No. GRA does not certify climate, resilience, sustainability, ESG, adaptation, biodiversity, social impact, public-good, or transition claims.
GRA may help participants improve claims discipline by identifying what evidence exists, what evidence is missing, what risks are material, what public-good context applies, what finance-readiness questions exist, and what language should be avoided. That is not certification.
Climate, sustainability, resilience, or impact claims may require specialized standards, assurance, verification, methodologies, data, governance, baseline definitions, metrics, safeguards, third-party review, regulatory compliance, and public reporting discipline. GRA does not replace those processes.
A GRA readiness record should not be used to claim that a project or company is climate-aligned, sustainable, resilient, net-zero, nature-positive, impact-certified, adaptation-ready, community-approved, ESG-compliant, or green.
GRA can help prevent overclaiming. It does not certify claims.