Running account research — scored against the CBCS Client Rubric. Qualitative, bottom-line-up-front, no overall score. Newest profile on top.
The world's largest label maker — pressure-sensitive & specialty labels, consumer labels (Avery), RFID loss-prevention (Checkpoint), and specialty films (Innovia).
Profiled 2026-06-08 · TSX: CCL.A / CCL.B
HQ Toronto (+ U.S. corporate office in Framingham, MA); ~26,000 employees; 214 plants in 42 countries; C$7.2B revenue (2024, ≈US$5.3B).
Four divisions — CCL (pressure-sensitive & extruded-film label materials), Avery (consumer labels & digital printing), Checkpoint (RF/RFID loss prevention), and Innovia (specialty films); also aluminum specialty containers. Serves food & beverage, healthcare, personal care, apparel, industrial, and automotive.
SBTi-validated: −50% absolute Scope 1&2 by 2030 (2022 baseline); net-zero (−90% all scopes) by 2050. A mature program for the world's largest label maker.
Supplier/customer engagement (75% of suppliers by emissions + 20% of customers by revenue to set SBTs by 2029). Onsite solar (e.g., the Raleigh, NC plant), LED retrofits, a full carbon-disclosure program for North American ops, and annual reports + CDP.
MediumMixed manufacturing load across many U.S. plants — label printing/converting is electricity-led, but film extrusion, coating/curing ovens, and aluminum-container forming carry real process heat.
No clean U.S. Scope 1 disclosed (global firm; emissions are reported company-wide across 42 countries), so no reliable U.S. MMBtu proxy. Gas load is process/curing heat, not the primary energy vector.
Not a buyerNo evidence of carbon-credit purchases — decarbonizes via SBTi reductions, onsite renewables (solar), and efficiency, not offsets.
No offset-procurement or REC-retirement disclosures surfaced; the posture is reductions-first.
MeasuredReports Scope 3 and includes it in an SBTi-validated net-zero (−90% all scopes by 2050) — but the aggressive near-term target is Scope 1&2 only (−50% by 2030).
Low evidenceNo supplier-diversity program found — typical for a Canadian-HQ'd B2B manufacturer.
None on fileNo CCL evidence in local files (PIPELINE.md / Clients/ / NETWORK.md). Cold on access.
Global marketing-data, analytics & consulting firm — brand, consumer/shopper, and media-effectiveness research. Majority-owned by Bain Capital; WPP minority.
Profiled 2026-06-08 · Private (Bain Capital / WPP)
HQ London; founded 1992; ~30,000 employees across 90+ countries; revenue ~$4B. Majority-owned by Bain Capital since 2019 (WPP retains a minority).
Marketing data, analytics, and consulting — brand strategy, consumer & shopper behavior, media effectiveness. Large U.S. operations; in Jan 2025 Kantar Worldpanel combined with Numerator. A services / knowledge-work firm, not a manufacturer.
SBTi-validated net-zero by 2050 — near-term −42% absolute Scope 1&2 by 2030 (2022 baseline) plus an absolute Scope 3 reduction target; Kantar also sells sustainability research itself.
Active supplier engagement (82.2% of suppliers, by purchased-goods emissions, to set science-based targets by 2029), a Supplier Health Scorecard, and a Gold EcoVadis rating (2024).
LowNegligible direct gas — a services/analytics firm whose footprint is offices + supply chain + travel, not process heat. The lowest gas prospect profiled.
No material on-site combustion to size; Scope 1 is essentially office heating. Emissions are dominated by Scope 3 (purchased services + business travel), not natural gas — not a BetterGas fit on load.
Active (travel)A genuine offset buyer — committed (from end-2023) to making all business travel carbon-neutral through reduction and offsetting, i.e., real carbon-credit purchases, not just RECs.
Scoped to travel neutrality rather than a company-wide offset program, but distinct from the certificate-only manufacturers in this set.
MatureSBTi-validated Scope 3 target with active supplier-SBT engagement (82.2% by 2029) and a Supplier Health Scorecard — Scope 3 (supply chain + travel) is the bulk of its footprint and is actively managed.
Low evidenceNo dedicated minority-owned supplier-diversity program found; the procurement lens is sustainability and ethics (a Sustainable Procurement Framework), not diversity.
None on fileNo Kantar evidence in local files (PIPELINE.md / Clients/ / NETWORK.md). Cold on access.
Rigid plastic packaging maker — the Custom Containers division of Silgan Holdings (NYSE: SLGN). Bottles, jars, tubes, containers, and closures.
Profiled 2026-06-08 · Division of Silgan Holdings (NYSE: SLGN)
HQ Chesterfield, MO; ~1,400 division employees; 20 North American plants. Part of Silgan Holdings (NYSE: SLGN, ~$5.9B revenue, ~16,000 employees).
1,200+ bottles, jars, tubes, containers, and closures for food, healthcare, personal-care, household, and industrial markets. Parent also runs Metal Containers and Dispensing & Specialty Closures — ESG is reported at the Silgan Holdings level.
