ESG data and reporting for real estate funds
ESG reporting for real estate funds is rising fast, and the blocker is rarely the intent. It is the data: fragmented, inconsistent, and hard to pull into investor reporting alongside the financials.
ESG reporting is a data problem before it is anything else
Funds want to report ESG well. What slows them down is that the underlying data — energy and water consumption, carbon, green certifications, tenant and building data — is scattered across operators, meters, certificates and spreadsheets, in different units and formats, arriving on different cycles. Turning that into consistent, auditable, portfolio-level reporting is the real work.
It is the same shape of problem as financial portfolio reporting: many sources, inconsistent data, a manual scramble each cycle. Which is why ESG reporting benefits from the same discipline — consolidation, validation and a clear audit trail.
The frameworks you report against
Real estate managers now report against an expanding set of standards: SFDR and the EU Taxonomy for disclosure and classification, CSRD for corporate sustainability reporting, GRESB as the benchmark most institutional investors expect, and INREV's sustainability reporting and EPRA's sBPR for real-estate-specific guidance. In Switzerland, the Swiss Climate Scores and AMAS guidance apply, alongside TCFD-aligned expectations.
Each has its own data requirements, but they draw on the same underlying asset- and portfolio-level ESG data. Getting that data consolidated and trustworthy once, rather than re-assembled for each framework, is the efficient path.
Where STREETS fits — honestly
STREETS is the governed data-consolidation and reporting layer. It ingests structured ESG data from your source systems and operators, validates it, consolidates it to portfolio level, and reports it alongside your financial KPIs on one governed dataset.
To be clear about the boundary: STREETS does not meter energy or carbon, run environmental models, or produce ESG ratings — those come from meters, operators and specialist tools. What STREETS does is make the resulting data consistent, auditable and reportable, so ESG reporting stops being a separate spreadsheet exercise. Better consolidated data also supports better decisions and, in turn, better ESG performance over time.
For the wider KPI picture see the key metrics guide; for a sector where ESG scrutiny is especially intense, see data-centre and digital-infrastructure reporting.
Bring ESG data into your portfolio reporting
STREETS consolidates and reports validated ESG data alongside your financials, on one governed dataset. See it on your portfolio.
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