Written by Field Name
Report Date
5 min read
Written by Fair Supply
April 19, 2026
5 min read

The energy sector is now at the centre of global climate regulation. With direct responsibility for a significant share of global greenhouse gas emissions, energy companies are facing increasing scrutiny from regulators, investors, and the public. From 2025–2026, mandatory climate-related financial disclosures will come into force across key jurisdictions, including Australia’s Australian Sustainability Reporting Standards and AASB S2.
For energy providers whether in generation, transmission, distribution, or infrastructure, carbon emissions reporting is no longer a compliance exercise completed annually. It is a continuous, enterprise-wide capability that must withstand audit scrutiny and inform real-time decision-making.
This article outlines what energy companies need to know about emissions reporting, the challenges they face, and how to prepare for the 2026 regulatory environment.
Unlike many industries where emissions are indirect, energy companies sit at the core of emissions generation. Power generation, fuel combustion, and infrastructure operations contribute directly to Scope 1 and Scope 2 emissions, while extensive supply chains drive significant Scope 3 exposure.
Governments are moving rapidly to standardise climate disclosures. Frameworks such as Australian Sustainability Reporting Standards require companies to disclose not just emissions data, but also governance, strategy, and risk management processes related to climate change.
For energy companies, this means:
Capital markets are increasingly pricing climate risk. Institutional investors, lenders, and insurers expect transparent, comparable, and decision useful emissions data. Inaccurate or incomplete disclosures can lead to:
Many energy companies have made public net-zero commitments. However, without robust reporting systems, these commitments risk being seen as aspirational rather than credible. Reporting provides the foundation for:
Understanding emissions sources is critical to effective reporting.
Electricity generation particularly from fossil fuels remains one of the largest contributors to Scope 1 emissions. Even as renewable capacity increases, legacy assets continue to drive emissions profiles.
Operational fuel use across assets, including gas turbines, diesel generators, and transport fleets, contributes directly to Scope 1 emissions.
Transmission and distribution losses contribute to indirect emissions (Scope 2), particularly in large and geographically dispersed networks.
Scope 3 emissions are often the most significant and the hardest to measure. These include:
Large-scale infrastructure projects involve embedded carbon in materials such as steel and concrete, contributing to lifecycle emissions.
2026 Reporting Requirements: What’s Changing
From 2026 onwards, energy companies will be required to meet enhanced climate disclosure standards under frameworks such as AASB S2.
Companies must disclose:
Scope 3 reporting is expected to be a major focus area, particularly for energy companies with complex supplier ecosystems.
Beyond emissions data, companies must demonstrate:
Boards and executive teams must show clear oversight of climate-related risks and opportunities, including:
Despite the clarity of regulatory expectations, many energy companies face significant implementation challenges.
Energy companies often operate across multiple asset classes, geographies, and regulatory environments. This complexity makes it difficult to:
Many organisations rely on outdated systems that were not designed for emissions tracking. This results in:
Accurate emissions reporting requires high-quality data. However, companies often struggle with:
Scenario modelling is a new requirement for many organisations. It requires:
To meet 2026 requirements, energy companies need to move quickly from fragmented approaches to integrated reporting systems.
Granular data is essential. Companies should:
A robust emissions inventory should include:
Climate reporting must be embedded into governance structures:
Scope 3 reporting requires supplier engagement. However, response rates are often low. Leading companies are:
As regulatory requirements become more complex, energy companies are increasingly turning to integrated technology platforms to manage emissions reporting at scale.
Fair Supply provides a comprehensive solution designed specifically for complex supply chains and regulatory environments.
Fair Supply’s platform combines:
The platform enables:
Fair Supply supports organisations to:
With increasing assurance requirements, auditability is critical. Fair Supply delivers:
Carbon emissions reporting is now a strategic priority for energy companies. With mandatory disclosures coming into force from 2025–2026, organisations must move quickly to build robust, auditable, and scalable reporting capabilities.
The stakes are high. Regulators are increasing scrutiny, investors are demanding transparency, and Boards are accountable for climate-related risks.
Energy companies that invest early in integrated reporting systems will not only achieve compliance—they will gain a competitive advantage through better data, stronger governance, and more informed decision-making.
Fair Supply simplifies this journey with our carbon accounting software, enabling energy companies to move from fragmented data and manual processes to a unified, audit-ready climate reporting capability.