For Companies and Organizations

Greenhouse Gas Protocol provides the world's most widely used greenhouse gas accounting standards for companies.

GHG Protocol standards and guidance enables companies to measure, manage and report greenhouse gas emissions from their operations and value chains.

In 2016, at least 92% of Fortune 500 companies responding to CDP used GHG Protocol directly or indirectly through a program based on GHG Protocol.

Corporate Value Chain (Scope 3) Standard Online Course

A convenient online training on accounting for emissions throughout the corporate value chain.

Related standards

Corporate Standard

The GHG Protocol Corporate Accounting and Reporting Standard provides requirements and guidance for companies and other organizations, such as NGOs, government agencies, and universities, that are preparing a corporate-level GHG emissions inventory.

Best for:
Companies and Organizations
Online learning product:

Product Standard

The Product Standard can be used to understand the full life cycle emissions of a product and focus efforts on the greatest GHG reduction opportunities. This is the first step towards more sustainable products.

Best for:
Companies and Organizations

Related guidance

The Scope 2 Guidance standardizes how corporations measure emissions from purchased or acquired electricity, steam, heat, and cooling (called "scope 2 emissions").

Scope 2 Guidance

The Scope 2 Guidance standardizes how corporations measure emissions from purchased or acquired electricity, steam, heat, and cooling (called "scope 2 emissions").

Best for:
Companies and Organizations
Online learning product:
The GHG Protocol Agricultural Guidance is a supplement to GHG Protocol Corporate Standard and covers all agricultural subsectors, including livestock, crop production, and land use change.

Agriculture Guidance

The GHG Protocol Agricultural Guidance, a supplement to the Corporate Standard, is the first ever global guidance to measure GHG emissions for the agriculture sector. It covers all agricultural subsectors, including livestock, crop production, and land use change.

Best for:
Companies and Organizations
Online learning product:

Estimating and Reporting Avoided Emissions

This paper provides a neutral framework for estimating and disclosing both positive and negative impacts of products and recommendations for companies to improve the credibility and consistency of claims they make about the comparative greenhouse gas impacts of their products.

Best for:
Companies and Organizations
Online learning product:

Portfolio Carbon Initiative

Portfolio Carbon Intiative, a partnership with Sustainable Finance Observatory, World Resources Institute and UNEP Finance Initiative, provides guidance for asset owners and banks to properly assess the climate impact from investing and lending activities.

Best for:
Financial Institutions
The first-ever comprehensive global guidance for measuring and reporting the potential greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions from the fossil fuel reserves held by oil, coal and gas companies.

Potential Emissions from Fossil Fuel Reserves

The first-ever global guidance for measuring and reporting the potential greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions from the fossil fuel reserves held by oil, coal and gas companies.

Best for:
Fossil Fuel Companies

Related News

Many Companies Inaccurately Estimate the Climate Benefits of Their Products

Cold-water laundry detergents, fuel-saving tires, energy-efficient ball bearings, emissions-saving data centers. Corporations are increasingly claiming that their goods and services reduce emissions. But there is a big problem: These avoided emissions claims are often unverifiable or inaccurate.

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