The greenhouse gases produced by customers and supply chains typically account for more than 70 percent of a companyâs carbon footprint. This reality means companies cannot credibly pledge to address their environmental impact without tackling this massive source of emissions, known as Scope 3.
At the same time, problematic data issues attached to Scope 3 emissions have become legendary while some have argued companies have limited ability to influence their value chains anyway. The complexity of the topic, unsurprisingly, has proven to be a barrier for some companies trying to set net-zero targets.
But the Science Based Targets initiative, the worldâs largest verifier of corporate climate goals, said we may be looking at the issue the wrong way.
In a paper published Tuesday, SBTi put forward a possible new approach aimed at enabling companies to âbetter assess and communicate their climate performanceâ in a way that goes beyond simply disclosing aggregate Scope 3 emissions.
Specifically, SBTi is exploring how to include new metrics that evaluate the alignment of a companyâs procurement and revenue generation with global climate goals. Corporate Scope 3 targets âcan serve as a powerful mechanism to integrate our global climate goals into the core of the economyâ by focusing on how companies source goods and produce income, SBTi said.
The idea is to measure how âoperational expenditure is directed towards and revenue is derived from entities, activities, commodities, products and services that have achieved a level of emissions performance compatible with reaching net-zero emissions,â SBTi said.
âTackling supply chain emissions is conceptually more difficult than tackling direct emissions within a company,â said Holger Hoffmann-Riem, who works for the Swiss nonprofit Go for Impact and sits on SBTiâs Technical Advisory Group. âThe main challenge is not to lower Scope 3 emissions, but rather to make sure that all suppliers reduce their own direct emissions as quickly as possible.â
To get on the path to achieving the goals of the Paris climate accord, SBTi said itâs assessing both emissions-based metrics that measure âimpactâ and non-emissions-based metrics that track âoutcomes.â
But in a seemingly unlikely admission from a climate group with science in its name, the SBTi said climate science may not hold all the answers.
âWhile science can tell us the timeline and the shape of the emissions curve, it may not provide the requisite understanding of how companies should act to address their emissions,â SBTI said. âFor many outcome metrics, such as the share of procurement spend going to suppliers with science-based targets, or the share of high-emitting commodities that are net-zero certified, the benchmarks for determining future performance levels may not be directly derived from climate science.â
Currently, Scope 3 emissions, which are measured in tons of carbon dioxide equivalent, or tCO2e, represent an aggregate of 15 different categories of emissions sources from purchased goods and services to business travel. Exploring new metrics to capture that nuance might be impactful, said Gilles Dufrasne, policy lead on global carbon markets at Carbon Market Watch.
âSaying that a car manufacturer must have a certain percentage of battery electric vehicle sales, or a steel manufacturer must have a defined amount of green steel would help us move away from the very coarse metric of tCO2e,â Dufrasne said. âThe idea of complementing the greenhouse gas targets with other, sector-specific metrics is really interesting and promising.â
SBTiâs Scope 3 paper was released as part of a broader package of research that will inform an update of the groupâs Corporate Net Zero Standard, its closely followed framework for corporate decarbonisation. (In a separate report the group said it found various types of carbon credits to be âineffective in delivering their intended mitigation outcomes.â)
Designing more appropriate metrics is just one of a series of options SBTi said itâs considering to enhance Scope 3 target setting. Other ideas include a âmore nuanced approachâ to defining the boundaries of targets to ensure companies prioritise action on âthe most climate-relevant activities,â as well as a more thoughtful consideration of the extent of a companyâs influence over emissions sources.
The publication of the reports follows several tumultuous months at SBTi since its board in April appeared to sanction a wider use of carbon credits to offset Scope 3 emissions. That went against its long-held position and threatened to damage the groupâs credibility.
For Doreen Stabinsky, professor of global environmental politics at College of the Atlantic, who is also a member of SBTiâs Technical Council, the Scope 3 paper is a welcome offering.
âItâs a refreshing, science-based approach, and 180 degrees different from the message the SBTi board was attempting to send in their April communique,â she said.âThe answer to Scope 3 emissions is not âitâs so difficult, so letâs just use carbon credits,ââ Stabinsky said. âItâs actually âletâs get much more clarity on the problems with decarbonisation in different value chains and choose approaches that address them specifically.ââ
By Alastair Marsh.