Scope 1, 2 & 3 Emissions Reporting for UK Businesses
Carbon data is now part of doing business. Pressure is building from customers, procurement teams, investors and regulation.
Scope 1, 2 & 3 Emissions Reporting gives businesses a clear view of where carbon is created across operations, purchased energy and the wider value chain.
What is Scope 1, 2 and 3 Emissions Reporting?
Scope 1 and 2 Emissions
Scope 1 covers direct emissions from sources you own or control. This often includes gas boilers, company vehicles and onsite fuel use.
Scope 2 covers indirect emissions from purchased electricity, heating or cooling. For many office, warehouse and manufacturing businesses, this is a major part of the footprint.
These categories are usually the fastest place to build a reliable baseline because the data already exists in bills, meter reads and fuel records.
Scope 3 Value Chain Emissions
Scope 3 covers emissions across your wider value chain. This includes purchased goods and services, business travel, commuting, waste, transport, leased assets and use of sold products where relevant.
For many medium sized businesses, Scope 3 supply chain emissions are the largest share of total impact. They are also often the most complex to measure.
A practical approach uses available spend, supplier and activity data first, then improves accuracy over time.
Why Businesses Need to Report their Carbon Emissions?
Client, Tender and Supply Chain Requirements
Large organisations now ask suppliers for Corporate carbon reporting data as part of onboarding, tender submissions and annual reviews.
Without credible emissions data, businesses can lose opportunities or face delays in procurement processes. Reporting now helps you stay competitive and respond quickly to requests.
Regulation, Risk and Better Decisions
UK reporting expectations continue to evolve. Even where formal disclosure is not mandatory, customers and investors often expect the same standards.
Carbon reporting also highlights inefficiencies in energy use, fleet operations, purchasing and logistics. That means lower cost, reduced exposure and better planning.
What Must be Included when Reporting Carbon Emissions
Effective reporting should be clear, evidence-based and aligned to recognised standards. It should also be proportionate to the size and complexity of the business.
Organisational Boundary and Reporting Period
You need to define which entities, sites and operations are included, along with the reporting year.
Clear boundaries avoid gaps, duplication and inconsistent comparisons year to year.
Scope 1, 2 and Relevant Scope 3 Categories
Your report should include all material Scope 1 and 2 emissions and relevant Scope 3 categories.
Not every Scope 3 category applies to every business. The key is to assess materiality and focus on the areas that matter most.
Data Sources, Methodology and Results
A robust report should explain data sources, assumptions, emission factors and calculation methods.
This creates transparency, supports assurance where needed and gives confidence in the final numbers.
Our Approach to Carbon Reporting
1. Define Scope and Priorities
We identify reporting drivers, required standards and the right level of detail for your business.
This keeps the project focused and avoids unnecessary work.
2. Gather and Structure Data
We work with your internal teams to collect energy, fuel, travel, waste and supplier data.
Where data gaps exist, we use practical estimation methods and clear assumptions.
3. Calculate and Review Emissions
We calculate emissions using recognised GHG Protocol reporting methods and current factors.
Results are sense-checked, reviewed with you and refined where needed.
4. Deliver Clear Outputs and Next Steps
You receive a clear emissions report, management summary and prioritised actions to reduce impact.
That means your Carbon Emissions Reporting becomes a decision tool, not just a compliance exercise.
Related Services & Case Studies
Carbon Reporting – From Data Complexity to Clear Insight
A client had fragmented data across multiple sources, making reporting unreliable.
We consolidated Scope 1, 2 and key Scope 3 emissions into a clear, auditable dataset and produced concise reporting outputs.
The result was a trusted carbon baseline and reporting that could support decisions and meet stakeholder expectations.
Decarbonisation – Building a Practical Net Zero Pathway
A business had clear ambition but no defined plan.
We developed a prioritised roadmap based on cost, feasibility and carbon impact, supported by energy and operational insight.
This turned ambition into action, reducing emissions and embedding decarbonisation into day-to-day decisions.
Sustainability Reporting – Strengthening ESG Credibility
A growing company needed to strengthen ESG reporting under increasing pressure.
We implemented a structured framework aligned to TCFD, GRI and IFRS, including KPIs and governance improvements.
The result was clear, credible reporting that improved confidence and prepared the business for future requirements.
FAQs
What is the difference between Scope 1, 2 and 3 emissions?
Scope 1 are direct emissions from owned or controlled sources. Scope 2 are emissions from purchased energy. Scope 3 are indirect emissions across the value chain, including suppliers, travel and waste.
Do medium sized UK businesses need Scope 3 reporting?
Many do because customers, procurement frameworks and investors increasingly request it. Even where not mandatory, Scope 3 often forms the largest share of total emissions.
How long does Scope 1, 2 & 3 Emissions Reporting take?
A first baseline can often be completed in weeks, depending on data quality, business size and operational complexity. Repeat annual reporting is usually faster once systems are in place.
What standard should we use for carbon reporting?
Most businesses use the GHG Protocol reporting framework. It is widely recognised and provides a practical structure for Scope 1, 2 and 3 reporting.