Calculating a carbon footprint for your business can help you accurately track and report your progress towards low carbon or net zero. This guide helps you take the first steps. Learn how to choose and collect the right data for your organisational footprint. Find out how you can reduce your footprint through carbon offsetting.
A carbon footprint measures the total greenhouse gases (GHGs) produced directly or indirectly by an organisation, person, product or service.
A corporate carbon footprint measures all GHG emissions related to your business activities. This includes the energy you use for heating and lighting, company transport, and industrial and commercial processes. Some businesses also include their supply chain emissions.
The benefits of calculating your carbon footprint
Some larger organisations are legally required to report emissions. But there are several reasons why you might volunteer to publish your company’s footprint.
Doing so can help you:
Manage GHG emissions and track your reduction over time
Meet the targets of a corporate responsibility programme
Ensure accurate reporting to internal and external stakeholders
The transition towards a net zero and low carbon economy is accelerating, which is rapidly increasing the focus on corporate environmental performance. More and more businesses are starting to see real value in carbon footprinting as a tool to understand, manage and reduce emissions.
Measuring different greenhouse gas emissions
While carbon dioxide (CO2) is the most common corporate GHG emission, it isn’t the only gas that has a significant impact on the environment. That's why a carbon footprint is usually expressed as carbon dioxide equivalent (CO2e).
CO2e describes the impact of various GHGs in terms of how much CO2 would have the same impact on global warming. It includes six GHGs:
CO2
Methane
Nitrous oxide
Sulphur hexafluoride
Perfluorocarbons
Hydrofluorocarbons
By converting all these emissions into CO2e, you can represent your overall global warming potential with a single number.
Which emissions to include in a carbon footprint
The Greenhouse Gas Protocol provides the world’s most widely used set of GHG accounting standards. It splits emissions into three categories:
Scope 1: Direct emissions, resulting from activities that your organisation controls (like natural gas burned in the site's heating system)
Scope 2: Indirect emissions that your business does not directly control, resulting from electricity, steam or heat purchased and used
Scope 3: Other sources of indirect emissions beyond your organisation’s control (like purchased staff travel or purchased goods and services)
Scope 1 and Scope 2 emissions should be included in every organisational carbon footprint. But it’s up to each business to decide which (if any) Scope 3 emissions to include.
Getting started with your carbon footprint
Calculating a basic carbon footprint can be a simple task if the relevant information is easy to access. But getting the full picture of all important Scope 1 to 3 emissions is often more complex and challenging.
A common way to start is to choose a ‘baseline’ year that represents your normal operating conditions. This will help you set clear carbon reduction targets and monitor your progress over time.
The Greenhouse Gas Protocol Corporate Standardopens in a new window provides a standardised approach to estimating business-related GHG emissions. By following its five key principles — completeness, relevance, transparency, accuracy and consistency — you can ensure your footprint is as robust as possible.
To help ensure success, there are certain steps in the process worth closely considering, like:
Developing an appropriate data collection strategy
Choosing a method for calculating Scope 2 emissions
Deciding which (if any) Scope 3 emissions to include
Verifying and reporting the footprint
The best approach to each of these tasks depends on your business and its specific carbon footprinting goals.
Carbon footprinting: tips and best practices
One crucial early step is to collect relevant data for all emissions sources that fit into the scope of your footprint.
You can use a simple spreadsheet to record data. Energy monitoring spreadsheets can automatically calculate, collate and report your corporate CO2 emissions.
When choosing units of measurement, there are some generally accepted best practices:
For gas and electricity, kWh units should be used. You can usually get this information from billing or direct meter readings.
For vehicle transport emissions, actual fuel use is the best data to collect. Alternatively, mileage data can help you estimate fuel use against fuel economy projections.
Data for other fuel (like coal, oil or liquified petroleum gas) should be collected in the most appropriate units - typically litres, tonnes or KWh.
Taking a clear, relevant inventory of emissions is a worthwhile exercise for any business. It also offers the extra benefit of helping you improve energy management.
Accurately calculating Scope 2 emissions (energy use at the site) requires an extra level of detail.
There are two main ways to calculate Scope 2 emissions:
The location-based method, which uses the grid average emissions factor for the UK
The market-based method, which uses specific emissions factors related to the purchased electricity
The best method depends on which type of energy source you’re measuring.
With the market-based method, electricity from low carbon or renewable sources can be calculated differently. This usually results in lower carbon emissions than the grid average factor. However, your supplier must offer robust evidence that the electricity is low or zero carbon.
Typical Scope 3 emissions include (but are not limited to):
Waste to landfill
Water use
Purchased goods and services
Staff travel
When businesses decide to add Scope 3 emissions to their carbon footprint, the emissions covered often vary widely.
