What is Scope 3 emissions?
The ripple effect
The upstream story
- • Manufacturing the products you purchase
- • People travelling to work each day
- • Business trips and work-related travel
- • Deliveries arriving at your premises
- • Disposing of your waste
The downstream story
- • Customers using what you've provided
- • Transportation getting products to customers
- • What happens when products reach end-of-life
- • Your products becoming components in other products
Why Scope 3 feels overwhelming
💡 Key takeaway
Scope 3 represents the largest portion of most organisations' footprints but requires influence rather than control. Success depends on collaboration with suppliers and customers, making stakeholder engagement crucial for meaningful reduction.
Seeing the complete picture
Want to understand how all three scopes work together? Learn about complete emissions accounting for your organisation's full greenhouse gas picture.
Related carbon accounting topics
- AASB S2 requirements: Australian sustainability reporting standards ASRS
Learn about Australian sustainability reporting requirements
- AASB S2 frequently asked questions
Common questions about AASB S2 compliance and requirements
- What is Scope 1 emissions? Direct greenhouse gas emissions explained
Understand direct greenhouse gas emissions from your operations
Ready to navigate Scope 3 complexity?
Our carbon accounting program helps teams navigate this complexity with practical, collaborative approaches to meaningful climate action.
- Learn about complete emissions accounting to understand how all three scopes fit together.
- Need help with value chain emissions? Let's chat about collaborative approaches to Scope 3 measurement and action.