Reporting Standards

Scope 3 Emissions Reporting Guide

February 25, 2026 CarbonSync Team 8 min read
Scope 3 Emissions Reporting Guide

For most enterprises, Scope 3 emissions represent the largest and most complex portion of their carbon footprint. Yet they remain the least well-reported category in corporate sustainability disclosures. Regulatory pressure is changing that fast. The EU's Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive (CSRD), CDP scoring methodology, and investor ESG frameworks all now demand credible Scope 3 data. This guide explains what Scope 3 reporting entails, which categories to prioritise, and how to build a reporting process that holds up to scrutiny.

What Scope 3 Emissions Are

The GHG Protocol Corporate Standard defines Scope 3 as all indirect emissions that occur in a company's value chain, both upstream and downstream, that are not covered by Scope 1 (direct emissions) or Scope 2 (purchased energy). The GHG Protocol further divides Scope 3 into 15 distinct categories, spanning everything from purchased goods and services to the end-of-life treatment of products sold.

Scope 3 emissions are indirect by definition: the organisation does not own or control the activities that produce them. This makes them harder to measure but does not make them optional. For a consumer goods company, over 80 percent of total emissions typically sit in Scope 3. For a financial institution, the figure often exceeds 99 percent once financed emissions are counted.

The 15 Scope 3 Categories

# Category Direction Typical Materiality
1Purchased goods and servicesUpstreamHigh
2Capital goodsUpstreamMedium
3Fuel- and energy-related activitiesUpstreamMedium
4Upstream transportation and distributionUpstreamHigh
5Waste generated in operationsUpstreamLow
6Business travelUpstreamMedium
7Employee commutingUpstreamLow
8Upstream leased assetsUpstreamLow-Med
9Downstream transportation and distributionDownstreamHigh
10Processing of sold productsDownstreamMedium
11Use of sold productsDownstreamHigh
12End-of-life treatment of sold productsDownstreamMedium
13Downstream leased assetsDownstreamLow
14FranchisesDownstreamLow-Med
15Investments (financed emissions)DownstreamHigh (financial)

Materiality Assessment: Where to Start

Attempting to measure all 15 categories simultaneously is neither practical nor required by most frameworks. The GHG Protocol requires companies to include all relevant categories but allows a materiality-based approach to determine relevance. A category is material if it is likely to constitute a significant portion of total Scope 3 emissions or is important to stakeholders for other reasons.

The standard approach is a screening exercise in the first year:

  1. Spend-based estimation: Apply industry-average emission intensity factors to financial spend data across categories to identify which account for the most estimated emissions.
  2. Sector benchmarking: Compare category materiality against industry peers using sector-specific guidance (the GHG Protocol publishes sector-specific guidance for multiple industries).
  3. Stakeholder relevance: Identify categories that investors, customers, or regulators have specifically flagged in your sector's disclosure expectations.

The output is a prioritised category list that focuses data collection effort where it will have the most impact on accuracy.

Practical note: For most manufacturing, logistics, and retail businesses, Categories 1, 4, and 11 (purchased goods, upstream transport, and use of sold products) collectively account for 70-85 percent of total Scope 3 emissions. Start there before expanding to secondary categories.

Data Collection Methods

The GHG Protocol recognises a hierarchy of data quality for Scope 3 calculations. From highest to lowest quality:

Mature Scope 3 programmes typically use a blend: primary data for top-20 suppliers by spend (covering most of Category 1), industry averages for the long tail, and spend-based methods only for de minimis categories.

Supplier Engagement

Building a primary data collection programme requires systematic supplier engagement. The elements that determine success are:

Reporting Requirements Under CSRD

Under the EU Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive and the European Sustainability Reporting Standards (ESRS), companies in scope are required to disclose Scope 3 emissions across all material categories. The ESRS E1 standard specifies that the Scope 3 inventory must be consistent with the GHG Protocol Corporate Value Chain Standard, which is the dedicated Scope 3 accounting and reporting standard.

Key ESRS E1 requirements relevant to Scope 3:

Common Pitfalls

Organisations that struggle with Scope 3 reporting typically encounter the same issues:

Building Toward Annual Reporting

Scope 3 reporting is a multi-year programme, not a one-time exercise. In year one, most organisations establish the inventory boundary, complete the materiality screening, and produce a spend-based estimate for all material categories. In year two, they shift material categories to primary or secondary data sources and launch supplier engagement for top-tier suppliers. By year three, the programme has enough historical data to establish a credible base year and set reduction targets.

The investment in building this programme pays off in two ways: it reduces regulatory risk as mandatory disclosure requirements tighten, and it identifies the highest-leverage opportunities for actual emissions reduction in the supply chain.

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