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A new study estimates most corporations are not reporting the full scope of their carbon footprint, with many claiming to be 鈥榞reen鈥 despite a lack of reporting on Scope 3 key categories.聽聽

Scope 3 emissions are the emissions upstream and downstream of companies鈥 operations. They include 15 categories, from business travel to product use. For example, when someone uses products that emit carbon, like driving a car or burning gas at home, those emissions are attributed to car companies鈥 or gas companies鈥 Scope 3 emissions.聽 聽聽

The latest research, published last week in , is an industry-university collaboration between climate risk analysis firm (EMMI) and researchers at 国产精品 Sydney, Griffith University and the University of Otago.聽

鈥淏y analysing reported emissions from over 1200 companies, we found most companies are under-reporting their Scope 3 emissions by up to 44 per cent,鈥 says Dr Ben McNeil, an Adjunct Fellow at the 国产精品 Climate Change Research Centre and co-founder of EMMI.聽聽

鈥淭his is because companies typically focus on emission categories that don鈥檛 generate huge amounts of emissions, like business travel, while avoiding the carbon emissions involved in carbon intensive categories like 'product use'.鈥澛犅

These results reveal that the majority of Scope 3 emissions disclosed from companies are not captured and are too low.聽 聽聽

Finance and Economics Professor Ivan Diaz-Rainey, a leading international expert in climate and sustainable finance from Griffith University, says firms were being strategic in their Scope 3 reporting, and this could underpin greenwashing.聽聽

鈥淪cope 3 emissions account for the highest proportion of total emissions, and it鈥檚 the least likely scope to be reported on,鈥 says Professor Diaz-Rainey.聽

"Scope 3 emissions often dominate a company's total carbon footprint, particularly for financial institutions, energy, utilities, mining and materials companies,鈥 Dr McNeil says.聽

鈥淭he problem is that Scope 3 is difficult to quantify but critical to understanding how companies are financially exposed to carbon pricing as markets shift away from carbon-intensive products. This research aims to better understand and predict emissions 鈥 including Scope 3 鈥 to give greater coverage and accuracy for investors.鈥澛犅

Increasing pressure to report CO2 emissions聽

Though CO2 reporting is currently voluntary for most firms, corporations are under pressure from investors, regulators, politicians, non-profit organisations and other stakeholders to disclose and reduce greenhouse gas emissions (GHG).聽

The standard for greenhouse gas accounting, the Greenhouse Gas Protocol, is used worldwide to measure a company鈥檚 total carbon footprint with three levels of reporting.聽聽

  1. The first measures the GHG emissions directly produced by a company during business activities (such as emissions from a corporate fleet).聽聽
  2. The second measures emissions associated with the production of energy which is purchased from an external supplier (such as emissions produced by electricity providers).聽聽
  3. The third (Scope 3) measures indirect emissions not already accounted for and includes upstream and downstream emissions from a company鈥檚 full value chain, such as emissions produced by customers as a result of a company鈥檚 product (downstream) and emissions produced in the manufacture of a company鈥檚 equipment (upstream).聽聽

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鈥淐ompanies have a great incentive to better their scope 1 and 2 emissions because direct energy efficiency leads to financial savings,鈥 says Prof. Diaz-Rainey. 鈥淎n oil and gas firm may pump oil out of the ground and in doing so, may use vehicles and electricity, but what really counts in terms of the impact of an oil and gas firm is how the end users are emitting GHG as a result of purchasing the firm鈥檚 product.聽聽

鈥淔or the oil and gas firm, the Scope 3 emissions are emitted by people who purchase the oil and use it in their cars to drive around or take a flight. If an oil and gas firm only report on Scope 1 and 2, we are missing most of the story.鈥澛

Predicting Scope 3 emissions using machine learning聽

In this study, researchers used machine learning to improve the prediction of corporate carbon footprints, which provided an indication of where policymakers and regulators should concentrate their efforts for greater disclosure.聽

鈥淚n this research we wanted to understand if we could use machine learning algorithms to predict Scope 3 emissions for any company using just financial data,鈥 says Dr McNeil.聽 聽

The research team discovered that firms chose to report on particular categories within Scope 3 鈥 and they often report on categories which are easier to calculate, instead of categories which really matter.聽

鈥淔or example, only 24 per cent of companies reported 鈥楿se of Sold Products鈥 emissions which we found make up 63 per cent of Scope 3 emissions 鈥 by far the most important category,鈥 says Dr McNeil.聽

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鈥淚t is interesting to see the Scope 3 categories firms choose to report on are not always the most material, such as travel emissions,鈥 says University of Otago Research Fellow Dr Quyen Nguyen.聽

鈥淭his may be because it is difficult to collect data for other relevant and material categories, such as the use of products and processing of sold products. But it could also mean that the true environmental impact of a firm is being disguised. Machine learning can help predict individual Scope 3 categories, but it is no magic bullet. What we need is for firms to report more Scope 3 categories.鈥澛犅

Although significant uncertainty remains, Dr McNeil explains how the machine learning approach to estimating Scope 3 emissions has proven valuable to EMMI in quantifying climate risk for investments.聽

鈥淭his is important in understanding how a company is at risk of financial repercussions in a net-zero world, where carbon is legislated and priced,鈥 Dr McNeil says.聽

However, firms are reporting more categories over time, and some jurisdictions are moving towards mandatory disclosures, driven by the Task Force on Climate-Related Financial Disclosures (TCFD), and there is increasing pressure to make Scope 3 reporting mandatory.聽

鈥淔uture work in this area will focus on better methods to forecast company emissions聽to help check and verify decarbonisation plans, and evaluate whether they are achievable,鈥 says Dr McNeil.聽