For Event Organisers

Measure your event. Own the results.

The carbon footprint of your conference or exhibition, calculated and reported automatically — so you can show your work, reduce what you can, and account for the rest.

Trusted by
CIWEM · Flood & CoastConfex Event Tech LiveConference NewsAbility HireThe PIE

What One Tribe does for events

Measure. Report. Remove.

Calculate

Full Event Carbon Footprint Measurement

Calculate the complete Scope 1–3 footprint of your conference or exhibition — venues, delegate travel, logistics, catering, exhibition stands. Single events or an annual portfolio. Travel data collected at check-in. Stand data via your exhibitor manual. No spreadsheets for your team.

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Report

ISO-Compliant Carbon Reports, Every Year

Branded, downloadable PDF reports — editable and recalibratable post-event. GHG Protocol aligned. Year-on-year comparable. Publish your footprint and show progress publicly. Build collective accountability with exhibitors, sponsors and delegates.

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Remove

Verified Carbon Offset & Removal Projects

Access 70+ verified carbon offset and removal projects — retired on global registries in your event’s name. Rainforest protection, woodland restoration, renewable energy, water projects. Let delegates choose via our badge-voting system.

View all projects →

How it works

Four steps. Zero admin for your team.

01
Embed into your exhibitor manual
One Tribe added as a mandatory task in your FAIR exhibitor manual. One link. No separate sign-up. Delegate travel collected at check-in.
02
Calculate the full footprint
One Tribe’s calculator produces your complete Scope 1–3 footprint — stands, travel, venue energy, catering, logistics. All in one report.
03
Report published automatically
Branded, ISO-compliant PDF. Shareable and downloadable. Year-on-year comparable from your first report.
04
Delegates choose the offset project
Badge-voting system: three verified projects, delegates choose on exit. Most votes wins. Offset retired in your event’s name.

What organisers say

In their own words.

“It’s not about being perfect. It’s about being honest. We show what we’re measuring even if it’s not what we wanted in the end.”

Marina SerranoHead of Events, CIWEM · Flood & Coast

“Sustainability is something that the industry needs to be acting upon now, and our partnership will ensure we are playing our part to promote greener events — not in 2050.”

Jack NeweyDirector, Conference News

“One Tribe’s simple and effective service helped position Ability as a leading sustainable supplier to the events industry.”

Peter WareDirector, Ability Furniture Hire

The commercial case

Sustainability doesn’t have to be a cost. It can be a revenue line.

Most event organisers treat sustainability as an obligation — something to minimise and report. One Tribe flips that. The sustainability programme becomes a new commercial product: a sponsorship package, a competitive differentiator, a reason exhibitors return year after year.

CIWEM introduced a Most Sustainable Stand Award. Confex created a sustainability sponsor package. Event Tech Live built it into their brand. Each turned environmental responsibility into commercial advantage.

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Revenue opportunities
Sustainability Sponsorship Package
A new high-value sponsorship tier. Sponsors fund the offset programme. You earn revenue share — directly from your sustainability work.
Exhibitor Carbon Reports
Include stand carbon reports in your exhibitor packages. Bundle into your stand fee and retain the margin, or offer as an add-on.
Most Sustainable Stand Award
A competition incentivising exhibitors to invest in sustainable stands. Delivered by One Tribe on site. Turns compliance into a prize worth winning.
Delegate Engagement Programme
Badge-voting for carbon projects. QR impact pages. Post-event comms. Sustainability becomes something delegates experience — not a footnote.

One Tribe works for conferences, exhibitions and trade shows of any size. Measure it. Own it. Reduce it. Evidence over intent. Always.

Schedule a Demo →

Eric currently works as an independent consultant at the intersection of nature and climate, focused on catalysing market and non-market solutions to drive the just transition.

