BROCHURE ● JANUARY, 2023
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The first wave of Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive (CSRD) legislation
was recently approved in the form of a wide ranging set of EU Sustainability
Reporting Standards (ESRS).
This will confront companies with an unprecedented level of data-intensive regulatory
reporting requirements, hitherto unseen outside of financial services. Given the tight timelines,
companies will need to quickly absorb the hundreds of pages of regulation and identify gaps
in existing capabilities and plans. The new regulations also make it clear that these approaches
need to be performed at a granular level using transparent and well-documented methods.
We estimate that over 10,000 companies will be caught in the 2024 reporting period expanding
to 50,000 companies by 2025.
Greenhouse gas emissions are categorised into three groups or ‘Scopes’ by the widelyused international Greenhouse Gas (GHG) Protocol.
Scope 1 covers emissions from owned or controlled sources. Scope 2 covers indirect emissions
from the generation of purchased electricity, heating and cooling. Scope 3 includes all other
upstream and downstream indirect emissions in a company’s value chain.
Calculating Scope 1 and 2 emissions is relatively straight forward. Scope 3, which comprises the
15 categories shown below, is harder, which is why Oliver Wyman's service focuses on these
emission calculations in our 3D Carbon Accounting Service.
Scope 3 is for many firms the majority of emissions and for all firms is the most complex
in terms of data requirements and methodological complexity.
The proportion of a firm’s emissions that fall into scope 3 changes dramatically based on the
industry. Note that scope 3 is material for most industries
But there is a spectrum of accuracy depending on how granularly you can perform the calculations. They can be spend-based (kgCO2e per Euro) or volume based (kgCO2e per kg, per litre and so on). Emission parameters might be generic, for example the emissions generated in the production of steel calculated on a global or country average, or they could be specific to your actual supplier.
We aim to help our clients to develop and enhance their own internal carbon accounting
capabilities drawing upon our databases and industry-specific models.
Our datasets include 100,000s of LCA studies and our models have been tailored to all
of the major industry segments.
We help gather the data needed to perform the emissions calculations, and then run
it through industry-specific mapping algorithms and models.
These capabilities need to be accurate, transparent, automated, fit-for-purpose, and tailored to your relevant industry.
Repeatable, traceable, auditable data that reveals your emissions in granular detail,
ready to meet your reporting obligations and inform wider decarbonisation strategy.
The example below shows the data associated with the repair of an aircraft engine following
a bird strike. Every task and component is identified and the emissions quantified, illustrating
the level of detail and rigour we apply.
We work with you to develop a bespoke programme that suits your business scale,
industry, reporting timeline and locations that is in harmony with your internal resources
and needs.
An example project structure is shown below, beginning with the baselining of your emissions
using assumptions and generic datasets and progressing to an accurate model via a supplier
engagement pilot and rollout.
Please get in touch with us, whether you have a general enquiry, would like to see if your firm or organization is eligible for a free pilot analysis, to book a demo, or if you'd like to join our team.
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