What you choose to include will depend on the purpose of your footprint, the availability of high-quality data and which emissions you have the power to influence. The key is to be realistic. It’s worth thinking carefully about which business activities have a meaningful indirect impact on GHG emissions.
After completing the carbon footprint calculation, your business may choose to have the findings verified by a third party. This can help give stakeholders confidence in the accuracy of the methodology and findings. It’s an optional step, and it will add costs. But it will also add robustness to your footprint.
As well as this, many businesses choose to report their footprint to external stakeholders – sometimes as part of a corporate social responsibility process. Again, this is a choice for each business to make based on its unique situation.
If you do intend to disclose your footprint, it’s crucial to use a robust and transparent methodology like the Greenhouse Gas Protocol.
How carbon offsetting helps you reduce your footprint
Despite your organisation’s best efforts, some residual emissions are likely to be unavoidable. Carbon offsetting helps you compensate for these emissions by joining or funding projects that remove CO2 from the atmosphere.
In a typical offsetting scheme, your business will pay an external party to avoid or remove emissions equal to those produced by its activities. These projects focus on removal of pollutants from the atmosphere, through practices like large-scale afforestation.
However, before using offsets, it’s important to cut your own CO2 emissions as much as possible with efficiency and reduction methods.
Carbon offsetting: key principles and useful tips
If you choose to use carbon offsets, it’s crucial to have a carefully considered strategy. The best offsets follow three key guiding principles:
1. Offsets should be additional, meaning they would not have happened without the offsetting scheme.
2. Offsets should be verifiable, meaning they can be audited by an independent third party.
3. Offsets should continue indefinitely, meaning they should exist for as long as it takes to remove the CO2 from the atmosphere – which can be hundreds of years.
You can also buy carbon credits from offsetting schemes through brokers and scheme organisers. But it’s important to ensure the offset schemes reduce CO2 emissions in ways that follow these same three guiding principles.
It's best to make sure that all carbon offsetting projects are professionally certified (for instance, through the Gold Standard scheme). This gives you the peace of mind that genuine carbon reduction will take place. It can also give stakeholders more confidence in the accuracy of your footprint.
Got a question?
If you’re interested in learning more about business sustainability, our team are here to help.
Cookies help Scottish Enterprise (“SE”, “us” or “we”) to provide you with a good experience when you browse our website and also allow us to improve our website. We assume that you are happy to receive all the cookies in the categories that you elect to allow, or which are strictly necessary for the operation of our website. You can change your cookie settings at any time.
Strictly necessary cookies
These are cookies that are required for the operation of our website. They include, for example, cookies that enable you to log into secure areas of our website.
Cookie name
Purpose
Expiry
DS_SEC_Necessary_AllowedCookies
This cookie is used to record your preferences in regard to accepting marketing, performance or functionality cookies across the site.
1 year
se_session
This cookie is used to provide secure access to SE website features such as address lookup and form validation/submissions.
When browser is closed
Performance and analytics cookies
They allow us to recognise and count the number of visitors and to see how visitors move around our website when they are using it. This helps us to improve the way our website works, for example, by ensuring that users are finding what they are looking for easily.
Third party service
Purpose
Where to find out more
Google Analytics
Google Analytics helps us analyse the behaviour of users on our site, such as which pages they view, how long they spend on each page, and which elements they interact with.
Hotjar helps us analyse the behaviour of users on our site by collating data into heatmaps, scrollmaps and other visual representations. It also allows us to add short surveys to the site.
Our website carries embedded ‘share’ buttons to enable users of the site to easily share articles with their friends through a number of popular social networks. These sites may set a cookie when you are also logged in to their service. Scottish Enterprise does not control the dissemination of these cookies and you should check the relevant third party website for more information about these.
Similarly, Scottish Enterprise sometimes embeds photos and video content from websites such as YouTube and Flickr. As a result, when you visit a page with content embedded from, for example, YouTube or Flickr, you may be presented with cookies from these websites. Scottish Enterprise does not control the dissemination of these cookies. Again, you should check the relevant third party website for more information about these.
Scottish Enterprise will not use cookies to collect personally identifiable information about you. However, if you wish to restrict or block the cookies which are set by Scottish Enterprise websites, or any third party websites, you can do this through your browser settings. The Help function within your browser should tell you how.
Alternatively, you may wish to visit the About cookiesopens in a new window website, which contains comprehensive information about cookies and how to restrict or delete cookies on a wide variety of browsers.
Please be aware that restricting cookies may impact on the functionality of the Scottish Enterprise website.
Scottish Enterprise and our other websites use a number of suppliers who set cookies on our behalf in order to deliver the services that they are providing. We are constantly reviewing our use of cookies and, as such, this cookies policy will be regularly renewed to include up to date information about the cookies used by our suppliers. We would highly recommend that you check this page on a regular basis.