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Carbon and Sustainability Accounting: An IPCC-based Approach

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Carbon and Sustainability Accounting: An IPCC-based Approach Prof. Paul Jowitt & Dr. Keith J. Baker Scottish Institute of Sustainable Technology (SISTech) – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Carbon and Sustainability Accounting: An IPCC-based Approach


1
Carbon and Sustainability Accounting An
IPCC-based Approach
  • Prof. Paul Jowitt Dr. Keith J. Baker
  • Scottish Institute of Sustainable Technology
    (SISTech)
  • Heriot-Watt University

2
Outline
  • Where to start?
  • Embodied Carbon
  • Operational Carbon
  • Sustainability Accounting
  • 5 Principles IPCC / World Resources Institute
  • Where now?

3
Where to start?
  • If you cant measure it, you cant manage it.
  • Robert Kaplan
  • Not everything that can be counted counts, and
    not everything that counts can be counted.
  • Einstein

4
Embodied Carbon
  • The carbon and other GHGs (expressed in CO2e)
    embodied in the capital of an organisation
  • i.e. everything the organisation owns.

5
Operational Carbon
  • The carbon and other GHGs (expressed in CO2e)
    emitted by an organisations operations
    (including emissions from electricity
    generation).
  • i.e. what the organisation does.

6
Sustainability Accounting
  • Also called the Social Cost of Carbon (SCC).
  • Accounting for the wider impacts of an
    organisation and its operations (environmental,
    social, economic, etc).
  • The next big challenge!

7
WRI 5 Principles
  • Relevance
  • Completeness
  • Consistency
  • Transparency
  • Accuracy
  • (World Resources Institute, The Greenhouse Gas
    Protocol, report submitted to the IPCC)

8
Relevance
  • The GHG inventory should reflect the GHG
    emissions of the organisation.
  • It should serve the decision-making needs of
    users both internal and external to the
    organisation.

9
Completeness
  • Account for and report on all GHG emission
    sources and activities within the chosen
    inventory boundary.
  • Disclose and justify any specific exclusions.

10
Consistency
  • Use consistent methodologies to allow for
    meaningful comparisons of emissions over time.
  • Document any changes to the data, inventory
    boundary, methods, or any other relevant factors
    in the time series.

11
Transparency
  • Address all relevant issues in a factual and
    coherent manner, based on a clear audit trail.
  • Disclose any relevant assumptions and make
    appropriate references to the accounting and
    calculation methodologies and data sources used.

12
Accuracy
  • Ensure that the quantification of GHG emissions
    is robust, and that uncertainties are reduced as
    far as practicable.
  • With sufficient accuracy to enable users to make
    decisions with reasonable confidence.

13
Where now?
  • We can measure most of what matters.
  • We can use what we know to drive policy.
  • We can ensure policy delivers sustainable
    outcomes.
  • Or

14
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