April 22, 2025

iQUBE.APP Launches UK SME Sustainability Platform as UAE Climate Law Comes into Force

As the UAE’s landmark mandatory climate disclosure law comes into effect in just over four weeks, Dubai-based compliance technology platform iQUBE.APP has launched a powerful new subscription service tailored for UK small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) grappling with sustainability reporting demands.

Timed to coincide with World Environment Day, the launch positions iQUBE.APP as a global compliance enabler — bridging UAE leadership in climate governance with urgent SME needs across the UK supply chain. The platform offers full-scope environmental compliance, carbon tracking, and audit-ready reporting for just 99 AED /month, a fraction of the typical consultancy cost.

"SMEs are the backbone of the economy, but many are flying blind on sustainability," said Lordie, a data analysis for Qintelligence Commercial Brokers LLC, the Dubai-headquartered firm behind iQUBE.APP. "Procurement officers in the UK and EU are already filtering out non-compliant suppliers. This launch is about protecting those businesses — and their contracts."

According to the new “Your Business Is at Risk” guide published by iQUBE.APP, SMEs unaware of frameworks like the ISSB, CSRD, and SECR are at risk of exclusion from corporate value chains. iQUBE.APP simplifies these obligations, offering:

  • Monthly ISSB-aligned compliance reports
  • Scope 3 carbon tracking & certification
  • Audit-ready evidence for partners and regulators
  • On-demand staff training
  • Access to hidden sustainability grants
  • Energy-saving tools for workplace and home

Every subscription comes with a 100% money-back guarantee: if the user doesn't save at least 1,000 AED in the first year, the full fee is refunded.

With the UAE becoming the first Middle Eastern country to legislate climate disclosures across sectors, iQUBE.APP’s dual-market positioning reflects a strategic pivot — one that anticipates the global harmonization of environmental compliance.

"The UAE is raising the bar, and the UK is tightening enforcement. The message is clear: compliance isn’t optional — it’s commercial survival," said the Lordie