He previously was Head of Product at Earthshot Labs, supporting nature conservation and restoration projects across the global south secure project finance. Prior to Earthshot Labs, Eric led nature-based carbon project development for Gorongosa National Park in Mozambique and founded the Carbon Cooperative, a global alliance of leading nature conservation and restoration practitioners exploring carbon finance. After serving in the Peace Corps in Mozambique out of university, he spent much of his 20s working in community-based conservation and ecosystem restoration efforts in Sub-Saharan Africa interspersed with two startup ventures as co-founder and CEO of a mental health tech startup and COO of a sustainable coffee company. Eric has a dual Masters in Environmental Engineering and Environmental Policy from Stanford University where he was a NSF Graduate Research Fellow and a BS in Environmental Engineering from Tufts University.

Alan is a risk management thought-leader, superconnector, and FinTech pioneer. His mission is to enable an Earth Positive economy which includes nature in global accounting systems.

Alan is Founder of Generation Blue, a venture studio dedicated to planetary game changers powered by exponential technologies. Previously, Alan established Natural Capital Markets at Lykke AG, pioneering blockchain based forestry and carbon backed tokens. Alan has over two decades of risk management experience advising global financial institutions, and was a founding member of the RiskMetrics Group, a JPMorgan spin-off. Alan is an investor and advisor to regenerative impact ventures, including TreeBuddy.Earth, Regenativ, and Vlinder Climate.

Lori Whitecalf made history when she became the first woman to be elected Chief of Sweetgrass First Nation in 2011. She served three terms of office from 2011-2017.  

Lori took a two-year hiatus from leadership to expand the family ranch and serve as the FSIN Senior Industry Liaison. She was re-elected on November 29. 2019 and again on November 30, 2021, as Chief of Sweetgrass. Chief Whitecalf practises a traditional lifestyle of hunting, fishing and gathering. She currently sits on the following boards: Saskatchewan Indian Institute of Technology, FSIN Lands and Resource Commission, Battle River Treaty 6 Health Centre and Battleford Agency Tribal Chiefs Executive Council, FSIN Women’s Commission.

Tina is the Chief Business Officer for MLTC Industrial Investments, the Economic Development arm of the Meadow Lake Tribal Council. She has a diverse background of experience. Having spent 15 years as a municipal Chief Operating Officer, 20 years involved in Saskatchewan’s Health Authority Board Keewatin Yatthe and 9 years with Northern Lights Board of Education. 

 

She continues as a Board Member with Beaver River Community Futures supporting small business development in her home region. Tina brings a wealth of experience in a variety of fields and many connections to the Indigenous communities of Northern Saskatchewan. In addition Tina holds a BA Advanced from the U of S, a Certificate in Local Government Authority from the U of R and is certified as a Professional Economic Developer for Saskatchewan and a certified Technician Aboriginal Economic Developer (TAED).

Tootoosis’ career spans 40+ years in HRM, political leadership, and Indigenous economic development, as a dedicated bridge builder and advocate for Indigenous causes.
As a key member of the Saskatoon Regional Economic Development Authority (SREDA) team since 2021, he develops strategies for the Truth and Reconciliation Commission final report and Call to Action #92.

He is a graduate of the First Nations University of Canada and a certified Professional Aboriginal Economic Developer. Spearheading various community initiatives while serving as a Chair of the SIEDN while directing ILDII and WIBF. Founder of MGT Consulting Tootoosis is based in Saskatoon, Treaty Six Territory.

Cy Standing (Wakanya Najin in Dakota) has a long and distinguished career including serving overseas as an Electronics Technician in the Royal Canadian Air Force, former Chief of Wahpeton Dakota Nation, former Vice Chief of the Federation of Saskatchewan Indigenous Nations (FSIN), past Executive Director of Community Development Branch of the Department of Northern Saskatchewan as well as an Order in Council appointment to the Federal Parole Board.  

Mr. Standing has served as a Director on many Profit and Non-Profit Corporate Boards, including serving as a Director for Affinity Credit Union with assets of over six billion dollars as well as IMI Brokerage and Wanuskewin and is currently a member of the One Tribe Indigenous Carbon Board.