What Is a Carbon Footprint — and Why Measure It?
A corporate carbon footprint is the total greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions an organisation is responsible for, expressed in a single comparable unit: tonnes of carbon dioxide equivalent (tCO2e). The “equivalent” matters — methane, nitrous oxide and refrigerant gases are converted to their CO2-warming equivalent so everything sums into one number.
You measure it for three reasons that increasingly converge. First, regulation: frameworks like the EU’s CSRD now require many companies to disclose emissions. Second, commercial pressure: customers and investors ask for your footprint, and large buyers increasingly require it from suppliers. Third, management: you cannot reduce what you don’t measure — a baseline is the prerequisite for any credible reduction target.
The challenge for most organisations starting out is that carbon platforms are expensive and a full implementation is premature before you even know the shape of your footprint. This free calculator solves that first-step problem: it builds a defensible GHG Protocol-aligned baseline in Excel so you understand your emissions before you invest in a platform.
📊 In one line: A carbon footprint converts every greenhouse gas your organisation emits into one number — tonnes of CO2 equivalent (tCO2e) — split across three “scopes” so you can see where it comes from and where to cut it.
Scope 1, 2 & 3 — The Three Emission Scopes Explained
The GHG Protocol Corporate Standard divides emissions into three scopes based on how directly you control them. Understanding the split is the key to carbon accounting.
| Scope | What it covers | Typical examples |
|---|---|---|
| Scope 1 Direct | Emissions from sources you own or control | Natural gas boilers, company vehicle fuel, on-site furnaces, refrigerant leaks |
| Scope 2 Indirect — energy | Emissions from the energy you purchase | Purchased electricity, steam, heating and cooling |
| Scope 3 Indirect — value chain | All other emissions across your value chain, up and downstream | Purchased goods, business travel, employee commuting, waste, use of sold products, logistics |
⚡ Scope 3 is usually the big one
For most organisations, Scope 3 — the value chain — represents the large majority of total emissions, often 70–90%. It is also the hardest to measure because the data sits with suppliers, not on your own meters. Don’t be surprised when your Scope 3 dwarfs Scopes 1 and 2; that’s normal, and it’s where the real reduction opportunity lives.
Scope 2 has two accounting methods you’ll see referenced: location-based (the average grid emissions where you operate) and market-based (reflecting the specific electricity contracts or renewable certificates you’ve purchased). The calculator handles both so you can report each, as the GHG Protocol Scope 2 Guidance expects.
What’s Inside the Carbon Footprint Calculator
One Excel file builds your full three-scope baseline. Enter activity data; the calculator applies emission factors and returns CO2e.
- All three scopes in one file — Scope 1, Scope 2 (location- and market-based), and the Scope 3 categories that matter most for typical organisations
- Activity-data inputs — enter what you actually have: litres of fuel, kWh of electricity, km of travel, tonnes of waste, spend on purchased goods
- Built-in emission factors — apply standard factors to convert activity data into CO2e automatically
- Automatic totals & charts — CO2e per scope, per category and per site, with charts showing where your emissions concentrate
- Baseline-ready — structured as the starting point for a CSRD or SBTi reduction baseline
- No macros — works in Excel and LibreOffice
How to Use the Calculator
- Set your boundary & period — Decide which sites, entities and time period (usually a financial year) the footprint covers. Consistency here is what makes year-on-year comparison valid.
- Gather activity data — Pull fuel and gas bills (Scope 1), electricity bills (Scope 2), and value-chain data such as travel records, supplier spend, and waste volumes (Scope 3).
- Enter the numbers — Type your activity data into each scope’s input section. The calculator applies the emission factors automatically.
- Read the results — Totals and charts show CO2e by scope and category. The picture of where your emissions concentrate usually surprises first-time users.
- Lock your baseline — Save this year as your baseline. Future years measured the same way show whether your reduction efforts are working.
✅ Tip: Start with the data you already have. You don’t need perfect Scope 3 data to begin — an estimate built from supplier spend is a legitimate starting point under the GHG Protocol’s spend-based method, and far better than no Scope 3 at all. Refine accuracy in later years.
