Scope 1, 2, and 3 Emissions Diagram & Visual Guide

A concise visual guide to mastering Scope 1, 2, and 3 emissions under the GHG Protocol for audit-ready sustainability reporting.

Aidan Gil
March 9, 2026
A phone is held up displaying an infographic

Why Share a Scope Emissions Diagram?

In the evolving landscape of 2026, understanding your carbon footprint is no longer optional; it is a fundamental business requirement. To help you master the essentials, we’ve broken down the Greenhouse Gas (GHG) Protocol’s three pillars into a brief summary with a Scope 1, 2 and 3 Diagram designed to give you an essential understanding of scope emissions, and support your climate strategy and reporting needs.

Scope 1, 2, 3 Emissions Diagram & Visual Guide

Infographic summarizing Scope 1, 2, and 3 emissions. Scope 1 (Direct) includes owned fuel combustion, fugitive emissions, and company vehicles. Scope 2 (Indirect) covers purchased electricity, heating, and cooling. Scope 3 (Value Chain) includes upstream raw materials and downstream product use/waste, noting it accounts for over 70% of a typical company's carbon footprint.

Scope 1: Direct Emissions (The Stuff You Control)

Scope 1, as seen in the diagram above, covers greenhouse gases released directly from sources that your organization owns or controls. If the combustion happens on your property or in your vehicles, it belongs here.

  • Fuel Combustion: Emissions from gas boilers, furnaces, or heaters used for on-site heating and manufacturing.
  • Company Vehicles: Fuel burned by cars, vans, or trucks owned or leased by the business.
  • Fugitive Emissions: Common leaks from air conditioning units or refrigeration systems.
  • Process Emissions: CO2 released during industrial chemical processes, such as cement or chemical production.

Scope 2: Indirect Emissions (The Energy You Buy)

Scope 2, as seen in the diagram above, accounts for emissions generated by the production of energy that you purchase and consume. While the smoke physically leaves a power plant elsewhere, the emissions are attributed to you because you bought the power to run your facility.

  • Purchased Electricity: The power used to keep your lights, servers, and computers running.
  • Purchased Heating & Cooling: Steam, chilled water, or heat provided by a local utility provider.
  • Key Distinction: Unlike Scope 1, these emissions happen at the source of generation, not at your facility.

Scope 3: Value Chain Emissions - Direct and Indirect (The ‘Everything Else’)

Scope 3, as seen in the diagram, is the heavy hitter, often accounting for over 70% of a company’s total carbon footprint. It encompasses all indirect emissions that occur in your value chain, divided into upstream and downstream activities.

  • Upstream (Supply Chain): Includes purchased goods and services, employee commuting, business travel, and the extraction of raw materials.
  • Downstream (Product Use): Covers how customers use your products (like the electricity to run an appliance) and how they are disposed of at the end of their life.
  • Strategic Asset: Identifying hotspots in Scope 3 can reveal hidden supply chain costs and drive significant operational efficiencies.

Why Full-Scope Reporting Is Mandatory in 2026

Reporting beyond Scopes 1 and 2 has become the global standard for a few critical reasons:

  1. Regulation: Laws like California’s SB 253 and the EU’s CSRD now make Scope 3 reporting a legal necessity for many.
  2. Investor/Consumer Demand: ESG funds require full transparency to assess a company’s long-term management quality and viability.
  3. Brand Integrity: Consumers increasingly demand radical transparency regarding the true environmental cost of the products they buy.

Ready to Simplify Your Carbon Accounting?

Don’t let the complexity of Scope 3 or the spreadsheet era hold your business back. Aclymate offers the all-in-one climate solution specifically designed for businesses without a full-time sustainability professional on their team.

By combining automated data ingestion with the expertise of our Carbon Bookkeepers, we help you move from manual data entry to audit-ready reporting. Whether you need to satisfy investor demands, meet new regulatory requirements like SB 253, or build trust with your customers, Aclymate provides the infrastructure you need to win, and stay ahead of the curve and competition.

Take the next step in your sustainability journey today:

FAQs

What is the main difference between the three Scopes?

  • Scope 1 are direct emissions from sources you own (like company vehicles).
  • Scope 2 are indirect emissions from energy you purchase, like electricity.
  • Scope 3 covers all other indirect emissions in your entire value chain, from raw materials to customer use.

Is Scope 3 reporting actually mandatory?

  • Yes, new regulations like California’s SB 253 and the EU’s CSRD are making Scope 3 a legal requirement for many businesses.
  • Many investors and enterprise customers now require this data to assess long-term risk.

Does Scope 3 lead to 'double counting' of emissions?

  • No. While one company’s Scope 3 is another’s Scope 1, tracking both ensures every gram of COis accounted for by someone in the chain.

How can a mid-market company measure Scope 3 if they don't have perfect data?

  • You don't need a meter on every factory. You can use spend-based modeling or average-data methods to create highly accurate estimates.

Where should a business start with carbon accounting?

  • Start by setting a base year and gathering l like utility bills (Scope 2) and fuel receipts (Scope 1).
  • Engage your top 10 suppliers early to begin the Scope 3 data collection process.
Aidan Gil
March 9, 2026

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