Intensity targets — cut operational carbon-footprint intensity 50% by 2030 (2017 baseline) and reach 50% renewable electricity by 2030 — not an absolute-emissions cap.
Progress is real: market-based Scope 1&2 down 42.5% vs. 2016 (grid decarbonization + efficiency + renewables), Scope 3 down 12.7%, total energy down 15%. Heavy use of post-consumer recycled (PCR) resin.
MediumReal manufacturing footprint (20 NA plants), but plastic molding is electricity-dominated — Silgan's own decarbonization centers on electricity, so gas is the secondary energy vector.
No clean division-level Scope 1 disclosed (ESG reported at the Silgan Holdings level across metal + closures + plastics), so no reliable MMBtu proxy for the Plastics business. Gas load is process/space heat + resin drying, not the primary draw.
Certificate-activeNot a carbon-credit buyer — retired ~76,789 RECs in 2024 (Silgan Closures targets 75% clean-energy-credit coverage), but those are electricity certificates, not voluntary carbon credits.
Decarbonization is renewables + efficiency + community wind/solar investment — no offset-procurement evidence.
MeasuredReports Scope 1/2/3 and tracks reductions (Scope 3 −12.7% since 2016, mostly purchased goods) — but targets are intensity-based, not an SBTi-validated absolute pathway.
Low evidenceNo supplier-diversity program surfaced — consistent with a B2B packaging manufacturer.
None on fileNo Silgan evidence in local files (PIPELINE.md / Clients/ / NETWORK.md). Cold on access.
Privately held custom compounder of plastics & rubber — vinyl, TPE, nylon, colorants, specialty chemicals, and garden hose. Founded 1924.
Profiled 2026-06-08 · Private (est. 1924)
HQ Pawtucket, RI; private (founded 1924); ~3,000 employees; ~$0.75–1.1B revenue (estimates vary); 13 plants worldwide.
Custom polymer compounder across six divisions (Vinyl, TPE, Nylon, Colorants, Chemicals, Garden Hose). 10 U.S. manufacturing sites: CA, GA, KY, MA, NC, RI, SC, TN, TX, VT (plus Belgium, Germany, China, Singapore).
Energy-intensity goal — cut normalized energy use a further 10% by 2030 — aimed at on-site fuel combustion + electricity, not an absolute GHG target.
For a private compounder, relatively engaged: publishes annual sustainability reports, holds ISCC PLUS mass-balance certification (Sarlink TPV / Monprene TPE), is a Vantage Vinyl member, runs on-site solar, and a "1 Million kWh" efficiency challenge.
Med–High*Real process-heat load — polymer compounding (mixing, extrusion, drying) across 10 U.S. plants — and they explicitly target on-site fuel-combustion emissions. *Unquantified: private, no disclosed Scope 1.
No public emissions figure to anchor an MMBtu proxy (private; energy-intensity target only). This is the strongest direct-combustion / BetterGas operational fit of the four profiled, but sizing the load needs discovery.
RECs onlyNot a carbon-credit buyer — two larger plants buy RECs to offset 10% of purchased electricity, which are certificates, not voluntary carbon credits.
Decarbonization is efficiency + on-site solar + ISCC PLUS circular/bio feedstock (product-level mass balance) — no offset-procurement evidence.
Not addressedScope 3 is not addressed publicly; the carbon commitment covers only Scope 1 (combustion) + Scope 2 (electricity), and no emissions figures are disclosed.
Low evidenceNo supplier-diversity program found — typical for a privately held mid-cap manufacturer.
None on fileNo Teknor Apex evidence in local files (PIPELINE.md / Clients/ / NETWORK.md). Cold on access.
Global leader in flavor — spices, seasonings, condiments, and flavor solutions (McCormick, French's, Frank's RedHot, Cholula, Old Bay, Lawry's, Zatarain's).
Profiled 2026-06-08 · NYSE: MKC
HQ Hunt Valley, MD; ~14,000 employees; ~$6.7B revenue; two segments (Consumer, Flavor Solutions).
The world's flavor leader. U.S. manufacturing & distribution at Hunt Valley (MD) and Dallas (TX) plus consolidated North American facilities; brands include French's, Frank's RedHot, Cholula, Old Bay, Lawry's, and Zatarain's.
SBTi-validated 42% absolute cut across Scopes 1/2/3 by 2030 (FY2020 baseline); net-zero by 2050 — and hit its 2025 Scope 1&2 goal four years early.
The most mature ESG program of the three profiled: regenerative agriculture across the U.S. supply chain (with PepsiCo + Soil & Water Outcomes Fund), solar procurement (Big Star → 100% renewable Dallas plant), and green gas at EMEA sites.
Low–MedReal food-processing thermal load across U.S. plants, but disclosed Scope 1 is small and partly greened — a modest direct gas consumer.
Upper-bound proxy: 2023 Scope 1 ≈ 34.6K tCO₂e (under 1% of footprint) → ~1,800 MMBtu/day at 53.06 kg/MMBtu. Far lighter than an industrial processor; renewable + green-gas procurement suppresses it further.
Certificate-activeNot a meaningful voluntary-credit buyer — uses RECs / green electricity & green gas, and reserves nature-based offsets only for residual emissions per SBTi.
