
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, 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.
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.
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.
Reporting beyond Scopes 1 and 2 has become the global standard for a few critical reasons:
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:
What is the main difference between the three Scopes?
Is Scope 3 reporting actually mandatory?
Does Scope 3 lead to 'double counting' of emissions?
How can a mid-market company measure Scope 3 if they don't have perfect data?
Where should a business start with carbon accounting?