalists, overly citing a single study, or more often, a single or small group of researchers who share their own biases. 5) Statistical Significance and P-values – these are based on probabilities. Statistics need to be significant to be important and real, not just possible. Data is often manipulated to look as if it is statistically significant when it is probably not. 6) Size Matters – they explain this as follows:

If a sample size is too small, for example, it won’t reflect the larger population. If a story cites a study with a small sample size, the story should give context: What the sample size actually was and why it may not mean much more broadly.”

7) False Balance – journalists often seek to be balanced in their reporting, by giving both sides of debates a voice. However, when one party’s view is much more plausible than the other party’s view, it conveys a false sense that it is difficult to determine who is winning the debate when in reality the likely winner is quite clear. We see this a lot, unfortunately. 8) Mice Aren’t Humans – this is simply the caveat that studies with mice or other animals do not necessarily mean that similar studies with humans would give the same result, as we know from several situations where results differ for humans. 9) Consider the Source – the reputation or legitimacy of sources needs to be considered in factchecking determinations. Scientific journals are best peer-reviewed. 10) Don’t Believe the Hype – claims need to be contextualized, especially claims that are bold and go against previous established understanding. As the following graphic shows, skepticism should be the default when investigating claims.






Factchecking Scientific Claims by Political Partisans     

     Factcheck.org, a project of The Annenberg Public Policy Center, has a subsection called SciCheck that focuses exclusively on false and misleading scientific claims that are made by partisans to influence public policy. It was launched in January 2015. This site is now dominated by spurious claims made by Trump. Consider his claims about the reflecting pool, among many others. One cannot deny that he is often quite loose with the truth. Remember the “alternative facts” idea during his first term. Trump’s cabinet members, several of whom have little qualifications for the positions they hold, are also often fodder for factcheckers. RFK Jr., in particular, is associated with wild claims about vaccines, pesticides, and genetic engineering dangers, and several other topics. Of course, other politicians of both parties should be scrutinized as well for scientific claims that may not be true. We need to hold all politicians to the fire for any claims they make. Trump, in particular, has made some very wild claims, many of which have been proven to be untrue. Thus, most people take his claims with a grain of salt and ignore them as hubris. He has certainly gotten away with a lot. Other people would have been annihilated for saying some of the things he has said.

  

 

References:

 

Scientific sleuths come in from the cold: Research integrity investigators are starting to organize, but the field, and the people, remain idiosyncratic. Dalmeet Singh Chawla. Chemical & Engineering News (C&EN). March 11, 2026. Scientific sleuths come in from the cold

Opinion: Scientific Journals Need Dedicated Fact-Checkers: An additional layer of quality control could help academic publishers weed out problematic content before it propagates. Dalmeet Singh Chawla. Undark Magazine. April 9, 2026.  Scientific Journals Need Dedicated Fact-Checkers

The Rise of the Science Sleuths: When an Alzheimer’s paper came under scrutiny, correcting the scientific record meant battling much bigger problems. Jessica Wapner. Undark Magazine. September 11, 2024. The Rise of the Science Sleuths

Fact-Checking in Science Reporting. In Fact-Checking 101.KSJ Fact-Checking Project. Massachusetts Institute of Technology.  Fact-Checking in Science Reporting - KSJ Fact Checking Project

Scientific Fact-Checking: A Survey of Resources and Approaches. Juraj Vladika and Florian Matthes. Findings of the Association for Computational Linguistics: ACL. July, 2023. [2305.16859] Scientific Fact-Checking: A Survey of Resources and Approaches

SciCheck. FactCheck.org. SciCheck Archives - FactCheck.org

Friday, June 26, 2026

Russia and Iran Lead Increase in Gas Flaring, and Along with Iraq Make Up Half of Global Flaring, According to Improved World Bank Global Gas Flaring Tracker


     The World Bank just released its annual global gas flaring tracker report. In 2025, global flare volumes rose to 167 BCM, or about 5.9 TCF. This was a 6% increase over the previous year. Flared gas in 2025 was worth an estimated US$54 billion. 




     The report’s forward notes that estimates have been improved with a new methodology and better satellite coverage:

This year's Global Gas Flaring Tracker introduces a significantly improved methodology for estimating flare volumes, developed in partnership with the Colorado School of Mines, which now draws on three satellites rather than one, more than doubling nightly observation coverage, improving flare locations and the accuracy of flare estimates at both ends of the operational flare volume spectrum.”

     The box below explains the new methodology in more detail, and while the new results kept the same trend globally, countries with big flares like Iran and Iraq were revised upward, and countries with smaller flares like the U.S. and Canada were revised downward.





