Scope 3 emissions are all indirect greenhouse gas emissions in a company's value chain, other than those from purchased energy. For most sectors, Scope 3 accounts for 70–95% of the total footprint — yet it is the least measured, least understood and hardest to reduce.
The 15 Scope 3 categories
The GHG Protocol Corporate Value Chain (Scope 3) Standard defines 15 categories, split into upstream and downstream.
Upstream (categories 1–8):
- Purchased goods and services
- Capital goods
- Fuel- and energy-related activities (not in Scope 1 or 2)
- Upstream transportation and distribution
- Waste generated in operations
- Business travel
- Employee commuting
- Upstream leased assets
Downstream (categories 9–15):
- Downstream transportation and distribution
- Processing of sold products
- Use of sold products
- End-of-life treatment of sold products
- Downstream leased assets
- Franchises
- Investments (financed emissions — dominant for banks and asset managers)
Which categories are material for you?
Materiality is sector-specific:
- Retail / consumer goods: categories 1, 4, 11 typically dominate.
- Manufacturing: categories 1, 11, 12.
- Banking: category 15 (financed emissions) is almost always >99%.
- Real estate: categories 1, 11, 13.
- Professional services: categories 1, 6, 7.
Under ESRS E1 and SBTi, companies must screen all 15 and report those that are material.
Measurement approach
Scope 3 measurement is a hierarchy — move up as data quality improves:
- Spend-based — €M procured × emission factor per €. Fast, low accuracy.
- Average-data — mass or units × industry-average emission factor.
- Hybrid — mix of primary and secondary data.
- Supplier-specific — actual emissions data from suppliers.
Start with spend-based to identify the material categories, then invest in primary data collection for the top 3–5.
Financed emissions (category 15)
For banks, insurers and asset managers, category 15 dominates. The PCAF Standard provides the methodology — attributing a share of each borrower's or investee's emissions based on the ratio of financing to enterprise value. Redigo Carbon supports PCAF-aligned financed emissions calculation for loan portfolios.
Reduction strategy
Scope 3 reduction is fundamentally a supply-chain engagement problem:
- Supplier programmes — cascade emission targets through procurement contracts.
- Product redesign — reduce material intensity, extend product life, design for end-of-life.
- Use-phase efficiency — where category 11 dominates (e.g. appliances, vehicles).
- Modal shift — for transport-heavy value chains.
- Financed transition — for banks, engage borrowers via Sustainability-Linked Loans.
Reporting requirements
Material Scope 3 categories must be disclosed under CSRD/ESRS E1 and ISSB IFRS S2. SBTi requires Scope 3 targets when Scope 3 is >40% of the total footprint. CDP scoring rewards granular Scope 3 disclosure.
Common pitfalls
- Skipping the screening. Companies jump to detailed measurement on non-material categories.
- Over-reliance on spend data. Spend factors have wide uncertainty; move to activity data on material categories.
- Ignoring category 11. For anyone selling energy-consuming products, use-phase often exceeds every other category combined.
Frequently asked questions
Do we have to report all 15 Scope 3 categories?+
You must screen all 15 and disclose those that are material. Immaterial categories can be excluded with a justification statement — ESRS reviewers will test this.
How accurate does Scope 3 need to be?+
PCAF and GHG Protocol both use data-quality scoring (typically 1–5). The requirement is transparency about the data quality used, and a plan to improve it — not perfection in year one.
Can we exclude Scope 3 from our SLL?+
Where Scope 3 is >40% of the footprint, most banks and SPO reviewers now expect at least one Scope 3 KPI. Excluding it undermines the credibility of the SLL structure.
This article follows Redigo Carbon's editorial standards: factual claims reference recognised frameworks — GHG Protocol, CSRD, ESRS, the Sustainability-Linked Loan Principles, the Green Loan Principles — and Redigo's opinions are labelled as such.
What this article is based on.
- GHG Protocol — Corporate Accounting and Reporting Standard — GHG Protocol
- GHG Protocol — Scope 2 Guidance — GHG Protocol
- GHG Protocol — Corporate Value Chain (Scope 3) Standard — GHG Protocol
- ISO 14064-1 — Corporate greenhouse gas inventories — ISO
- SBTi — Corporate Net-Zero Standard — Science Based Targets initiative
- IEA — World Energy Outlook & sectoral net-zero scenarios — International Energy Agency
- IPCC — Sixth Assessment Report (AR6) — IPCC
Redigo Carbon distinguishes between regulatory requirements, industry standards, best practice and Redigo's own recommendations. See our editorial standards for how we research, cite and update this content.
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