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Dashe is an enterprise-focused carbon data collection and reporting SaaS platform. It aims to replace spreadsheets and manual data entry with real-time, AI-driven automation. Its core value lies in automatically capturing carbon-emissions-related data from enterprise systems and turning it into a data foundation for compliance, ESG disclosure, and audits.
Based on the information on its website, Dashe focuses on real-time carbon reporting, automated data collection, AI emissions capture, compliance reporting, and audit-ready data. Its industry solutions are relatively clearly defined: construction companies can track emissions across multiple sites, subcontractors, and materials; manufacturers can collect factory energy and production emissions data; logistics users can focus on fleets and fuel; retailers can emphasize supply-chain Scope 3 emissions; financial institutions can produce investor-friendly ESG disclosures; and education organizations can cover campuses, departments, and travel.
Transparent pricing is a highlight. Dashe charges a fixed monthly fee by team size, ranging from £15.15/month for 1 user to £1,010/month for 101–250 users, with custom enterprise pricing for teams of 251+ users. The company emphasizes no hidden fees and no feature lock-in, with pricing automatically updated according to team size. At present, there does not appear to be a free plan or self-service trial; only a free demo booking is available. The enterprise plan includes an SLA, a dedicated success manager, and assisted onboarding.
Dashe says it can connect to enterprise systems and track carbon data in real time, but it does not list specific third-party integrations, ERP/finance/energy system connectors, or APIs. On the team-management side, the only confirmed detail is seat-based pricing; role permissions, approval workflows, and multi-organization management are not disclosed. For security and compliance, the site highlights terms such as fully compliant, audit-ready, and auditable data, but does not provide concrete evidence such as ISO, SOC, GDPR, or encryption policies. Large enterprises would therefore still need to conduct further due diligence before procurement.
Dashe’s strengths are its focused positioning, clear industry scenarios, public pricing, and attempt to reduce the manual workload of carbon accounting. Its weaknesses are that the public product information still leans toward conceptual and marketing language, while integration lists, deployment options, APIs, permissions, and security certifications remain insufficiently detailed. It is better suited to small, mid-sized, and larger enterprises that are moving from spreadsheets or consulting-led processes toward continuous carbon data management—especially in construction, manufacturing, logistics, retail, and financial services.
Access from mainland China cannot be determined from the available text, and payment methods are not disclosed. Since pricing is in GBP, cross-border payments and invoice compliance may be relevant issues. If an organization’s data is mainly located within China or it needs to meet local dual-carbon, ESG, or data compliance requirements, it is worth evaluating domestic carbon management and ESG disclosure platforms alongside international alternatives such as Watershed, Persefoni, Plan A, and Sweep.
⚠ This review is compiled from public sources and does not constitute a purchase recommendation. Verify all facts on the vendor's official site. Verify on dashe.ai official site.
dashe.ai is an Unknown Legal & Tax provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 7.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of Workable. Click "Visit Official Site" to reach dashe.ai directly.