Key findings from the report include:

  • Persistent safety challenges hinder success. Workforce issues, including high turnover, hiring challenges, and onboarding new employees, are stalling progress and contributing to workplace injuries for 55% of organizations. Insufficient training (34%) and time and manpower shortages (31%) also top the list.
  • Feedback and reporting issues are a significant roadblock. An alarming 79% of respondents believe accidents, hazards, concerns, and near misses are underreported.
  • The responsibilities of the EHS leaders have grown. Forty-five percent of EHS leaders said ESG and sustainability goals have intensified the complexity of their EHS roles, limiting their ability to focus on core safety functions. Another 35% said managing compliance with new and evolving regulations is another burden.
  • AI technology is becoming an essential tool for modernizing workplace safety management. Fifty-nine percent of organizations are confident that generative AI can help predict and prevent injuries. Another 39% of companies are increasing their AI investments for EHS in the next 12 months.

In better news, the report reveals a growing optimism around AI's potential to transform safety management. Over half (51%) of organizations are investing in AI-driven solutions in 2025 for EHS applications such as data analysis capabilities (60%), AI-powered video analysis (50%), AI-powered prompts (50%) and automated classification, trend monitoring, and alerting (48%).

AI is also emerging as a tool to help EHS leaders overcome underreporting issues. Sixty-one percent of respondents feel that employees would accurately report hazards, concerns, near misses, or accidents with access to mobile apps for real-time feedback sent right from the employee’s smartphone (61%) and GenAI-generated prompts to improve the quality and expediency of user inputs (36%).