NEMS As

NEMS As NEMS an environmental management software company. That aims to be one step ahead of a changing world. NEMS - Compliant by Nature

We used to build every client report from scratch. It took us years to realize that was the problem.For a long time, cus...
29/05/2026

We used to build every client report from scratch. It took us years to realize that was the problem.

For a long time, custom meant quality. A client needed environmental compliance reporting? We built it from zero. Bespoke data models, bespoke outputs, bespoke everything.

And it worked. Until it didn't scale.

Every new operator meant starting over. Every regulatory update meant touching dozens of unique configurations. Our team spent more time rebuilding than improving.

So we made a difficult call. We stopped building from scratch.

Instead, we invested in a configurable baseline. A standardized platform that could be tailored to each operator's needs without reinventing the architecture every time.

That shift changed everything about how we deliver 📊

Today, operators get production-ready environmental reporting from day one. Not month three. Not after six rounds of custom development. Day one.

We've onboarded 50+ operators on this model. Same configurable core. Each one adapted to their specific regulatory requirements, site structures, and reporting obligations.

The old approach felt like craftsmanship. The new approach actually is. Because now our engineers spend their time making the platform smarter for everyone, not duplicating effort for one.

Nearly 40 years in environmental software taught us something counterintuitive: the best way to serve each client individually is to stop treating every project like it's never been done before.

Most teams say their data is traceable. They mean they saved the spreadsheet.In environmental reporting, "traceable" has...
27/05/2026

Most teams say their data is traceable. They mean they saved the spreadsheet.

In environmental reporting, "traceable" has become one of those comfort words. It sounds rigorous. It checks a box. But when a CSRD or ISO 14001 auditor asks you to walk a single number back to its source measurement, timestamp, and calculation method, a saved file isn't enough.

Traceability isn't a quality claim. It's an operational requirement.

Every reported figure needs a clear path back to where it came from, how it was calculated, and when it was recorded. That's the difference between data you can defend and data you hope nobody questions.

We built NEMS Panorama around this principle. Our reporting systems are designed to be accurate, traceable, and scalable, so that when the auditor arrives, you're not reconstructing a paper trail. You're opening a door to one that already exists.

If your traceability stops at "we kept the file," it's time to raise the bar.

The most data-disciplined teams in oil and gas aren't in finance. They're in chemical management.Offshore chemical track...
25/05/2026

The most data-disciplined teams in oil and gas aren't in finance. They're in chemical management.

Offshore chemical tracking demands full traceability, from substance registration to discharge. Every data point classified, every movement logged, every report auditable. That same rigor is exactly what most ESG reporting workflows are missing.

We broke down three data hygiene principles borrowed directly from chemical management. Swipe through and see what your reporting process might be overlooking.

A pattern we see again and again: operators come to us ready to build out their Scope 3 inventory. Value chain emissions...
22/05/2026

A pattern we see again and again: operators come to us ready to build out their Scope 3 inventory. Value chain emissions, supplier frameworks, category-level estimates. The full picture.

Then we look at their Scope 1 data.

Manual calculations passed between spreadsheets. Emission factors that differ across assets with no documented reason why. Quarterly reconciliation processes that even the people running them describe as "best guesses." The direct operational emissions they fully control are held together by workarounds that nobody has had time to fix.

We understand the pull toward Scope 3. It is where CSRD and ISSB frameworks are pointing. It is what investors ask about first. It is what makes a net zero strategy feel complete.

But every Scope 3 estimate is built on top of Scope 1 and 2 foundations. Gaps in your direct emissions data do not stay contained. They flow downstream into every category, every supplier calculation, every aggregated number in the final report. Uncertainty does not shrink as you move outward. It compounds.

When operators go back and rebuild the foundation first, something shifts. Automated collection, consistent calculation methods, traceable audit trails across every asset. The Scope 3 work that follows stops being decorative and starts being defensible.

The most visible part of your emissions profile is only as trustworthy as the least visible part of your data chain.

