Enterprise grade

Trust & security

We understand that our platform is used to store sensitive financial and emissions data. Keeping this information secure is our cornerstone priority.

At the heart of our approach is an Information Security Management System (ISMS), based on the ISO 27001 standard, which provides comprehensive governance across our organisational operations and product offerings.

Transparency

We believe that transparency is a critical component in building trust and commit to being upfront and honest about our security operations and controls.

A live status of our security controls is publicly available in our trust centre.

Compliance

We engage independent third parties to audit our information security program. This includes penetration testing of our product offerings.

We are ISO 27001:2022 certified and SOC 2 Type II compliant.

Responsible disclosure

We encourage responsible disclosure of any potential security issues.

Our security team may be reached via email at security@pathzero.com. We aim to acknowledge all security-related emails within one week of receipt.

News & insights

Latest updates from our team and the industry.

Pathzero expands global platform to capture location data for physical risk management across private markets

Pathzero expands global platform to capture location data for physical risk management across private markets

Sydney, 14 October 2025: Pathzero, the leading platform for climate risk data in private markets, has announced the launch of a new capability that allows investors to collect location-level data on the operations and assets within their portfolios – laying the foundation for comprehensive physical risk management across global private markets.
Climate scenarios: Everyone has a plan until reality delivers the punch

Climate scenarios: Everyone has a plan until reality delivers the punch

By Carl Prins, Pathzero Insights | September 29, 2025 Mike Tyson famously quipped, "Everyone has a plan until they get punched in the face." In the world of climate risk modelling, that punch arrives not from a heavyweight bout, but from the relentless flux of policy shifts, geopolitical surprises, and weather events that defy our carefully constructed forecasts. For asset owners, this rings especially true as Australia's AASB S2 Climate-related Disclosures standard approaches—finalised just a year ago and mandating adoption in reporting periods beginning on or after 1 January 2025 for Group 1 entities, with Group 2 entities required to report from 1 July 2026 onwards. The standard demands robust, decision-useful disclosures on transition and physical risks across direct holdings and indirect exposures via third-party managers. Yet, the scenarios underpinning these disclosures—venerable frameworks like NGFS and IPCC pathways—offer structure at the expense of agility. They excel in compliance but falter in foresight, leaving asset owners grappling with outdated baselines amid accelerating change.
ISO and GHG Protocol announce harmonisation – and the ISSB’s role in building a unified global standard

ISO and GHG Protocol announce harmonisation – and the ISSB’s role in building a unified global standard

The greenhouse gas (GHG) accounting landscape has reached a pivotal moment, with the GHG Protocol and International Organisation for Standardisation (ISO) announcing a strategic partnership to harmonise their standards and co-develop new ones. This step responds to the growing importance of these frameworks in global finance, supply chains, and corporate disclosures.