Sustainability in the supply chain is no longer just reporting.
We’ll be there to talk about what’s next.
Greenplaces is joining CSCMP and Streamline to speak about how sustainability data is moving from compliance overhead into a genuine driver of supply chain performance.
We’ll be at CSCMP’s National Supply Chain Day to show you what’s possible.
Dates
Tuesday, April 29, 2026 · 5:00 PM ET
Location
LauderAle Brewery · Fort Lauderdale, FL
Conference
Conference site ↗
Why we’re there
Brews & Banter: where supply chain strategy meets real-world impact
The CSCMP South Florida Roundtable’s National Supply Chain Day social is built for people who are actually in the trenches: a high-energy evening of insights, conversation, and connection, not a sit-and-listen conference. This year’s theme is The Inventory Tax: Turning Supply Chain Waste into Competitive Moat, an honest look at how excess stock, missed forecasts, and reactive planning quietly drain margins, and how AI-driven demand planning and operational discipline are helping companies flip that equation.
Greenplaces is on the panel discussing where sustainability fits into that operational story. Specifically, how accurate emissions data and Scope 3 visibility are becoming inputs to smarter supply chain decisions, not just outputs for an annual report.
Panel discussion
Greenplaces joins fellow panelists to discuss Scope 3 visibility, ESG reporting frameworks, regulatory pressure, and how sustainability data is moving from annual compliance exercise to real-time operational input.
Open networking
Plenty of unstructured time to connect with supply chain leaders in a setting that actually makes real conversations happen. LauderAle’s industrial space is built for it.
The panel
From fragmented tracking to integrated strategy: sustainability as a supply chain operating principle
Sustainability in the supply chain has moved beyond reporting — it now demands real operational change, grounded in accurate data and actionable insights. The panel explores how organizations are evolving from disconnected emissions tracking to fully integrated strategies that connect measurement, compliance, and performance optimization across the value chain.
From compliance to competitive advantage
How leading organizations are moving past annual emissions reporting and embedding sustainability data into day-to-day supply chain decisions — turning a compliance obligation into a genuine source of operational performance insight.
Scope 3 visibility across the supply chain
For most organizations, Scope 3 emissions — embedded in raw materials, logistics, and supplier operations — represent the largest and least-measured share of their carbon footprint. We’ll discuss how companies are building the data infrastructure to make those emissions visible, trackable, and actionable across complex supplier networks.
AI, inventory optimization, and the sustainability connection
AI-driven planning and inventory optimization aren’t just margin plays — they’re also sustainability levers. Reducing excess stock, tightening forecast accuracy, and eliminating distribution waste all have material emissions implications. Smarter operational decisions and smarter sustainability decisions are increasingly the same decision.
Regulatory pressure and where it’s heading
ESG reporting requirements are accelerating — and supply chains are increasingly in scope. From enterprise RFP requirements and EcoVadis assessments to emerging Scope 3 disclosure mandates, we’ll cover what supply chain leaders need to know about the regulatory landscape and how to get ahead of requirements that are still gaining momentum.
Find us at the event
Come say hello, or schedule time before you arrive
Greenplaces will be at LauderAle for the full evening. If you want to connect on supply chain sustainability, Scope 3 measurement, or just where to start, find Emily at the event or reach out ahead of time.
Go deeper
Supply chain sustainability is a data problem. Here’s how Greenplaces solves it.
Scope 3 emissions are the hardest part of supply chain sustainability — dispersed across suppliers, logistics partners, and upstream material flows that no single team fully controls. Greenplaces gives supply chain and manufacturing organizations the carbon accounting infrastructure to measure what matters, respond to customer and regulatory demands, and use emissions data to make better operational decisions.