Side-by-side comparison of AI visibility scores, market position, and capabilities
Kalamazoo MI. Acquired by Wolters Kluwer in 2023. SME sustainability management platform for carbon tracking and reporting, serving businesses beginning net-zero journeys.
Sustain.Life is a Kalamazoo, Michigan-based sustainability management platform that was acquired by Wolters Kluwer in 2023, bringing it into one of the world's largest professional information services companies. Prior to acquisition, Sustain.Life had built a reputation as a user-friendly, affordable carbon management tool tailored for SMEs and mid-market companies that are beginning their sustainability journeys and need a straightforward path to measuring and reporting emissions.\n\nThe platform automates emissions data collection by connecting to utility accounts, fleet management systems, and financial data sources. It calculates scope 1, 2, and 3 emissions, generates carbon footprint reports, and provides reduction recommendations. Following the Wolters Kluwer acquisition, Sustain.Life benefits from integration with Wolters Kluwer's broader portfolio of tax, compliance, and audit tools, creating a natural pathway for accounting firms and compliance professionals to offer sustainability services to their SME clients.\n\nSustain.Life targets small and mid-size businesses that lack dedicated sustainability teams and need an accessible, cost-effective tool to begin measuring and managing their carbon footprint. The Wolters Kluwer acquisition also opens distribution through the accounting and professional services channel. It competes with Net0, Greenly, and Normative in the SME segment, differentiating through its backing by a large enterprise software company and its integration with accounting and compliance workflows.
Akron OH Midwest/Mid-Atlantic regulated utility (NYSE: FE) ~$13.5B FY2024 revenue; HB 6 scandal recovery complete, $26B 2024-2028 capex, 6M customers in 6 states, data center NJ growth competing with AEP and Exelon.
FirstEnergy Corp. is an Akron, Ohio-based regulated electric utility holding company — publicly traded on the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE: FE) as an S&P 500 Utilities component — providing electric transmission and distribution service to approximately 6 million customers across six states (Ohio, Pennsylvania, West Virginia, New Jersey, Maryland, New York) through regulated utility subsidiaries including Ohio Edison, Cleveland Electric Illuminating, Toledo Edison, Pennsylvania Power, The Illuminating Company, Monongahela Power, Potomac Edison, Jersey Central Power & Light, Met-Ed, Penn Power, and West Penn Power through approximately 12,000 employees. FirstEnergy is in the final stages of reputational and operational recovery from a historic corporate governance scandal: in 2020, FirstEnergy admitted to paying $60 million in bribes to Ohio utility regulators and state legislators (including former Ohio House Speaker Larry Householder) to secure passage of HB 6 — a $1.3 billion nuclear plant bailout law that was later repealed — resulting in criminal convictions, executive departures, shareholder class action settlements, and a $230 million DOJ deferred prosecution agreement. In fiscal year 2024, FirstEnergy reported revenues of approximately $13.5 billion, with the company executing CEO Brian Tierney's (joined 2023) strategy of rebuilding regulatory trust, improving operational performance, and executing the $26 billion capital plan (2024-2028) for grid modernization, electric vehicle infrastructure, and smart meter installation across the six-state service territory. FirstEnergy's 2021 divestiture of its competitive power generation business (FirstEnergy Solutions — renamed Evolent Energy Resources, including the Davis-Besse and Perry nuclear plants in Ohio) simplified FirstEnergy to a pure regulated utility — eliminating the commodity generation exposure that had distorted earnings and contributed to the improper HB 6 lobbying motivation.
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