Emission Factors — How Activity Data Becomes CO2e
An emission factor is the conversion rate between an activity and its emissions — for example, “kg CO2e per litre of diesel” or “kg CO2e per kWh of grid electricity.” The calculation is always the same shape:
Emissions (CO2e) = Activity data × Emission factor
Burn 1,000 litres of diesel, multiply by the diesel emission factor, and you get the CO2e. Use 50,000 kWh of electricity, multiply by your grid’s factor, and you get your Scope 2. The calculator stores standard factors so you enter only the activity data.
| Activity | Unit entered | Becomes |
|---|---|---|
| Natural gas | kWh or m³ | Scope 1 CO2e |
| Company fleet diesel/petrol | litres or km | Scope 1 CO2e |
| Purchased electricity | kWh | Scope 2 CO2e |
| Business air travel | passenger-km | Scope 3 CO2e |
| Purchased goods & services | spend or mass | Scope 3 CO2e |
| Waste | tonnes by type | Scope 3 CO2e |
Emission factors are published by bodies such as the IEA, national environment agencies, and the GHG Protocol, and they change over time as grids decarbonise. Keep a note of which factor set and year you used — auditors and assurance providers will ask, and it’s essential for valid year-on-year comparison.
Why This Matters Now — CSRD, SBTi & Disclosure
Carbon measurement has moved from voluntary to mandatory for a growing population of companies, and a credible baseline is the entry point to every framework.
| Framework | What it needs | Role of your baseline |
|---|---|---|
| CSRD / ESRS E1 | Disclosure of Scope 1, 2 and material Scope 3 emissions | The baseline is the foundation of the E1 climate disclosure |
| SBTi targets | Science-based reduction targets from a base year | You cannot set a target without a measured base-year footprint |
| CDP disclosure | Annual emissions reporting by scope | The scope split maps directly to CDP’s structure |
| Customer requirements | Supplier emissions data for others’ Scope 3 | Your footprint is your customers’ Scope 3 input |
For the regulatory picture, see our CSRD guide and AI in carbon accounting 2026. When you outgrow a spreadsheet — typically when Scope 3 supplier data and audit-grade traceability become the constraint — the natural next step is a dedicated platform such as Watershed, SINAI Technologies, or Persefoni.
Five Common Carbon Accounting Mistakes
- Ignoring Scope 3. Reporting only Scopes 1 and 2 captures a fraction of most footprints. Even a rough spend-based Scope 3 estimate is far more honest than leaving it blank.
- Double-counting. One activity counted in two categories inflates your total. Each emission belongs in exactly one scope and one category.
- Inconsistent boundaries year to year. If you add sites or change methods between years, your “reduction” may be an artefact. Keep the boundary stable or restate the baseline.
- Not recording emission-factor sources. Auditors will ask which factors and which year you used. Undocumented factors undermine the whole footprint.
- Mixing location- and market-based Scope 2. Report both methods clearly and separately — don’t blend them into one number.
💡 The bottom line: You can’t set a reduction target, answer a customer questionnaire, or file a CSRD disclosure without first knowing your number. This free calculator gives you a defensible, GHG Protocol-aligned baseline across all three scopes — the essential first step before any carbon platform investment.
Related Resources & Tools
- What is CSRD? — the disclosure framework your baseline feeds
- AI in Carbon Accounting 2026 — where carbon software is heading
- Watershed — enterprise carbon platform for Scope 3 depth and audit-grade data
- SINAI Technologies — decarbonisation modelling with MACC and financial analysis
- Persefoni — carbon accounting with PCAF financed-emissions depth
- Normative — science-based carbon accounting for the full value chain
Provided free by AiGreenTools for educational and operational use. It aligns to the GHG Protocol Corporate Standard but does not constitute assured or audited emissions data — always validate factors, boundaries and methodology against current guidance and your assurance requirements. Created by AiGreenTools.
Corporate Carbon Footprint Calculator
Estimate your Scope 1, 2 & 3 GHG emissions in minutes — GHG Protocol methodology
