A new AI-powered intelligent sustainability management system (ISMS) has been launched at the COP26 climate change summit, currently underway in Glasgow, Scotland.

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The system is the creation of satellite and AI-powered operations, maintenance and sustainability platform provider, AiDash. The company hopes to play a supporting role in helping global organisations meet their eco goals, including the 10 percent biodiversity net gain by 2030.

The new ISMS SaaS platform can enable customers like UK’s National Grid to meet the biodiversity net gain standards (BNG) and increase cost savings and other efficiencies by eliminating frequent land surveys that are currently performed manually.

Organizations with large landholdings, such as National Grid and other utilities, energy, water and wastewater companies, face the challenge of using traditional on-the-ground surveying methods to accurately map the land type and understand and measure the biodiversity level of each habitat.

The cost and process complexities of using these methods can often hinder the implementation of natural capital enhancement plans for progressive, environmentally conscious organisations.

The UK’s Environment Bill legislating the BNG, when approved, would further strengthen the planning powers in Britain mandating at least the 10 percent net gain in biodiversity for all new developments and raise the imperative of land sustainability across many sectors.

In a recent survey by SAP and Oxford Economics, 50 percent of utility and energy executives said increased process complexity is a hindrance to meeting sustainability goals.

Abhishek Singh, Co-founder and CEO of AiDash, said:

“Sustainably responsible organisations are struggling to find integrated operations platforms that can help them stay on top of their goals and meet the regulations within their sectors.

“Existing tools and techniques lack the ability to analyse historical data and make data-driven environmental improvements. Our new platform allows organisations to achieve resource efficiency and implement individual Sustainable Development Goals (SDG). Any organisation and/or government body with large land or water assets can benefit from ISMS.”

The ISMS ‘Land’ module would help customers reduce laborious fieldwork through the AI backed image analysis for systematic mapping, planning and assessing land enhancements, and quantify biodiversity to plan sustainable land development and restoration initiatives based on the environmental value of varying habitats.

The GHG emissions are measured across sources like well pads and gas pipelines through the ISMS ‘Air’ module.

Prem Gabbi, Head of National Grid Property, said:

“At National Grid, we are committed to improving the Environmental Value across our sites in the UK by 10 percent by 2026, from a natural capital and biodiversity baseline.

“It’s a crucial step in helping us achieve our regulatory obligations and enabling us to make our contribution towards addressing the biodiversity crisis and climate change. Collaborating with AiDash’s satellite-powered Intelligent Sustainability Management System could enable us to make environmental surveys and audits, relatively seamless, while saving weeks of manual labor in the field work.

“This means we could efficiently leverage repeatable and transparent satellite data to design optimal strategies for enhancing the biodiversity across c.3500 hectares of non-operational National Grid land in the UK and regularly monitor improvements while reallocating internal resources,” Prem Gabbi added.