Kicking off the new year with two webinars you simply can't miss
Two practical webinars for building product manufacturers who need to get on the front foot with product carbon data.
Whether you are building your foundations, understanding what customers are asking for and what good looks like, or you are already responding to requests and need a more consistent, defensible way to produce product level answers, these sessions will give you clarity and practical next steps.
Start with Carbon Curious to Carbon Confident for a clear overview of PCFs, verification, and carbon disclosure expectations, then join Preparing for the Carbon Crunch for the practical workflow to deliver customer ready carbon numbers as June reporting pressure ramps up.
Carbon Curious to Carbon Confident in 60mins
For: Manufacturers and building product companies who want a clear, plain-English starting point on product carbon, and need to understand what customers and compliance teams are actually asking for
Speakers: Esther Bailey (Chief Operating Officer, Rebuilt) and Martin Lynch (Product Development Manager, Cement Australia)
Date & Time: 18 February 2026 1pm
For building product manufacturers, the demand for verified low-carbon products is stronger than ever.
In the webinar, Esther Bailey, Rebuilt's Chief Operating Officer and Martin Lynch, Cement Australia's Product Development Manager, will unpack how Product Carbon Footprints (PCFs) and verification are helping manufacturers meet compliance, win customer trust, and create new business opportunities.
We'll provide:
- Clarity on carbon disclosure requirements and the difference between EPDs and PCFs
- Talk through how verification positions your products to meet compliance and customer expectations
- Provide insights on how verified PCFs are reshaping the building industry
- Give you practical steps to future-proof products and strengthen customer relationships
👉Register here
You’ll walk away with practical insights to future-proof your products, build market credibility, and strengthen customer relationships, with real-world lessons from how the building industry is leading the shift.
Preparing for the Carbon Crunch
For: Manufacturers and building product companies who are already fielding customer carbon questions and want practical, repeatable ways to produce decision-ready numbers across product variants, updates, and requests
Speakers: Esther Bailey (Chief Operating Officer, Rebuilt) and Phil Crowley, Novon Lighting
Date & Time: 27 February 2026, 11am
By June this year 1,485 of Australia's largest companies, representing $1.2 trillion of purchasing power, will be required to report their carbon emissions annually under the Australian Sustainability Reporting Standards legislation (ASRS).
With corporate reporting accelerating, your customers will need defensible product carbon data, not estimates. They are about to ask for carbon numbers the way they ask for lead times: fast, specific, and tied to the exact product variant. If your answer today is “we’re working on it” or “it depends”, you are already behind.
This webinar walks you through the practical steps to take now so you can respond with numbers that hold up when customers, consultants, procurement and compliance teams come knocking, especially as June reporting pressure ramps up.
Hear from Rebuilt customer, Novon lighting, how they are using insights from the platform to engage their customers, win business and redesign products for continuous improvement.
What we will cover:
- How customers are evaluating product carbon data today, and how that is changing
- Managing variants, keeping product-level answers consistent and decision-ready
- Timely data, what customers need, how current is current enough, and how to keep it updated
- How carbon data is informing design choices and supplier selection in real projects
- How to position your data to support top-tier developer and government procurement pathways.
👉Register here
You’ll walk away with the tools to turn carbon requests into customer trust, better specification conversations, and a stronger position in carbon-regulated procurement.