"Any ESG tool can handle oil and gas compliance." Most environmental managers believe this when they start evaluating so...
20/05/2026

"Any ESG tool can handle oil and gas compliance." Most environmental managers believe this when they start evaluating software. We stopped believing it a long time ago.

Generic ESG platforms were built for corporate sustainability reporting. Oil and gas environmental compliance is a different discipline entirely. Permit-level discharge tracking, chemical inventory management, authority data exchange formats. These aren't edge cases. They're the core of the job.

We've onboarded over 50 oil and gas operators globally. The pattern is consistent. Teams arrive after months or years on a generic platform, confident their reporting is solid. Then we map their actual regulatory obligations against what their tool was capturing. Every single migration has uncovered compliance gaps the previous system never flagged.

The gaps aren't dramatic. They're invisible. A discharge permit threshold that wasn't tracked at the right granularity. A chemical category that didn't exist in the system's taxonomy. An authority reporting format that required manual workarounds nobody documented.

Generic ESG tools do many things well. Oil and gas environmental compliance just isn't one of them. The architecture has to be built for it from the ground up, or it quietly falls short.

We've onboarded over 50 oil and gas operators onto environmental accounting systems. The ones who struggle most don't ha...
18/05/2026

We've onboarded over 50 oil and gas operators onto environmental accounting systems. The ones who struggle most don't have a data problem. They have a single-person dependency problem.

It shows up the same way almost every time.

One person owns the reporting. They know where the data lives, how the calculations work, which regulators want what format. The spreadsheets make sense to them. The workflows live in their head.

Then they leave. Or they're on holiday during a reporting deadline. Or they get pulled onto another project.

And suddenly, compliance doesn't just slow down. It stops.

We've seen this pattern across operators of every size. The risk isn't bad source data or outdated software. The risk is institutional knowledge sitting inside one person's brain with no system to catch it when they walk out the door.

Environmental reporting needs to be built like infrastructure, not like a personal filing cabinet. That means structured workflows, documented logic, and software that makes the process legible to more than one pair of eyes.

After close to 300 years of collective team experience in oil and gas, this is the single biggest compliance vulnerability we keep finding. Not technology gaps. Not regulatory confusion.

People-architecture gaps.

If your environmental reporting depends on one person being available, that's not a process. That's a liability.

Last quarter, an operator sent us their CSRD-ready ESG report. Fourteen data sources, three frameworks, zero traceabilit...
15/05/2026

Last quarter, an operator sent us their CSRD-ready ESG report. Fourteen data sources, three frameworks, zero traceability between them.

The numbers looked fine. The problem was nobody could explain how those numbers moved from one system to the next.

Most companies still treat CSRD as a reporting exercise. It's a data architecture problem.

CSRD doesn't just ask what you emitted. It asks you to prove the chain of custody from measurement to disclosure. That proof lives in the handoffs between systems.

Your PDMS feeding your environmental accounting. Your IoT sensors feeding your emission inventories. Your Scope 1 numbers rolling into your Scope 3 estimates.

Every one of those handoffs is a potential audit failure.

When CSRD auditors arrive, they won't ask for your final number first. They'll trace a single data point backward through every system it touched. If that trail includes a manual copy-paste step, a reformatted Excel column, or an email attachment from six months ago, you have a gap.

We built NEMS Accounter to automate those handoffs. We watched operators lose weeks reconciling spreadsheets that should have talked to each other from the start. Automated data exchange between systems isn't a nice-to-have anymore. It's the foundation of audit-readiness.

The companies preparing well right now aren't polishing dashboards. They're mapping every data handoff in their reporting chain and asking one question: can I defend this connection under audit?

That's the unglamorous work. That's also the work that separates compliant organizations from ones scrambling in Q4 📊

Every barrel tells a story. Most operators lose the plot somewhere between the third spreadsheet and the fifth revision....
13/05/2026

Every barrel tells a story. Most operators lose the plot somewhere between the third spreadsheet and the fifth revision.

