Scope 3 GHG Emissions

From Open Risk Manual
The printable version is no longer supported and may have rendering errors. Please update your browser bookmarks and please use the default browser print function instead.

Definition

Scope 3 GHG Emissions. All other Indirect GHG Emissions (not included in Scope 2 GHG Emissions) that occur in the value chain of the reporting company or entity, including both upstream and downstream emissions.

Scope 3 is an optional reporting category that allows for the treatment of all other indirect emissions.

Scope 3 emissions are other indirect emissions, such as the extraction and production of purchased materials and fuels, transport-related activities in vehicles not owned or controlled by the reporting entity, electricity-related activities (e.g. transmission and distribution losses) not covered in Scope 2 GHG Emissions, outsourced activities, use of sold products, waste disposal, etc.

In the context of the City GHG Protocol, Scope 3 emissions all other GHG emissions that occur outside the city boundary as a result of activities taking place within the city boundary.[1]

Upstream versus Downstream Scope 3 Emissions

Scope 3 emissions can be broken down into:

  • upstream emissions that occur in the supply chain (for example, from production or extraction of purchased materials) and
  • downstream emissions that occur as a consequence of using the organization’s products or services.

Significance

For some business sectors scope 3 emissions may form the majority of emission (e.g. as consumers use a company's products) and are thus essential in capturing the full Climate-Related Risk profile of said sectors.

Standards

There are existing international and European standards on the matter, that could serve for the calculation of scope 3 emissions

Examples

  • Emissions of logistics
  • Emissions of business trips
  • Emissions of employees' commuter traffic
  • Emissions of upstream chains
  • Emissions of purchased materials
  • Emissions of product utilisation phase
  • Emissions of product or waste disposal
  • Outsourced activities

Calculation

Scope 3 GHG emissions will primarily be calculated from activity data such as fuel use or passenger miles and published or third-party emission factors. In most cases, if source- or facility-specific emission factors are available, they are preferable to more generic or general emission factors.

Issues and Challenges

  • Scope 3 emissions data are typically estimates rather than measurements (GHG Data Types)
  • Carbon footprint approaches must allocate the responsibility for scope 3 emissions across industries without double counting (GHG Emissions Double Counting)

See Also

References

  • As defined in[2]
  1. Global Protocol for Community-Scale Greenhouse Gas Inventories, An Accounting and Reporting Standard for Cities, Version 1.1, 2021. WRI, C40, IOCLEI
  2. The Greenhouse Gas Protocol, A corporate accounting and reporting standard, Revised Edition 2008