Geotab 2025 Sustainability and Impact Report (EN-GB)

CEO message

About Geotab

Customer sustainability

Environment and climate action

Governance

People@Geotab

Appendix

Message from the CEO

Sustainability’s pragmatic path — Delivering value today

“We no longer need to debate a choice between ‘sustainability’ or ‘profitability.’ When integrated with a pragmatic focus on short-term value, sustainability is a clear driver of efficiency and profitability.” When we find a way to reduce fuel consumption, we create an immediate, measurable cost savings, today. When telematics data helps a driver optimise their route to eliminate unnecessary driving or idling, it can lead to fuel and cost savings, reduced vehicle wear and tear, and lowered environmental impact of that delivery. Making business sense enables better outcomes for organisations and for the “greater good” - what we mean when we say a “win-win.” Geotab, like other forward-thinking companies, is using all the tools we have - from data analytics to smart AI models – to find efficiencies for customers and within our own operations. We no longer need to debate a choice between "sustainability" or "profitability." When integrated with a pragmatic focus on short-term value, sustainability can be a clear driver of efficiency and profitability. Every operational improvement delivering value today is an immediate, measurable step—an essential building block that creates the secure foundation to credibly and profitably achieve our ambitious, long-term targets. Thank you for your ongoing collaboration as we build a more intelligent and resilient future, together.

The very nature of the sustainability conversation has changed.

For years, "sustainability" has been a separate dialogue, focused on ambitious and distant 2050 goals. Special teams or departments were established to study results and generate reports. It was a glossy, annual publication, a "side-of-desk" project, or something we pursued in addition to our core business. It was often discussed in terms of aspiration, not a pragmatic application. Over the past few years we have seen, and participated in, a critical necessary shift. Sustainability has moved from isolation to integration. The most resilient and successful businesses have realised that those lofty, long-term goals are simply not realistic, or even achievable, without a clear, short-term plan. In our industry, there has been a big realisation that sustainability can be operational and cost efficient. It can improve supply chain resilience. And it is a key driver in attracting and retaining top talent. This is exactly where it must be to gain traction – it makes business sense — to be ingrained in organisational operations. It has a clear profit and loss, a tangible ROI, and a provable, short-term benefit. We are now seeing more of this in practice. Sustainability, while in some circles has been diminished, the principles underlying smart practices are becoming mainstream because it is being integrated, not as a separate "green" programme, but as a core business driver. It's in how finance teams budget, how engineers design products, and how logistics teams plan their routes.

Neil Cawse Founder and CEO, Geotab

Geotab 2025 Sustainability and Impact Report 3

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