     The report notes a continuing steady increase in global flaring since it reached a minimum in 2022. Russia has increased flaring by 9% compared to the previous year. Russia by itself makes up 18% of global flaring. The amount of gas flared globally is roughly equivalent to the gas consumption of Africa!




Nine countries together account for 83 percent of global flare volumes while producing only 46 percent of the world's oil. This concentration means that targeted action by a small number of governments and operators could yield disproportionate and significant results.”

     Those nine countries are Russia, Iran, Iraq, Venezuela, Mexico, Libya, Algeria, Nigeria, and the U.S. 




     I know that Iraq has plans in place to utilize flared gas from Iraqi oilfields to power local natural gas plants. Nigeria also noted its commitment to end flaring remains firm despite a small increase this year associated with higher natural gas output.

"Nigeria’s commitment to end routine flaring by 2030 remains firm," said Eniola Akinkuotu, spokesperson of the Nigerian Upstream Petroleum Regulatory Commission (NUPRC), which he said has "a scheme to monetise gas flares."

     Below are some more positive flaring news highlights:

The United States achieved the largest absolute reduction in flare volumes of any country in 2025 — 0.4 bcm, or 7 percent — while also reducing its flaring intensity, the amount of gas flared per barrel of oil produced, by 10 percent. Kazakhstan continued its multi-year downward trajectory, registering a 16 percent decline through consistent and sustained application of regulatory standards. Also, countries and companies committed to the Zero Routine Flaring by 2030 (ZRF) initiative continue to outperform those that have not.”

     Zubin Bamji, Manager for the World Bank’s Global Flaring and Methane Reduction Partnership (GFMR) commented on the report:

"The technologies and approaches needed to capture and utilize associated gas are well established. But in many oil-producing countries, gas utilization is not yet integrated as a core part of oil production planning, with infrastructure investment and regulatory enforcement often lagging."


Some possibilities for developing and utilizing the so-called stranded gas that is commonly flared are given below, as well as policy and financing options. 




     Russia, Iran, and Iraq combined flared about 84 BCM in 2025, nearly half the global total, with Russia and Iran accounting for much of the year-over-year increase, according to the data. I will say that this is another case where the two countries, Russia and Iran, represent the worst ranking and noncompliance with international norms and expectations.

     Below are more graphs of global data from the report.

    




 



 Some U.S. data is given below by the producing basin. I found it interesting that in the key findings, it was noted that the big drop in flaring in the Permian Basin in 2025 was associated with the turning on of the Matterhorn Pipeline in the Permian Basin.








References:

 

Global Gas Flaring Tracker Report: June 2026. World Bank. Global-Gas-FlaringTracker-June-23-2026.pdf

Russia, Iran lead surge in gas flaring, dimming global hopes to end the practice. Isaac Anyaogu. Reuters. June 23, 2026. Russia, Iran lead surge in gas flaring, dimming global hopes to end the practice

Biggest Single Driver of Global Sea Level Rise is Thermal Expansion of Warming Seawater, Not Melting Ice Sheets or Glaciers, New Paper Confirms


       A new paper published in the journal Science Advances confirms that the biggest driver of global sea level rise is the thermal expansion of seawater. The international researchers analyzed data from tide gauge measurements, satellite records, and ocean-monitoring buoys. While we know that melting glaciers and melting sea ice increase global sea level, the biggest single source, responsible for 43% of global sea level rise, is thermal expansion of the warmer water. Thermal expansion occurs as ocean water heats up, expands, and occupies more space. The researchers found that mountain glacier loss contributed 27% of the rise, while the Greenland Ice Sheet accounted for 15% and the Antarctic Ice Sheet for 12%. Changes in land water storage made up an additional 3%. Thus, the paper shows that only just over a quarter of global sea level rise is caused by ice loss from the Arctic and Antarctic ice sheets. Mountain glaciers contributed as much as both. Of course, ice loss from all three of those sources accounted for 54%, so one could say that total ice loss (from mountain glaciers and the two ice sheets combined) contributes more to sea level rise than thermal expansion. I made a graph below to depict the percentages found in the paper.




     The researchers used a statistical technique known as balancing the global mean sea level (GMSL) budget. Mechanical engineer John Abraham, from the University of St. Thomas in the U.S., noted:

"This work shows that, with better instruments, processes, and smarter analysis, this knowledge gap can be closed. We can [now] explain sea level rise with greater confidence."




