
When a major retailer declares it has reached net zero, what that usually means is it has addressed its Scope 1 and 2 emissions — the fuel it burns directly and the electricity it buys. What it often excludes is Scope 3: the emissions embedded in its supply chain, its logistics providers, the business travel of its employees, and the eventual disposal of its products. In most industries, Scope 3 represents 70–90% of the total carbon footprint.
The GHG Protocol Corporate Standard — the global framework used by the vast majority of large companies — divides emissions into three scopes:
Scope 3 contains 15 distinct categories defined by the GHG Protocol Scope 3 Standard, ranging from purchased goods and services to investments.
Consider a smartphone manufacturer. Its Scope 1 emissions — the gas it uses to heat its offices — might be a few hundred tonnes of CO2 per year. But the mining of lithium, cobalt, and rare earth minerals; the energy-intensive manufacturing of components in Southeast Asia; the freight shipping of finished goods; and the eventual landfilling or recycling of devices could easily total millions of tonnes. The same logic applies to food companies, apparel brands, and financial services firms.
A McKinsey analysis found that supply chains account for more than 80% of greenhouse gas emissions for most industries. Ignoring Scope 3 is not a conservative approach — it is a fundamentally incomplete one.
The GHG Protocol organizes Scope 3 into upstream and downstream categories:
Regulatory pressure is accelerating rapidly. The EU's CSRD requires large companies — and eventually their supply chain partners — to report Scope 3 emissions starting in 2025. California's SB 253 (Climate Corporate Data Accountability Act) requires companies with revenues over $1 billion operating in California to disclose Scope 3 from 2027. The SEC's climate disclosure rules also include Scope 3 for larger registrants.
Even for companies not yet legally required to report, major customers increasingly require supply chain emissions data as part of their own Scope 3 accounting. If your clients are listed companies in regulated jurisdictions, they will eventually ask you for this data.
The data collection challenge is real, but it is manageable if you take a structured approach:
A carbon calculator that covers the full scope of GHG Protocol categories significantly reduces the data collection burden. Climate Tally's business calculator supports Scope 1, 2, and 3 emissions — including freight transport, business travel, hotel stays, employee commuting, refrigerants, and waste disposal — using verified emission factors from DEFRA, IEA, UNFCCC, and other recognized sources.
You can calculate your emissions for free, generate a detailed breakdown by category, and identify which Scope 3 sources are driving your footprint.
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