Written by Field Name
Report Date
5 min read
Written by Fair Supply
April 16, 2026
5 min read

Infrastructure assets—whether in transport, energy networks, water systems, or social infrastructure are long lived, capital intensive, and deeply embedded in the economy. They also carry significant and often underreported carbon footprints, both during construction and across decades of operation.
As governments and regulators intensify their focus on climate risk, infrastructure operators are facing a new reality: carbon emissions reporting is no longer optional. From 2025–2026, mandatory disclosures under frameworks such as the Australian Sustainability Reporting Standards and AASB S2 will require infrastructure companies to provide detailed, auditable climate information.
At the same time, emissions transparency is increasingly tied to access to capital, project approvals, and contract awards. For infrastructure companies, reporting is not just about compliance it is about project viability and long-term value.
This guide outlines what infrastructure companies need to know, the challenges they face, and how to prepare for the 2026 regulatory landscape.
Many infrastructure projects are funded or supported by government entities. As a result, they are subject to heightened scrutiny around environmental and social impacts.
Transparent carbon reporting is now a key requirement for:
Institutional investors are increasingly allocating capital based on ESG performance. Infrastructure assets, often held in long-term portfolios, must demonstrate:
Carbon performance is becoming a differentiator in procurement processes. Infrastructure companies are increasingly required to:
Large infrastructure projects attract public attention. Poor emissions performance or lack of transparency can lead to:
Construction is one of the most emissions-intensive phases of an infrastructure asset’s lifecycle. Key sources include:
Embodied carbon in materials is a major contributor to lifecycle emissions. Steel and concrete, in particular, have high emissions intensity and are often sourced through complex global supply chains.
Transporting materials, equipment, and personnel contributes to both direct and indirect emissions, particularly for large-scale or remote projects.
Once operational, infrastructure assets continue to generate emissions through:
Scope 3 emissions across supply chains covering materials, contractors, and services—are often the largest and least visible component of total emissions.
From 2026, infrastructure companies will be required to comply with enhanced climate disclosure obligations under AASB S2.
Companies must report across all emissions scopes:
For infrastructure, Scope 3 emissions—particularly embodied carbon—are often the most material.
Organisations must identify and disclose:
Infrastructure companies must demonstrate how they will:
Boards and executive teams must show:
Infrastructure projects involve numerous contractors, subcontractors, and suppliers. This creates challenges in:
Emissions data is often managed at the project level, leading to:
Infrastructure assets operate over decades, requiring:
Many suppliers lack the capability or resources to provide accurate emissions data, resulting in:
Contractors must be embedded into the reporting process. Leading organisations are:
Granular tracking is essential. Companies should:
To achieve enterprise-wide reporting, organisations must:
Climate reporting must be embedded into governance structures:
As reporting requirements become more complex, infrastructure companies require solutions that can handle multi-project environments, complex supply chains, and long asset lifecycles.
Fair Supply provides a comprehensive platform designed to meet these needs.
Fair Supply enables:
The platform provides:
Fair Supply allows organisations to:
With increasing assurance requirements, Fair Supply delivers:
In addition to technology, Fair Supply provides:
Carbon emissions reporting is now a critical requirement for infrastructure companies. With mandatory disclosures coming into effect from 2025–2026, organisations must act quickly to build robust, scalable, and auditable reporting capabilities.
The implications go beyond compliance. Emissions transparency is increasingly linked to funding, procurement outcomes, and long-term asset value.
Infrastructure companies that invest early in integrated systems, strong governance, and effective contractor engagement will be better positioned to succeed in this evolving landscape.
Fair Supply supports this transition—providing the tools, data, and expertise required to deliver end-to-end, audit-ready carbon reporting across complex infrastructure portfolios.