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

For most organisations, Scope 3 emissions represent the largest share of total greenhouse gas emissions, often accounting for 70–90% of the overall footprint. They are also the most complex to calculate, as they span upstream suppliers, logistics providers, customers and end users.
Unlike Scope 1 and Scope 2 emissions, Scope 3 emissions rely heavily on external data, estimates and assumptions. This makes them harder to measure, validate and audit yet increasingly critical as investors, regulators and customers expect transparency across the full value chain.
This guide explains how to calculate Scope 3 emissions in practice. It sets out the main calculation methods, when to use each, common mistakes to avoid, and a clear step-by-step workflow aligned with the GHG Protocol. It also explains why Fair Supply’s system delivers more reliable and defensible Scope 3 results.
Calculating Scope 3 emissions is no longer optional for many organisations.
Beyond compliance, Scope 3 calculations enable practical decision-making such as prioritising supplier engagement, informing procurement choices, and identifying emissions hotspots across the value chain.
Before selecting any calculation method, organisations should align on a few core principles:
Scope 3 accounting is an iterative process. The goal is not perfection in year one, but continuous improvement over time.
The GHG Protocol defines 15 Scope 3 emissions categories, covering upstream and downstream activities. These include:
In practice, organisations should focus first on the categories that represent the largest share of their emissions, rather than attempting to calculate all categories at the same level of detail.
There is no single method for calculating Scope 3 emissions. Most organisations use a combination of approaches depending on data availability, supplier maturity and reporting timelines.
What it is
Emissions data reported directly by suppliers, typically covering Scope 1, 2 and sometimes Scope 3 from the supplier’s perspective.
When to use it
High spend or high impact suppliers where data access is feasible.
Pros
Cons
Example
A furniture manufacturer collects emissions data directly from its timber and metal suppliers.
What it is
Estimates emissions by applying emission factors to financial spend data.
When to use it
When supplier- specific data is unavailable or incomplete.
Pros
Cons
Example
$1 million spent on office supplies is multiplied by an industry emission factor to estimate associated emissions.
What it is
Uses published industry averages (e.g. life cycle databases, national statistics).
When to use it
Where spend does not align neatly with supplier or activity data.
Pros
Cons
Example
Using average emissions per tonne of steel for purchased materials.
What it is
Calculates emissions based on physical activity data, such as distance travelled or energy consumed.
When to use it
Logistics, freight, business travel and fuel-related activities.
Pros
Cons
Example
Kilometres travelled by freight × emissions factor per kilometre.
What it is
A combination of supplier data, spend-based and average-data methods.
When to use it
Most real world business scenarios.
Pros
Cons
Example
Primary data from the top 20 suppliers, with spend based estimates for remaining suppliers.
The appropriate calculation method depends on several factors:
In practice:
A practical Scope 3 calculation workflow typically follows these steps:
Common mistakes
Best practices
Fair Supply supports organisations to calculate Scope 3 emissions in line with the GHG Protocol using a systematic, audit-ready approach.
Fair Supply combines:
Fair Supply is not just a calculator. It is a complete system combining technology, data and expert support designed to produce reliable Scope 3 results that stand up to scrutiny.
Calculating Scope 3 emissions is complex, but it is manageable with the right methods and systems. By selecting appropriate calculation approaches, documenting assumptions and improving data quality over time, organisations can build credible, decision-ready Scope 3 inventories.
Accurate Scope 3 calculation enables meaningful decarbonisation action across the value chain. Fair Supply supports organisations at every step from initial screening to supplier engagement and audit-ready reporting.