What It Extracts
Constrovet extracts ESG and carbon values only when project records contain them. Fuel, power, water, waste, emissions, and carbon stay separate from financial leakage.
Why It Matters
ESG data often sits in utility bills, fuel logs, equipment records, waste reports, and contractor submissions. Without structure, teams miss gaps or mix ESG with cost claims.
What Executives Get
- ESG values only when source evidence is present.
- ESG metrics kept separate from budget and leakage.
- Missing fuel, power, water, waste, carbon, or emissions evidence flagged.
- File, page or sheet, and quoted span for each finding.
- 7/30/90 documentation and monitoring actions where useful.
What Documents Help
- Diesel, fuel, power, water, waste, and energy records.
- Equipment utilization, vehicle logs, generator logs, and site utility bills.
- Material quantity records and carbon-related declarations where available.
- Inspection notes, compliance submissions, ESG reports, and site progress reports.
Example Output
| ESG metric | Evidence used | Output |
|---|---|---|
| Diesel consumption | Fuel log and invoice | Metric value, citation, reporting period |
| Electricity usage | Utility bill or meter record | Energy finding and missing-evidence note if incomplete |
| Waste diversion | Waste log and disposal record | Diversion metric and source reference |
Action Use
ESG findings can become 7-day evidence requests, 30-day reporting cleanup, and 90-day monitoring controls. They should not imply compliance confirmation.