Sustainability is built on three pillars: Environment, Social, and Governance (Transparency) . Locking your sustainability report behind an access error directly violates the “Governance” pillar. If a customer wants to see how you recycle waste or treat workers, but is met with 403 Forbidden or 404 Not Found , the implied message is: “We only care about sustainability for internal compliance, not for public trust.”
Rating: ⭐ (1/5) – Fails the transparency test
Remove the IP block or password barrier immediately. If the page is internal-only, do not index it publicly. If the page exists, ensure a 200 OK status. Otherwise, remove the link from your footer. Transparency is not a privilege; it is a baseline requirement.
From a technical standpoint, the “Access Denied” message is vague. It does not specify whether the block is due to geo-restrictions (e.g., blocking international VPNs), IP blacklisting, or a simple server misconfiguration. For a local Australian user, or even an international investor trying to vet the company’s carbon neutral claims, this error is a dead end. There is no redirect, no alternative link, and no explanation. It feels less like a bug and more like a deliberate firewall.
There is a dark humor in getting “Access Denied” from a page dedicated to being open, ethical, and sustainable. Until xxxx.com.au fixes this error—or provides a mirror for the document—the public must assume that their sustainability is "exclusive." Avoid relying on their claims until they unlock the gate.