     Since 1960, the data shows, global mean sea levels have risen by an average rate of 2.06 millimeters (0.08 inches) per year. However, as Science Alert notes:

Between 2005 and 2023, they went up by 3.94 millimeters (0.16 inches) per year – about twice the average rate.”

     The researchers noted that using better datasets, such as higher-resolution satellite imagery, has improved estimates of the extent of glacier melt worldwide.

 "The up-to-date community estimates reconcile differences among multiple estimate methods, mitigate the random errors induced by a single source, and reduce the differences from the dataset choice."




     Sea level rise threatens coastal areas with flooding, storm surges, and king tides. The researchers note that even if we could stop carbon emissions now, sea level would continue to rise for another 50 years, resulting in an additional 103 mm of sea level rise, or a little over 4 inches. With continued emissions guaranteed, it will be much more than that.  

     The researchers noted that their analysis does indicate that sea level rise has indeed accelerated, especially since 1993, as the abstract below points out.

 






References:

 

Scientists pinpoint biggest driver of sea level rise, and it's not melting ice sheets or glaciers. Curtis Deacon. The Cool Down. June 15, 2026. Scientists pinpoint biggest driver of sea level rise, and it's not melting ice sheets or glaciers

Sea Level Rise Is Accelerating, And We Now Know The Biggest Reason Why. Science Alert. David Nield. June 9, 2026. Sea Level Rise Is Accelerating, And We Now Know The Biggest Reason Why : ScienceAlert

Improved closure of the global mean sea level budget from observational advances since 1960. Huayi Zheng, Lijing Cheng, Sönke Dangendorf, Benoit Meyssignac, Anne Barnoud, Kevin E. Trenberth, John T. Fasullo, and John Abraham. Science Advances. 20 May 2026. Vol 12, Issue 21. Improved closure of the global mean sea level budget from observational advances since 1960 | Science Advances

Global Superbasins: Geoscience Resources and Future Opportunities: AAPG Academy Webinar Summary & Review, June 25, 2026


     AAPG provided a nice summary of the webinar:

This AAPG Academy webinar marked the 10-year anniversary of the superbasins concept, featuring presentations by Bob Frickland of S&P Global and Charles Sternberg, both pioneers in petroleum geology. Bob outlined the geological criteria for designating superbasins, which require 5 billion barrels equivalent of discovered volumes plus an additional 5 billion barrels of potential, along with specific geological characteristics including multiple petroleum systems, marine settings, and significant thickness of Mesozoic strata. Charles discussed the AAPG Superbasin Initiative he led as president in 2018, which produced four special issues of the AAPG Bulletin covering 20 global basins and organized 20+ themed events with over 5,000 attendees. The presentations covered how exploration has shifted from frontier basins to mature and emerging basins over the past decade, with notable discoveries in Guyana-Suriname and potential new superbasins emerging in the Black Sea. The webinar concluded with a discussion of how large language models and AI are accelerating basin analysis, and questions from attendees about EOR in unconventionals, the role of smaller players in international exploration, and the potential for superbasin discoveries in India.”

     The discussion was great, and the slides contain some vital information about superbasins. As noted, it has been about ten years since superbasins were basically defined and began to be a focus for petroleum explorationists. Below are Bob Frykland’s slides on the geological characteristics of superbasins.








     Bob went on to describe what has been discovered in new and existing superbasins over the past 5 years and 10 years. He stated that a superbasin requires recoverable hydrocarbon reserves of 100 million barrels of oil equivalent per kilometer. He notes that in the past ten years, only one superbasin has been discovered, the Guyana-Suriname Basin, which is offshore these two countries. There are, however, several possible emerging superbasins. One in particular is the Black Sea Basin, which is heavily weighted towards natural gas.











     He also notes that some mature superbasins may still have significant hydrocarbons remaining.  Large language models are speeding up our ability to explore superbasins. He also makes mention of the large accumulations of unconventional resources, such as those of the Permian Basin in West Texas, the Appalachian Marcellus gas basin, and the Neuquén Basin in Argentina, which hosts the Vaca Muerta shale. He notes some emerging unconventional shale basins in Saudi Arabia and the UAE.







     Charles Sternbach first provided the Exploration Pyramid, showing the path from concept to drill-ready locations. He notes that in the USGS’s Petroleum Provinces of the 21st Century from 2008, there was no mention of the Permian Basin or the Appalachian Basin. He notes that 4 issues of the AAPG Bulletin from 2020 to 2022 covered 20 superbasins.






     Below, he introduces his Superbasin thinking toolkit. He notes that technology includes better seismic, better geochemistry, and a better understanding of basin architecture. 