Decarbonization is reductions-first: efficiency, renewables, and regenerative-agriculture insetting within its own (Scope 3) supply chain — not offset procurement.
MatureReports Scope 3 with an SBTi-validated 42%-by-2030 target — and Scope 3 is ~97.6% of its footprint (agriculture + packaging).
Packaging alone is ≥8% of Scope 3. This is where the company's real climate exposure — and effort — sits.
Softened (2025)Historically a strong, award-winning diverse-supplier program — but the public page is now "Supplier Development," with the explicit minority/women/veteran/LGBTQ criteria removed.
A DiversityInc Top 50 honoree historically. A Tier 2 spend-reporting path and SupplierIO registration remain, but the explicit diverse-supplier framing has been dropped from public-facing content — verify directly before leaning on it.
None on fileNo McCormick evidence in local files (PIPELINE.md / Clients/ / NETWORK.md). Cold on access.
Global specialty-materials & chemicals maker; operates one of North America's largest integrated manufacturing complexes at Kingsport, TN.
Profiled 2026-06-08 · NYSE: EMN
HQ Kingsport, TN; ~14,000 employees; ~$9.4B revenue; 36 manufacturing sites worldwide.
The Kingsport complex is the energy/load anchor — one of the largest integrated chemical sites in North America. Specialty plastics, additives, fibers, and coatings serving 100+ countries.
30% absolute Scope 1&2 cut by 2035 (2017 baseline); net-zero operations by 2050 — pursued via reductions, not offsets.
Levers: energy efficiency, renewable energy, process transformation (molecular recycling), and breakthrough tech (carbon capture, thermal batteries). Runs the world's largest polyester molecular-recycling plant (2024); reports to GRI/SASB/TCFD.
HighTop-tier industrial combustion load — the strongest gas prospect profiled. Kingsport runs ~50% coal / 50% natural gas after boiler conversions.
Upper-bound proxy: 2023 Scope 1 = 6.58M tCO₂e → ~340,000 MMBtu/day at 53.06 kg/MMBtu. Includes coal + process emissions, so gas-specific is a large fraction (not all) of this — still a very large pipeline-gas consumer.
Not a buyerNo evidence Eastman buys carbon credits — it decarbonizes operationally rather than via offsets.
Strategy centers on efficiency, fuel-switching, circular/molecular recycling, and mass-balance accounting (ISCC) — not offset procurement.
EarlyReports Scope 1&2 but has no Scope 3 target — still in assessment (cross-functional steering team building the footprint).
Less mature on Scope 3 than peers, though GRI/SASB/TCFD-aligned overall.
Low evidenceNo dedicated minority/women/veteran supplier-diversity program found — their procurement door is sustainability, not diversity.
Selects suppliers on quality + sustainability; member of Together for Sustainability and uses EcoVadis assessments. Has employee inclusion & diversity reporting, but not a diverse-supplier procurement program.
None on fileNo Eastman evidence in local files (PIPELINE.md / Clients/ / NETWORK.md). Cold on access.
Diversified global family entertainment & media — theme parks, resorts & cruise line, studios, streaming (Disney+), and ESPN/ABC.
Profiled 2026-06-08 · NYSE: DIS
HQ Burbank, CA; ~233,000 employees; ~$91B revenue (FY24); three segments (Entertainment, Sports, Experiences).
Largest U.S. load centers: Walt Disney World (FL, ~25K acres), Disneyland (Anaheim), studios/corporate (Burbank), ESPN (Bristol, CT), Disney Cruise Line (Port Canaveral).
Net-zero Scope 1&2 by 2030 (46.2% interim cut vs. 2019) — currently lagging.
Scope 3 target of −27.5% by 2030. Discloses via CDP + TCFD. Long conservation legacy ($132M+ since 1995).
Medium–HighReal park/resort thermal load, but the headline Scope 1 is inflated by cruise-ship marine fuel + fleet, not pipeline gas.
Upper-bound proxy: 2024 Scope 1 ≈ 921K tCO₂e → ~47,600 MMBtu/day at 53.06 kg/MMBtu — overstates pipeline gas (includes marine fuel + fleet); true stationary-gas figure is a fraction.
Active buyerDeliberate voluntary-market buyer funded by a double-digit internal carbon price; forestry/REDD+ focus.
Seeded Alto Mayo REDD+ (Peru), 8.4M+ tonnes since 2008. Caveat: some of its rainforest REDD credits flagged as low-integrity in press — relevant to credit-quality positioning.
MeasuredReports 8 of 15 categories with a 2030 target — but Scope 3 is rising (2023 > 2019 baseline), so off-track.
Discontinued (2025)Was a strong fit, but Disney ended its supplier-diversity program in 2025 — the formal door-opener is gone.
Historically NMSDC/WBENC/NGLCC/DisabilityIN-certified with an "NMSDC Corporation of the Year" award; the dedicated page now redirects to corporate. Don't lead a pitch with it.
None on fileNo relationship or access evidence in local files (PIPELINE.md / Clients/ / NETWORK.md). Cold.