When organizations seek to reduce their greenhouse gas (GHG) footprint, it’s important that an accurate emissions inventory is created. Implementing a detailed inventory will facilitate effective reporting, target setting, planning, management, and tracking of GHG footprint reduction activities and outcomes. In this article, we will provide an overview of the generally accepted principles surrounding GHG accounting, inventory development and reporting.
The most generally accepted standards and principles for GHG reporting are laid out comprehensively in the Corporate Accounting and Reporting Standard published by The Greenhouse Gas Protocol (the GHG Standard). The Greenhouse Gas Protocol is a collaboration between the World Resources Institute, the World Business Council for Sustainable Development, and various governments, industry organizations, non-governmental organizations (NGOs), businesses and other organizations.
The GHG Standard sets out five principles that should guide the development of an organization’s emissions inventory (the following is taken verbatim from the GHG Standard):
- Relevance: Ensure the GHG inventory appropriately reflects the GHG emissions of the company and serves the decision-making needs of users – both internal and external to the company.
- Completeness: Account for and report on all GHG emission sources and activities within the chosen inventory boundary. Disclose and justify any specific exclusions.
- Consistency: Use consistent methodologies to allow for meaningful comparisons of emissions over time. Transparently document any changes to the data, inventory boundary, methods, or any other relevant factors in the time series.
- Transparency: Address all relevant issues in a factual and coherent manner, based on a clear audit trail. Disclose any relevant assumptions and make appropriate references to the accounting and calculation methodologies and data sources used.
- Accuracy: Ensure that the quantification of GHG emissions is systematically neither over nor under actual emissions, as far as can be judged, and that uncertainties are reduced as far as practicable. Achieve sufficient accuracy to enable users to make decisions with reasonable assurance as to the integrity of the reported information.
Defining the Boundaries
As referenced in the principles, in order to develop an effective GHG emissions inventory, an organization needs to rigorously define the boundaries within which it is accounting for and classifying its emissions. The boundaries that the GHG Standard contemplates are of two varieties – Organizational and Operational.
The establishment of organizational boundaries determines which emissions an organization will report. Organizational boundaries here refer to boundaries of ownership and control of emitting facilities. Though the Standard addresses these topics in detail, the general principle is that organizations should account for facility level emissions to the degree that the organization owns the value associated with activity operations, and/or to the degree that the organization controls the activity operations. The key point here is that organizations need to consider and elect which form of boundary determination is most relevant in their case, and then apply that election consistently.
The establishment of operational boundaries of GHG emissions serves to categorize those emissions by the degree to which they stem directly from organizational activities, and by extension the degree to which organizations may affect or influence activities and associated emissions. Here the standard establishes operational boundaries to sort emissions into three distinct ‘Scopes’:
- Scope 1: Emissions that are created directly through activities undertaken by the organization within its defined organizational boundaries. This includes emissions generated from combustion associated with facility heating, steam generation, on-site electricity generation, vehicles/transportation; or from other non-combustion processes or activities that result in the formation and emissions of GHGs.
- Scope 2: Emissions that arise from electricity that is purchased by the organization.
- Scope 3: Emissions that are associated with activities that are either ‘upstream’ of the organization’s operations – such as emissions from production of purchased supplies or services, employee travel, transportation of supplies and fuel – or activities that are ‘downstream’ of the organization’s operations – such as outsourced shipping of sold goods to consumers, product use, product disposal, etc.
Source: EPA.gov
Accounting for and developing inventories of both Scope 1 and 2 emissions is generally considered a ‘must’ for any serious GHG reporting and tracking program. Scope 3 emissions are generally considered optional but may be highly relevant for organizations where outsourcing or purchased supplies is a very important part of operations.
Establish Quality Data Sources and Processes
Once organizational boundaries are set and an understanding of the sources for Scope 1 and Scope 2 (and possibly Scope 3) emissions is set, the next task is to establish sources of activity data for these emissions, along with processes for compiling the data. Primarily for most organizations, this will involve cataloguing sources of fuel consumption data for Scope 1 accounting – such as gasoline, diesel, fuel oil, natural gas, etc. – and sources of electricity consumption data for Scope 2 accounting.
Data quality is of course paramount in satisfying the core accounting principle of accuracy. Organizations need to put a good amount of work into specifying the best possible sources for activity data and in developing robust and fault free processes for intake, assembly and aggregation of such data. Particular care needs to be taken at interface and transformation points – i.e., anytime data is moved between systems, translated, or manipulated – as these are the most likely sources of data errors and corruption.
Along with data, the other component required for determining GHG quantities emitted is source and fuel specific emissions factors, such that:
GHG Quantity = Fuel Quantity X Fuel Emission Factor
The emissions factors for any given fuel (here we refer to electricity as a fuel) will vary by region and supplier of the fuel. Where possible, organizations should obtain accurate emissions factors from the suppliers of fuel. However, organizations should also determine the basis of the emission factor provided by suppliers. If supplier specific emissions factors are not available (or are determined to be unreliable), credible public sources exist for these factors (referenced in the Standard or on the GHG Protocol website).
Establishing the Baseline Year
A final basic consideration for an effective GHG accounting and reporting program is the establishment of a Baseline Year. The Baseline Year is the standard against which ongoing GHG management efforts will be managed, and so should be chosen to accurately and fairly represent an organization’s starting point in its GHG footprint management activities. The Baseline Year will typically also serve as a standard for any GHG reduction targets that the organization will establish and work towards. An important consideration outlined in the GHG Standard is that organizations need to recalculate Baseline Year emissions any time there is a substantial change in the nature of their business owing to acquisition or divestiture of business activities.
Additionally, with regard to Scope 2 emissions in particular, the GHG Standard calls for the Fuel Emissions Factors to be accounted for by separately two methods, as described in more detail in the GHG Protocol Scope 2 Guidance:
- Location-Based Method: ‘A method to quantify Scope 2 GHG emissions based on average energy generation emission factors for defined geographic locations, including local, subnational, or national boundaries. Emission factors representing average emissions from energy generation occurring within a defined geographic area and a defined time period.’ (from the Corporate Standard)
- Market-Based Method: ‘A method to quantify the Scope 2 GHG emissions of a reporter based on GHG emissions emitted by the generators from which the reporter contractually purchases electricity bundled with contractual instruments, or contractual instruments on their own’ (from the Corporate Standard). The contractual instruments referred to here may be Renewable Energy Certificates (RECs), Power Purchase Agreements (PPAs), Integrated Retail Products, or other qualifying instruments. Each of these needs to meet Quality Criteria laid out in the Corporate Standard.
Underlying all of these activities again are the principles laid out above – Relevance, Completeness, Consistency, Transparency and Accuracy. While the process of developing a comprehensive GHG inventory and establishing reporting procedures can be daunting, guidance by and adherence to these principles can ensure that organizations avoid pitfalls and risks and capture the benefits associated with effective management of their GHG emissions footprint.
Organizations that fail to effectively manage their GHG profile face the risk of getting left behind by competitors/peers, spurned by stakeholders, or worse. The first step in effective management is getting a good grasp on where you are today through a solid inventory. We can help you take that first step.
Interested in learning more?
OnSite Partners could be your trusted advisor in understanding your Scope 1 and Scope 2 GHG emissions footprint; as a critical first step in protecting your organization from risks and realizing value.
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