Title: Carbon Footprints.
1Carbon Footprints.
- Nick Main, Chairman Deloitte
- 26 October 2007
2Agenda
- Drivers for Change
- Standards and Approaches
- Developing a Carbon Footprint
- Assurance
- Accounting
3Sustainability is the end game, but Climate
Change awareness is helping drive a change in
attitudes
- Matters to the world
- Over the past year there has been a huge change
in public perception (Stern, IPCC, An
Inconvenient Truth) - Some countries already have their backs against
the wall and it isn't just developing countries
eg. Australia and Water - Matters to future generations
- The decisions we make (and dont make) today will
have wide ranging impacts on future generations - Matters to consumers
- Consumer attitudes are changing and businesses
that do not recognise this will suffer
I would try to take advantage ofand capitalize
ona green movement, whether I believed in it or
not. If youre a CEO, you have no option today.
Jack Welch, April 12, 2007.
4Why you want to measure your Carbon Footprint
will determine your approach
- Regulatory requirements
- Trading
- Voluntary
- Kyoto
- NZ ETS
- Corporate brand positioning
- Strategic planning
- Product positioning
5What is a carbon footprint?
- Simply put the total amount of greenhouse gases
produced to directly and indirectly support human
activities, usually expressed in equivalent tons
of carbon dioxide (CO2). - The term carbon neutral refers to those
organisations (and individuals) that have worked
to reduce the amount of greenhouse gas emissions
their activities produce and then off-set any
unavoidable emissions. - This is an immature area and standards are still
being developed early movers can have an
advantage
6It is important to use recognised standards and
approaches when calculating carbon footprints
- The Greenhouse Gas Protocol, A Corporate
Accounting and Reporting Standard - Issued by the World Business Council for
Sustainable Development and the World Resources
Institute - Principals Relevance Completeness,
Consistency, Transparency, Accuracy - Organisational Boundaries accounting concepts
for control - Operational Boundaries, Scope 1 direct, Scope 2
electricity indirect, Scope 3 other indirect - Scope 3 relevance, reliability
- Reporting
- Double counting
- ISO 14064-1 Specification with Guidance at the
organisation level for quantification and
reporting of Greenhouse gas emissions and
removals - Based on the GHG protocol
7Measuring a carbon footprint
- Define the scope of your inventory
- Must be clear on the purpose of measuring the
carbon footprint! - Critical step in ensuring that information
captured is relevant for the purpose it is being
compiled - Measure emissions and establish a baseline
- - Collect activity data and appropriate
emissions factors - Scope 1 Direct Emissions, eg. onsite fuel
combustion - Scope 2 Indirect Emissions, eg. purchased
electricity for own use - Scope 3 (Optional) Indirect Emissions, eg.
Employee business travel - Develop targets and strategies to reduce
emissions - You need a plan to manage down your emissions.
Reductions targets can either be absolute (eg. A
10 reduction relative to the chosen baseline
year) or intensity based (eg. A percentage
reduction per unit produced, or per FTE if a
services organisation)
8Measuring a carbon footprint (cont)
- 4. Off-set unavoidable emissions
- - Organisations can then purchase carbon credits
(also known as offsets) to cover any
unavoidable emissions. Offsets are derived from
projects that are specifically implemented to
avoid emissions - - The quality of the credits is an important
issue and most reliable credits will be supported
by a certification process - 5. Independent Verification
- - Increased credibility and enhanced
stakeholder trust - - Increased senior management confidence
- Companies in New Zealand are reaping benefits of
going through the local carbon neutral
certification process provided by Landcares
carboNZero programme eg. NZ Wine Company,
Meridian -
9The Carbon Trust in the UK provides guidance on
developing product footprints
- Analyse internal product data
- Build supply chain process map
- Define Boundary Conditions and identify Data
requirements - Collect Primary and Secondary data
- Calculate emissions by supply chain process steps
- There is an increasing mood to determine
standards for product carbon footprints as a way
for consumers to make informed decisions (Tesco)
10Assurance provides a safeguard against a number
of risks associated with emissions reporting
- Financial risk arising from under reporting of
emissions - Financial risk arising from over reporting of
emissions, leading to additional costs incurred
to purchase offsets - Financial and reputation risk arising from
selling credits which have not been subject to
robust verification - Reputation risk arising from making statements of
carbon neutrality or offsetting schemes which are
later found to be green wash. For example,
claiming to have offset all emissions when the
credits purchased only offset part of the
emissions profile.
11There are several audit standards employed for
assurance
- ISO 14064
- Part 1 Specifications with guidance at the
organisational level for quantification and
reporting of Greenhouse Gas Emissions and
Removals - Part 2 Specification with guidance at the
project level for quantification, monitoring and
reporting of greenhouse gas reductions or removal
enhancements - Part 3 Specifications and guidance for
validation, verification assertions - International standard on Assurance Engagements
- Guidance provided by IAASB, designed for all
assurance engagements other than audits or
reviews of historical financial information - Attest Engagements on Greenhouse Gas Information
- Specific rules for ETS e.g. European guides,
DEFRA guidelines in the UK
12There are some challenges ahead
- Diverse and frequently changing set of standards
for accounting for GHG emissions - Diverse set of set of standards determining how
assurance services are provided and the level of
assurance given - Different and often no regulation about who can
provide this assurance - Requirements under a compliance regime (NZ ETS)
13Accounting Issues
- IFRIC 3 Withdrawn!
- Accounting for Allowances
- An (intangible?) asset
- Initial recognition fair value (or cost?)
- Free allocations
- Accounting for emissions
- A liability
- At market value
- Revenue account treatment asymmetric
- Hedging (compliance or trading)
- No netting
14- www.deloitte.com/nz/sustainability
Member of Deloitte Touche Tohmatsu