Carbon Accounting refers to the systematic recording, calculation, and allocation of greenhouse gas emissions—at the corporate, plant, line, or individual product level. In a manufacturing context, it is no longer just about a company's total emissions. The more critical question is: How much CO2 is embedded in a specific product, batch, or production order?
This granularity is no longer an academic exercise. CSRD reporting, Scope 3 data requests from OEMs, the Digital Product Passport (DPP), and the Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM) all require emissions data to be calculated at the product and batch level.
For manufacturers responding to supply chain inquiries or preparing for the Digital Product Passport, the product-based approach is the essential standard.
Several key factors contribute to a manufactured good's CO2 footprint:
The greatest methodological hurdle in product-based Carbon Accounting is allocation: how to distribute shared emissions among individual products. If a machine produces three different items in one hour, how is the energy divided? ISO 14067 recommends the following order:
For most mid-sized manufacturers, time-based or mass-based allocation is the most pragmatic entry point. Pulling machine runtimes per order from an MES provides the perfect data foundation for this.
Order-specific carbon accounting is only possible if the following data is structured and available:
Without clean data from the MES, reporting tools are forced to use estimates and industry averages, leading to inaccurate and non-verifiable results.
What is the difference between Carbon Accounting and a Carbon Footprint?
Carbon Accounting is the process (the methodology of tracking and calculating). The Carbon Footprint is the result (the actual metric/value).
What is ISO 14067?
It is the international standard for calculating the Carbon Footprint of products. It is the methodological reference for CBAM, the Battery Passport, and most OEM data requests.
How accurate must the calculations be?
For initial CSRD reports, activity-based averages are often acceptable. However, for verifiable product passports or OEM requirements, "primary data" (actual supplier data and order-specific production data) is increasingly required.
Who owns Carbon Accounting in the company?
It is often a cross-functional task: Sustainability defines the logic, Procurement provides supplier emission factors, and Production delivers the shop-floor data.