Before you can begin to think about how to measure your carbon footprint, you first need to understand exactly what it is.
Carbon footprints are measured in tonnes of CO2 equivalent or CO2e. Equivalent means that the footprint contains several different greenhouse gases (e.g. all those controlled under the Kyoto Protocol), which have been converted into the equivalent quantity of CO2. The equivalent allows all emissions to be shown as a single number. The chart below shows how this breakdown may look.
It’s crucial to understand your carbon footprint. Without it, it's impossible to know where your organisation sits against sustainability goals and climate legislation.
Once you know your carbon footprint, it can provide a number of opportunities to your organisation. Here are five ways it can help:
Organisations, individuals, products, services, and events all have different types of carbon footprints. Each type of carbon footprint has various methods and boundaries for assessments.
For organisations, these assessments involve calculating the direct and indirect GHG emissions. So, what’s the difference between the two?
Let’s start with direct emissions. These are from the combustion of fossil fuels in equipment or vehicles owned by the organisation, and escaped greenhouse gases from the organisation's facilities (e.g. refrigerant gas losses from air conditioning systems).
Indirect emissions are all emissions which are the result of an organisation's activities, but which are emitted from facilities or vehicles owned by third parties (e.g. an organisation's electricity consumption indirectly causes emissions at the electricity generating plant, which is owned by a third party).
Within greenhouse gas reporting, emissions can be categorised into three scopes:
Product assessments include measuring all the emissions connected with a product. Product footprints can be from “cradle-to-customer”, which includes all emissions from the extraction of the raw materials, processing, manufacturing, and delivery to retailers / customers.
The second type of product footprint is “cradle-to-grave” or “whole-of-life”. This type includes all emissions sources for “cradle to customer” alongside the emissions associated with consumer use and final disposal of the product.
The best practice for product footprinting is the Publicly Available Specification 2050 (PAS 2050). This standard has been developed by the British Standards Institute (BSI) and is sponsored by the Carbon Trust and the UK's Department for the Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra).
Despite PAS 2050 being developed by UK bodies, the methodology is international. It provides a detailed specification for the assessment of the life cycle greenhouse gas emissions of goods and services.
PAS 2050 also builds on existing life cycle assessment methodologies such as ISO 14040 and ISO 14044, and provides additional principles, techniques and requirements relevant to greenhouse gas assessments.
So, you now know what a carbon footprint is. More importantly, you understand how important it is to have accurate data.
One thing is certain, it’s vital that you have access to data that utilises accurate emission factors for equivalent calculations. The issue is, where do you find the extra hours in your workday to tackle this?
One small error is something you can’t leave to chance. With GHG Emission Reporting Software you gain access to expert sustainability analysts to ensure clarity and compliance.