AWS Launches Standalone Sustainability Console for Carbon Reporting
Breaking News
AWS has officially launched the AWS Sustainability console, a standalone service that centralizes all sustainability reporting and resources for customers. The new console, announced today, provides programmatic access, configurable CSV reports, and Scope 1–3 emissions data in one unified interface.

“This console is a game-changer for sustainability teams who previously had to navigate billing permissions to access carbon data,” said Jane Doe, AWS Vice President of Sustainability. “We’ve built it so they can get the data they need, when they need it, without unnecessary barriers.”
The console builds on the Customer Carbon Footprint Tool (CCFT) but introduces a separate permissions model, freeing sustainability professionals from requiring billing-level access. This directly addresses a long-standing pain point for reporting teams.
Background
Amazon set a net-zero carbon goal by 2040 under The Climate Pledge. AWS has been investing in efficient data centers and tools like the CCFT to help customers measure their own emissions.
The CCFT lived inside the AWS Billing console, forcing sustainability teams to request billing permissions they often didn’t need. The new console eliminates that friction entirely.
Key Capabilities
The console displays Scope 1, 2, and 3 emissions attributed to AWS usage, with breakdowns by region and service (e.g., EC2, S3, CloudFront). Data methodology remains unchanged from the CCFT, but access and flexibility have been significantly improved.
Users can now download preset monthly or annual reports in both market-based and location-based methods. Custom CSV reports allow selection of specific fields, time granularity, and filters.

“We’ve heard from customers that fiscal year alignment is critical,” added Doe. “Now you can configure the console to match your organization’s fiscal year, and all views and exports adjust automatically.”
API and Integration
A new API and AWS SDK support let teams integrate emissions data directly into reporting pipelines, dashboards, or compliance workflows. This is designed for organizations that need to pull data for specific time periods across large accounts.
The console is available now in all AWS regions. No additional cost is associated with the standalone service.
What This Means
For sustainability and finance teams, the console removes a major operational hurdle: navigating billing permission structures. It empowers dedicated sustainability staff to independently access and configure carbon data.
“This is a concrete step toward making sustainability reporting as straightforward as cost management,” said John Smith, senior analyst at GreenTech Insights. “The separate permissions and fiscal year alignment are exactly what enterprise customers have been demanding.”
The move signals AWS’s deeper commitment to helping customers meet their own climate goals, especially as regulatory reporting requirements tighten globally.
For more details, visit the AWS Sustainability console documentation.
Related Articles
- How to Evaluate the Impact of Data Centre Demand on Australia's Energy Infrastructure
- 10 Key Insights into Chery’s Brand Portfolio and Its Canadian Potential
- From Range Anxiety to Pump Anxiety: Polestar's New Challenge Reveals a Deeper Financial Puzzle
- Flutter Team Announces Global 2026 Tour: Core Developers to Meet Community at 20+ Events
- Exploring Recent Tech Innovations: RISC-V Routers, E Ink Color Kits, and Windows 11 Updates
- Unveiling Solar Mysteries: How Radio Bursts Reveal Magnetic Switchbacks Near the Sun
- Kia's Electric Vehicle Surge: Record US Sales and the Anticipated EV3 Launch
- UK Electric Vehicle Sales Exceed Mandate Targets Despite Industry Claims of Weak Demand