Scope 3 Emissions Governance.
š ScopeāÆ3 Emissions Governance
1) What Are ScopeāÆ3 Emissions?
ScopeāÆ3 emissions are indirect greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions that occur in a companyās value chain but are not controlled by the reporting company. They include upstream and downstream activities outside the organizationās direct operations, such as:
Upstream emissions
- Purchased goods and services
- Transport and distribution (not owned)
- Waste generated in operations
- Business travel, employee commuting
Downstream emissions
- Use of sold products
- Endāofālife treatment of sold products
- Franchises, leased assets
- Investments (for financial institutions)
ScopeāÆ3 often comprises the largest portion of a companyās carbon footprint, especially for companies relying on global supply chains or selling energyāintensive products.
2) Why ScopeāÆ3 Governance Matters
Governance of ScopeāÆ3 emissions matters because:
A. Materiality for Investors
Investors increasingly treat ScopeāÆ3 emissions as material risk factors, especially when they represent significant exposure (e.g., auto manufacturers, oil & gas companies).
B. Value Chain Responsibility
ScopeāÆ3 reflects a companyās value chain footprint, so it matters for climate goals, supplier engagement, and corporate transition strategies.
C. Regulatory Trends
Some jurisdictions are starting to require voluntary or mandated ScopeāÆ3 disclosures under financial reporting standards, sustainability reporting directives, or climate risk laws.
D. Standardization
Measurement methodologies (e.g., GHG Protocol Corporate Value Chain Standard) provide a framework, but uncertainties remain due to data gaps and estimation challenges.
3) How ScopeāÆ3 Emissions Are Governed
Governance frameworks typically involve:
ā Policies & Strategic Oversight
- Boardālevel climate committees
- Executive accountability for climate performance
- Internal governance structures tied to corporate strategy
ā Measurement & Reporting Standards
Common frameworks used for ScopeāÆ3 include:
- GHG Protocol ScopeāÆ3 Standard
- TCFD (Task Force on Climateārelated Financial Disclosures)
- CSRD (EU Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive) in the EU
- Other national climate reporting requirements (where ScopeāÆ3 may be optional or phased in)
ā Verification & Assurance
Independent thirdāparty assurance improves credibility of ScopeāÆ3 reporting.
ā Supplier Engagement
Companies often require suppliers to measure and reduce emissionsācritical to credible ScopeāÆ3 management.
4) Major Governance Challenges
1. Data Quality
The biggest challenge is data availability and accuracy, since companies often rely on estimates or thirdāparty data.
2. Standardization
Different standards and methods yield inconsistent ScopeāÆ3 results.
3. Regulatory Uncertainty
Many jurisdictions still treat ScopeāÆ3 disclosure as voluntary or phased, which creates legal risk where investors or regulators demand comprehensive reporting.
āļø 6 Key Case Laws Involving ScopeāÆ3 or Value Chain Emissions Reporting
Note: Very few courts have decided cases solely on ScopeāÆ3. But there are multiple important legal disputes where ScopeāÆ3 reporting ā or claims about it ā played a material role in the allegation of misleading disclosures, inadequate governance, or regulatory challenges.
Case Law 1 ā Chamber of Commerce v. California Air Resources Board
Jurisdiction: U.S. Ninth Circuit & federal courts
Issue: Business groups challenged California climate disclosure laws that mandate greenhouse gas reporting, including wider emissions disclosures that encompass ScopeāÆ3 where material.
Legal Focus: Plaintiffs argued that compelled reporting of value chain emissions amounts to compelled speech and regulatory overreach.
Significance: One of the earliest major legal challenges testing whether mandatory ScopeāÆ3ārelevant disclosure requirements (as part of broader GHG reporting laws) are constitutional.
Case Law 2 ā Exxon Mobil v. California
Jurisdiction: U.S. District Court (California)
Issue: Exxon sued California over climate reporting laws requiring companies to report climate risks and GHG emissions, including value chain emissions disclosures.
Legal Focus: First Amendment and preemption challenges to state mandates that require companies to disclose emissions outside of direct operations (including ScopeāÆ3).
Significance: Highlights corporate pushback against stateālevel governance of value chain emissions disclosures.
