Amount of greenhouse gas emissions and/or removals produced

Type (see Help & Glossary diagram)

Impact driver

Units

tCO2e/ha or tCO2/kg LW or other units relevant to production

Example Target

Benchmark against best practice

Example approach

Estimate using internal records and tools/calculators

Example methods/guidance/data sources/references

Internal records

Notes

Amount of greenhouse gas emissions produced may be divided into scopes 1, 2 and 3 following the GHG Protocol <https://ghgprotocol.org/>. Corporate users may also wish to refer to IFRS S2 Climate-related Disclosures <https://www.ifrs.org/issued-standards/ifrs-sustainability-standards-navigator> for further guidance. Greenhouse gas removals refer to the the sequestration or draw-down of greenhouse gases from the atmosphere, for example through carbon sequestration in soils or biomass, or the capture of carbon through technological means. Usually, this is only counted if the removal is ‘additional’ to any removals which would have happened anyway, and if the greenhouse gas is permanently retained (i.e. not likely to return to the atmosphere on a specified timescale, such as the next 100 years). Greenhouse gas emissions and removals should be measured and reported in gross terms, but it may also be appropriate to measure and report in net terms, i.e. net emissions or net removals.

Type (see Help & Glossary diagram)

Impact driver

Units

tCO2e/ha or tCO2/kg LW or other units relevant to production

Example Target

Benchmark against best practice

Example approach

Estimate using using internal records, national/state/territory map data and/or remote sensing inputs

Example methods/guidance/data sources/references

TBD – please submit your suggestion at the feedback tab in the bottom right hand corner.

Notes

Amount of greenhouse gas emissions produced may be divided into scopes 1, 2 and 3 following the GHG Protocol <https://ghgprotocol.org/>. Corporate users may also wish to refer to IFRS S2 Climate-related Disclosures <https://www.ifrs.org/issued-standards/ifrs-sustainability-standards-navigator> for further guidance. Greenhouse gas removals refer to the the sequestration or draw-down of greenhouse gases from the atmosphere, for example through carbon sequestration in soils or biomass, or the capture of carbon through technological means. Usually, this is only counted if the removal is ‘additional’ to any removals which would have happened anyway, and if the greenhouse gas is permanently retained (i.e. not likely to return to the atmosphere on a specified timescale, such as the next 100 years). Greenhouse gas emissions and removals should be measured and reported in gross terms, but it may also be appropriate to measure and report in net terms, i.e. net emissions or net removals.

Type (see Help & Glossary diagram)

Impact driver

Units

tCO2e/ha or tCO2/kg LW or other units relevant to production

Example Target

Benchmark against best practice

Example approach

Measure using site-specific remote and/or in-field sensing inputs and/or lab testing

Example methods/guidance/data sources/references

TBD – please submit your suggestion at the feedback tab in the bottom right hand corner.

Notes

Amount of greenhouse gas emissions produced may be divided into scopes 1, 2 and 3 following the GHG Protocol <https://ghgprotocol.org/>. Corporate users may also wish to refer to IFRS S2 Climate-related Disclosures <https://www.ifrs.org/issued-standards/ifrs-sustainability-standards-navigator> for further guidance. Greenhouse gas removals refer to the the sequestration or draw-down of greenhouse gases from the atmosphere, for example through carbon sequestration in soils or biomass, or the capture of carbon through technological means. Usually, this is only counted if the removal is ‘additional’ to any removals which would have happened anyway, and if the greenhouse gas is permanently retained (i.e. not likely to return to the atmosphere on a specified timescale, such as the next 100 years). Greenhouse gas emissions and removals should be measured and reported in gross terms, but it may also be appropriate to measure and report in net terms, i.e. net emissions or net removals.

Last updated: 21st February 2024