     He mentions that geochemistry can provide hints of petroleum systems yet unexplored or underexplored. He notes that source rocks and reservoirs are a continuum, and the importance of carrier beds for hydrocarbon migration. Below, he shows a slide depicting possible underexplored basins where additional source rocks and subsequent petroleum systems may be found. 






     He also mentions that later tilts of migrated plays can concentrate hydrocarbons into traps, as happened in the Permian Basin. He notes that, especially in deepwater fields, the power density is very important. He emphasizes clinoform motifs and their historical importance in West Siberia and Alaska’s Cretaceous petroleum system. He points out that structural traps are typically tapped first, with stratigraphic and combination traps usually coming later. He says we should look specifically for stratigraphic and combination traps, as is happening in global shale exploration. Analog plays are important, he notes.  He also considers that there are possibilities of deeper source rocks and additional petroleum systems in existing basins.

     AAPG editor Rasoul Sorkhabi provided context on ‘What’s Next for Global Superbasins, ’ noting the classifications of giant fields, supergiant fields, and superbasins. The map below shows the distribution of the 62 superbasins, so far identified.










     Superbasins are the habitats of giant fields, he says. 60% are onshore – more since that’s where exploration began. He notes that there are currently 62 superbasins globally and that 45 of them produce 90% of the world’s oil & gas.

     Below, he shows conjugate margins of both sides of the Atlantic Basin and the possibility of new superbasins emerging.




     Below, he shows an example of machine learning applied to superbasins. He also mentions co-production strategies of other basin products, such as brine that can be mined for critical minerals. He notes that emerging superbasins are mainly in deepwater provinces.




     The Q&A explored overpressure retention in the Permian,  provided by the Tertiary overburden. There was discussion of the dozen or so sparsely explored basins in India, indicating that a superbasin could emerge on the east or west side. There was a question about EOR and refracs in the Eagle Ford and Bakken being a possible part of the next production peak. Another touched on the role of independents as risk takers. It was noted that 50% of independents are now gone in the U.S., but that private equity-backed companies are returning.

 

Climate Disclosure Platform CDP Sells Majority Stake to Private Equity as Fewer Companies Disclose and Mandatory Disclosure Requirements Lead to Less Company Interest in the Platform


    Nonprofit disclosure platform CDP will move to the private sector, and private equity firm Permira will assume majority ownership. In addition to the sale, a new nonprofit will be created, CDP Foundation, that will continue to develop new disclosure methods. Fewer companies are disclosing now, and the company has had to lay off employees. Private equity companies are known for maximizing short-term profit, while sustainability-based groups do not usually prioritize profit.




     Jim Giles at Trellis explains:

It has not been an easy few years for CDP. Technical glitches impacted the disclosure cycles for data from 2023 and, to a lesser extent, 2024. Renewal rates suffered and an expected increase in commercial revenue was delayed, CDP said in its 2025 report. The proliferation of mandatory disclosure requirements has also prompted some companies to reconsider the need to report to CDP, contributing to a fall in disclosures in 2025 — the first in the organization’s history.”

     CDP CEO Sherry Madera explains how CDP is trying to improve the disclosure process and make it more efficient. There have been complaints in the past about access fees, but she did not address those.

CDP already follows a “write once, use many” approach designed to ensure that a single submission to the platform can be used by multiple stakeholders, including supply chain partners and investors. One immediate focus, said Madera, is improving the “write” part of the process so companies can upload documents they have already produced, such as annual sustainability reports and regulatory filings, then let the system automatically extract the relevant data.”

 

Climate Disclosure Platforms and What They Do

     I searched ‘climate disclosure platform’ on Microsoft CoPilot and got the following results:

Climate disclosure platforms help organizations, governments, and cities measure, report, and manage climate-related data to drive sustainability, regulatory compliance, and actionable environmental insights.”




     CDP, which stands for Carbon Disclosure Platform, is now a global company, formerly a global nonprofit.

Climate disclosure platforms are essential tools for organizations and governments to measure, report, and act on climate-related data. Whether through nonprofit systems like CDP and TCR, open data utilities, or AI-driven commercial platforms, these solutions enable transparency, regulatory compliance, and actionable insights to support sustainability and climate resilience efforts globally.

  

 

 

References:

 

CDP sells majority stake to private equity firm. Jim Giles. Trellis. June 17, 2026. CDP sells majority stake to private equity firm | Trellis

           As someone who has done science and who writes about science, I know the importance of accuracy in reporting events or result...