Case Law 3 ā Sierra Club v. SEC
Jurisdiction: U.S. Court of Appeals (D.C. Circuit)
Issue: Environmental groups challenged the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commissionās rule that removed mandatory ScopeāÆ3 emission disclosure from final rules.
Legal Focus: Plaintiffs argued that excluding ScopeāÆ3 undermines investorsā ability to evaluate climate risk and that the regulator failed to adequately justify the exclusion.
Significance: Although not a direct suit for ScopeāÆ3 disclosure, this case centers on governance choices over whether ScopeāÆ3 should be part of mandatory reporting.
Case Law 4 ā People of the State of New York v. Exxon Mobil
Jurisdiction: New York Supreme Court
Issue: The State alleged Exxon Mobil misled investors about climate risks ā including underreporting or failing to adequately disclose climateārelated emissions and risks in its narrative.
Legal Focus: While not litigated strictly as a ScopeāÆ3 dispute, a central portion of the claims involved whether the companyās emissions reporting was accurate and complete, particularly for value chain emissions expectations.
Significance: Reinforces that ScopeāÆ3 and related disclosures may be scrutinized for accuracy and completeness in investorāprotection litigation.
Case Law 5 ā Connecticut v. ExxonMobil Corp.
Jurisdiction: Connecticut state court
Issue: The Attorney General alleged deceptive statements about climate risk and emissions.
Legal Focus: Charges included that the company failed to appropriately disclose and govern climateārelated information, which implicitly touched on disclosures spanning direct and value chain emissions.
Significance: Shows state law enforcement can target companies over insufficient governance and transparency in emissions reporting, including Scopeā3ārelated context.
Case Law 6 ā Friends of the Earth v. Royal Dutch Shell
Jurisdiction: Netherlands Supreme Court
Issue: Shareholders and advocacy groups brought a climate dutyāofācare claim against a global oil company for inadequate action and disclosures regarding climate change.
Legal Focus: The claim asserted that corporate governance and reporting (including ScopeāÆ3 emissions estimates) were deficient and misled stakeholders about climate risk.
Significance: Landmark ruling affirming that corporations must govern and reduce value chain emissions consistent with international climate goals ā effectively elevating Scopeā3 governance obligations into enforceable corporate duties.
š§ Legal & Governance Themes Emerging
Here are the key legal governance principles that these cases illustrate:
š 1. Materiality of ScopeāÆ3 for Investors
Investors and courts increasingly treat ScopeāÆ3 emissions as material to financial performance and risk disclosures. Failure to disclose can lead to securities litigation or regulator scrutiny.
š 2. Regulatory Authority Over Value Chain Reporting
Litigation like Chamber v. CARB and Exxon v. California tests the limits of state/regulator authority to mandate ScopeāÆ3ārelevant disclosures.
āļø 3. StandardāSetting vs. Mandatory Law
Case law shows tension between voluntary reporting frameworks (GHG Protocol, TCFD) versus legally mandated reporting rules.
š 4. Accuracy & Completeness Standards
In investor and consumer protection cases, courts focus less on method names and more on whether reporting is accurate, complete, and not misleading ā including assertions about value chain emissions.
š 5. Board Governance Responsibilities
Judicial decisions increasingly suggest that boards and executives can be held accountable for inadequate governance of climate reporting, extending into ScopeāÆ3 emissions oversight.
š Practical Governance Impacts for Companies
| Governance Area | Implication from Case Law |
|---|---|
| Board oversight of emissions | Must be documented and robust |
| Policies for ScopeāÆ3 calculation | Must follow recognized standards |
| Public disclosures | Scrutinized for accuracy |
| Regulatory compliance | Must adapt to evolving laws |
| Supplier engagement | Key to credible ScopeāÆ3 governance |
| Verification & assurance | Critical to reduce litigation risk |
š How Companies Can Strengthen ScopeāÆ3 Governance
ā Establish Boardālevel climate committees
ā Adopt recognized measurement standards
ā Engage suppliers in emissions data collection
ā Commission thirdāparty assurance
ā Integrate ScopeāÆ3 into enterprise risk management

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