Chemical data is one of the heaviest invisible loads in offshore operations. Thousands of substances tracked across dozens of sites, each with its own hazard profile, regulatory requirement, and reporting deadline. It accumulates quietly until someone asks for a complete picture, and nobody can produce one.

The weight isn't in the chemicals themselves. It's in the chaos of managing them across disconnected systems, outdated logs, and manual reconciliation processes that eat hours every week.

NEMS Chemicals was built to sort that weight into structure.

It's a dedicated chemical data management solution designed for oil and gas operators handling complex substance inventories across their operations. Every vessel, every substance, every record organized into compliance-ready format before the regulator comes knocking.

Think of it as moving from a warehouse of unlabeled containers to a shelf where every item has a name, a place, and a purpose.

When your chemical data is structured, reporting stops being a fire drill. It becomes routine. And routine is where operational confidence lives.

A Reuters Insights survey of 659 sustainability and business leaders found that 63% still store their sustainability dat...
12/05/2026

A Reuters Insights survey of 659 sustainability and business leaders found that 63% still store their sustainability data primarily in spreadsheets or manual systems.

With CSRD requirements tightening across Europe, that number should concern every compliance team, not just in oil and gas, but across energy, fish farming, construction, manufacturing, and process industries.

The data quality problem runs deeper than most realize. 48% of respondents named the quality of collected data as their single biggest concern. Not access to data. Not reporting deadlines. The reliability of what they're actually collecting.

Spreadsheets weren't built for audit-grade environmental reporting. Every manual entry, every copy-paste between tabs, every formula referencing last quarter's version introduces risk. Across dozens of emission sources, production sites, or facility types, those risks compound fast, regardless of your industry.

This is where AI changes the equation. Before any analyst writes a single sentence, NEMS Panorama runs AI-driven analysis across your full dataset. It surfaces trends, flags anomalies, and ranks emission sources and abatement opportunities by potential impact. The starting point for your report becomes data-driven priorities, not last year's template and a set of assumptions.

That matters because the gap between where CSRD regulations are heading and where most organizations actually operate is widening. Ambition statements say net zero. Operational reality says version-control issues and broken cell references.

We built NEMS Panorama to close that gap for any industry facing structured environmental reporting requirements. Whether you operate offshore platforms, fish farms, construction projects, or manufacturing facilities, the platform consolidates data from internal systems and external Scope 3 suppliers, applies AI insights across the full picture, and produces reusable panorama reports grounded in what the data actually shows.

Our advisory team works alongside the platform to help you identify where your current process is most exposed and where AI-driven insights can replace manual guesswork.

If your sustainability reporting still depends on spreadsheets, the risk isn't just inefficiency. It's regulatory exposure. Reach out to learn how NEMS Panorama can help.

A pattern we keep running into: operators come to us asking for help with compliance reporting.Deadlines are looming, re...
11/05/2026

A pattern we keep running into: operators come to us asking for help with compliance reporting.

Deadlines are looming, regulators are asking questions, and the team is scrambling to pull numbers together. The assumption is almost always the same. The report is the problem. If we can just get the formatting right, the calculations tighter, the submission on time, everything will be fine.

But when we start looking at the actual data flow, the report is rarely where things break down. The real bottleneck is upstream. Emissions data living in six different systems, three spreadsheets, and someone's inbox. Inconsistently tagged. Impossible to audit without manual reconstruction. The compliance report is just where the pain becomes visible.

We have seen this across small single-asset operators and large multi-field portfolios. The request sounds like a reporting problem. The finding is almost always a data architecture problem. The infrastructure was never designed for the reporting obligations that exist today.

When operators stop treating compliance as a reporting task and start treating it as a data architecture challenge, something shifts. Reports get faster to produce. The numbers hold up under scrutiny. And the next cycle does not start from scratch.

With CSRD obligations tightening and Q2 submissions approaching, compliance deadlines will keep coming. The question is whether you rebuild the report every cycle, or fix what feeds it.

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