Digital traceability & emissions push

Published by The Daily Scout

What happened

Latin America is moving fast on emissions reporting and digital traceability for supply chains — regulatory and customer pressure are driving investments that will soon ripple into Caribbean operations tied to U.S./UK owners. Traceability tech is becoming a compliance as well as cost‑optimization play. (rhenus.group)

Why it matters

Brazil’s securities regulator has moved to align listed companies with the ISSB’s IFRS S1 and S2 sustainability standards, with CVM measures formalizing voluntary adoption now and mandatory disclosures scheduled from January 1, 2026. (gov.br) Mexico’s securities rules likewise require IFRS S1/S2-aligned reporting for issuers, with first reports covering 2025 data due in 2026, bringing Scope 1–3 greenhouse‑gas metrics into statutory filings for many large firms. (fisherphillips.com) Colombia’s legislature voted to require mandatory digital traceability in the national cattle sector on March 26, 2026, creating a legal basis to link beef supply chains to deforestation‑risk monitoring. (eia.org) The EU Deforestation Regulation (EUDR) and parallel UK Forest Risk Commodity proposals force due‑diligence and geolocation/origin documentation for cattle, cocoa, coffee, palm oil, rubber, soya and wood, with EUDR market obligations phased in from late 2024/2025. (debevoise.com) The U.S. Food Traceability Rule (FSMA 204) requires additional records and Key Data Elements for foods on the FDA Food Traceability List, with traceability data expected to be produced within 24 hours on request, and major buyers such as Walmart now require ASNs and SSCC‑18 pallet labeling tied to KDEs. (fda.gov) Regional vendors and consultancies report rising projects to meet these rules: Colombia‑ and Latin‑America focused providers such as KOLTIVA and ENSESO4Food are marketing traceability and EUDR/FSMA‑204 readiness services to exporters and aggregators. (londondaily.news) The Caribbean imports roughly US$6 billion of food annually while Latin America and the Caribbean lag peer regions on logistics performance, creating a practical imperative for centralized distribution hubs serving resort groups to embed digital traceability and emissions data flows to meet buyer and regulator deadlines. (portsidecaribbean.com)

Key numbers

  • (rhenus.group) Brazil’s securities regulator has moved to align listed companies with the ISSB’s IFRS S1 and S2 sustainability standards, with CVM measures formalizing voluntary adoption now and mandatory disclosures scheduled from January 1, 2026.
  • (gov.br) Mexico’s securities rules likewise require IFRS S1/S2-aligned reporting for issuers, with first reports covering 2025 data due in 2026, bringing Scope 1–3 greenhouse‑gas metrics into statutory filings for many large firms.
  • (fisherphillips.com) Colombia’s legislature voted to require mandatory digital traceability in the national cattle sector on March 26, 2026, creating a legal basis to link beef supply chains to deforestation‑risk monitoring.
  • (fda.gov) Regional vendors and consultancies report rising projects to meet these rules: Colombia‑ and Latin‑America focused providers such as KOLTIVA and ENSESO4Food are marketing traceability and EUDR/FSMA‑204 readiness services to exporters and aggregators.

What happens next

  • Brazil’s securities regulator has moved to align listed companies with the ISSB’s IFRS S1 and S2 sustainability standards, with CVM measures formalizing voluntary adoption now and mandatory disclosures scheduled from January 1, 2026.
  • (portsidecaribbean.com) Latin America is moving fast on emissions reporting and digital traceability for supply chains — regulatory and customer pressure are driving investments that will soon ripple into Caribbean operations tied to U.S./UK owners.

Quick answers

What happened in Digital traceability & emissions push?

Latin America is moving fast on emissions reporting and digital traceability for supply chains — regulatory and customer pressure are driving investments that will soon ripple into Caribbean operations tied to U.S./UK owners. Traceability tech is becoming a compliance as well as cost‑optimization play. (rhenus.group)

Why does Digital traceability & emissions push matter?

Brazil’s securities regulator has moved to align listed companies with the ISSB’s IFRS S1 and S2 sustainability standards, with CVM measures formalizing voluntary adoption now and mandatory disclosures scheduled from January 1, 2026. (gov.br) Mexico’s securities rules likewise require IFRS S1/S2-aligned reporting for issuers, with first reports covering 2025 data due in 2026, bringing Scope 1–3 greenhouse‑gas metrics into statutory filings for many large firms. (fisherphillips.com) Colombia’s legislature voted to require mandatory digital traceability in the national cattle sector on March 26, 2026, creating a legal basis to link beef supply chains to deforestation‑risk monitoring. (eia.org) The EU Deforestation Regulation (EUDR) and parallel UK Forest Risk Commodity proposals force due‑diligence and geolocation/origin documentation for cattle, cocoa, coffee, palm oil, rubber, soya and wood, with EUDR market obligations phased in from late 2024/2025. (debevoise.com) The U.S. Food Traceability Rule (FSMA 204) requires additional records and Key Data Elements for foods on the FDA Food Traceability List, with traceability data expected to be produced within 24 hours on request, and major buyers such as Walmart now require ASNs and SSCC‑18 pallet labeling tied to KDEs. (fda.gov) Regional vendors and consultancies report rising projects to meet these rules: Colombia‑ and Latin‑America focused providers such as KOLTIVA and ENSESO4Food are marketing traceability and EUDR/FSMA‑204 readiness services to exporters and aggregators. (londondaily.news) The Caribbean imports roughly US$6 billion of food annually while Latin America and the Caribbean lag peer regions on logistics performance, creating a practical imperative for centralized distribution hubs serving resort groups to embed digital traceability and emissions data flows to meet buyer and regulator deadlines. (portsidecaribbean.com)

Get your own daily briefing

Scout delivers personalized news, insights, and conversations tailored to your role and industry.

Download on the App Store

Published by The Daily Scout - Be the smartest in the room.