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ESG, Sustainability and the Supply Chain: Why Data is the Deciding Factor

Mark Lumsdon-Taylor · Posted on: February 18th 2026 · read

The Future of Food series: Risk, Resilience and the Path to Sustainable Value Chains

Supply chains were front and centre at the 2026 Sustainable Foods conference, where leaders across the food sector acknowledged a shared reality: sustainable transformation will only move as quickly as supply chains allow. As companies face European regulatory expectations and the growing pressure of Scope 3 emissions reporting, supply chain transparency has become both the biggest challenge and the biggest opportunity. 

Participants emphasised that “supply businesses also have to get it right” if the sector is to meet ESG goals. While leading brands are making bold sustainability commitments, suppliers - particularly agricultural producers - carry much of the responsibility for delivering measurable change. However, the complexity of agricultural baselining, diverse production methods and regional variations make consistent reporting difficult. 

"When I asked a room full of companies that fell under Scope 3 reporting requirements not a single one of them raised their hands when asked if they felt fully confident in their data. This highlights the difficulties food businesses face when they are measuring their sustainability efforts."

Mark J Lumsdon-Taylor, Executive Development & Sustainability Lead

The question stands: When is the data good enough?

The consensus is aligned with our recommendations; organisations cannot wait for perfect data before acting. They must establish policies and processes that allow for continuous improvement. Once internal policies and measurement frameworks are in place, companies reported that preparation becomes significantly more manageable.

 

The Affect on Suppliers

Supplier comparison will be inevitable. As corporate policies get stricter, and more accurate emissions and sustainability metrics become available, procurement decisions will increasingly be influenced by performance. If Supplier A has significantly higher emissions than Supplier B, commercial conversations will follow. This represents a major strategic shift: environmental performance is no longer a parallel consideration; it is becoming a strategic advantage. 

In the food sector’s journey toward sustainability, supply chains are no longer behind the scenes. They are the focal point. For businesses across the sector, now is the time to prioritise data, invest in supplier engagement and education, and prepare for a future where sustainability performance defines market position.