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Regulatory Intelligence

Every regulation. Every jurisdiction.
Mapped independently.

Sustainability regulation is multiplying across every major economy. Taza maps compliance requirements and funding eligibility per jurisdiction, per company — so you know exactly what applies to you.

100K+ Solutions in the index
728 Project types mapped
12 Taza Topics
76 Sustainability attributes scored
Jurisdictions

California ≠ US federal. France ≠ EU-level.
Each region mapped independently.

Taza's Obligation Intelligence doesn't treat "Europe" or "the US" as a single regulatory environment. Every jurisdiction gets its own map because every jurisdiction has its own rules.

United States — California Tracked

Leading US state-level sustainability regulation.

California consistently leads US climate and sustainability policy. Multiple disclosure and accountability laws are live or phased in — often more aggressive than federal requirements.

  • SB 253 — Climate Corporate Data Accountability Act. Scope 1, 2, and 3 GHG reporting for companies with >$1B revenue doing business in CA
  • SB 261 — Climate-Related Financial Risk Act. TCFD-aligned risk disclosures for companies with >$500M revenue
  • AB 1305 — Voluntary carbon offset disclosure. Companies making net-zero or carbon-neutral claims must disclose methodology
  • SB 54 — Plastic Pollution Prevention and Packaging Producer Responsibility Act. EPR for packaging
Discuss California mapping →
United States — New York Tracked

Climate finance and building decarbonization at scale.

New York's regulatory approach targets the financial sector and the built environment — two areas where sustainability mandates create immediate operational exposure for large enterprises.

  • Climate Leadership and Community Protection Act (CLCPA) — economy-wide emissions reduction targets: 40% by 2030, 85% by 2050
  • Local Law 97 — NYC building emissions limits for structures >25,000 sq ft. Fines live from 2024
  • NY Fashion Act — proposed supply chain due diligence for fashion companies. Environmental and social impact mapping
  • DFS Climate Guidance — NY Department of Financial Services climate risk guidance for insurers and banks
Discuss New York mapping →
India Tracked

BRSR and the emerging sustainability disclosure framework.

India's sustainability regulation is maturing rapidly. SEBI's mandatory disclosure framework applies to the top 1,000 listed companies, with expanding scope to supply chains and smaller entities.

  • BRSR — Business Responsibility and Sustainability Reporting. Mandatory for top 1,000 listed companies by market cap
  • BRSR Core — mandatory assurance framework for ESG disclosures, phased enforcement
  • Extended Producer Responsibility — plastic waste, e-waste, battery waste management rules with producer accountability
  • Green Credit Programme — market-based mechanism for environmental compliance
Discuss India mapping →
Latin America Expanding

Biodiversity, deforestation, and climate regulation emerging across the region.

Latin America's regulatory landscape is driven by its role as a global biodiversity hotspot. Brazil, Colombia, Chile, and Mexico are each developing distinct sustainability frameworks with direct supply chain implications for global enterprises.

  • Brazil — regulated carbon market legislation (December 2024), Amazon deforestation tracking enforcement, CVM sustainability disclosure requirements for public companies
  • Colombia — Green Taxonomy (2022), mandatory climate disclosure for financial sector, carbon tax with offset mechanism
  • Chile — Framework Law on Climate Change (2022), mandatory GHG reporting for large emitters, green bond framework
  • Mexico — General Law on Climate Change, emissions trading system (pilot), sustainable taxonomy in development
Discuss LatAm mapping →
And Expanding Roadmap

The regulatory perimeter expands predictably outward.

From large enterprise to mid-market to supply chain. From the EU to the US to Asia-Pacific to Latin America. Taza's Heatmap scales with this expansion — adding jurisdictions as they formalize sustainability regulation.

  • Australia — mandatory climate disclosure from 2025, ISSB-aligned
  • UK — TCFD-aligned disclosure, Green Taxonomy under development
  • Singapore — SGX mandatory climate reporting, ISSB adoption
  • Japan — ISSB-aligned sustainability standards, GX transition bonds
Discuss additional jurisdictions →
How Obligation Intelligence Works

Compliance mapped. Funding identified.
Gaps connected to action.

Taza's Heatmap doesn't just flag what you need to comply with. It maps what funding you're eligible for and connects every gap to verified providers who can deliver.

Step 01

Map obligations per jurisdiction

Every region analyzed independently. CSRD in France is a different compliance context than BRSR in India or SB 253 in California. The Heatmap resolves this complexity.

Step 02

Identify funding eligibility

Regulations create requirements — but they also unlock funding. RRF, ECF, Green Credit Programmes, and climate bond frameworks are mapped alongside compliance obligations.

Step 03

Connect gaps to execution

Every compliance gap and funding opportunity is decomposed into a scoped project and connected to verified providers from the 100K+ solution index. At the speed of infrastructure, not consulting.

Pricing

Scales with enterprise complexity.

Clarity includes your HQ region. Additional regulatory regions at €5,000 each. 3 EU countries = €15,000. 10 jurisdictions = €50,000. The more jurisdictions you operate in, the more the Heatmap reveals.

Regulations don't wait.
Neither should your intelligence.

Obligation Intelligence per jurisdiction. Every deadline. Every funding window. Every compliance gap connected to action.

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