
What Documents You Need to Calculate Your Carbon Footprint (The Complete 2026 Guide)
To calculate your carbon footprint accurately, businesses need to gather core operational documents such as energy bills, fuel receipts, waste invoices, water bills, and travel records. For more comprehensive reporting—especially Scope 3—procurement data, supplier information, freight records, and accounting system exports are essential. While companies can estimate figures when data is missing, collecting reliable, year-round documentation ensures more accurate carbon reporting and smoother compliance with frameworks like the GHG Protocol, CSRD, and B Corp.
Calculating your carbon footprint starts with one thing: having the right documents. Whether you're reporting under CSRD, completing a B Corp assessment, or simply trying to understand your environmental impact, your carbon footprint can only be as accurate as the data behind it.
The good news? Most businesses already have the essential documents—they just don’t realise those documents contain the activity data needed to calculate Scope 1, Scope 2, and Scope 3 emissions.
This guide explains exactly what documents you need, why they matter, and how to prepare them for a seamless carbon accounting process.
Why Documents Matter in Carbon Accounting
Carbon accounting is fundamentally a data exercise. Emissions are calculated using:
Activity data × Emissions factors = CO₂e
The activity data comes from the records your business already keeps: utility bills, invoices, mileage logs, receipts, payroll records, and procurement documentation.
High-quality documents = high-quality carbon footprint.
Missing or incomplete documents = estimates, assumptions, and lower data confidence.
Documents You Need for Scope 1, Scope 2 & Scope 3 Emissions
Let’s break it down scope by scope.
Scope 1 Documents (Direct Emissions)
Scope 1 covers emissions from sources your business owns or controls—mainly fuel, heating, and company vehicles.
1. Fuel Purchase Records
You’ll need:
Fuel card statements
Gas oil/diesel delivery invoices
Fleet fuel receipts
Boiler fuel logs
These documents provide litres of fuel purchased or used.
2. Natural Gas Bills
Utility bills contain:
kWh consumed
Billing periods
Meter readings
This is essential for office, warehouse, or manufacturing site heating.
3. Company Vehicle Mileage Logs
Includes:
Odometer readings
Mileage spreadsheets
Telematics data
Mileage can be converted to emissions using standard factors.
4. Refrigerants & HVAC Documentation
If the business has HVAC or refrigeration systems, you need:
F-gas service logs
Refrigerant refill/maintenance invoices
These contain refrigerant types and amounts—often overlooked but high-impact.
Scope 2 Documents (Purchased Electricity, Heating & Cooling)
Scope 2 covers emissions from electricity and energy your business buys.
5. Electricity Bills
You’ll need:
kWh consumed
Tariff details
Billing periods
Supplier name
Renewable energy certificates (if applicable)
If you use multiple sites, you’ll need bills for each.
6. District Heating or Cooling Statements
Not common for SMEs, but for larger facilities:
Monthly/annual consumption statements
Energy delivered (kWh or MWh)
Scope 3 Documents (Value Chain Emissions)
Scope 3 is the most complex—and typically the largest—part of your footprint. It includes upstream and downstream emissions from suppliers, travel, waste, products, and more.
Below are the key document categories:
Category 1: Purchased Goods & Services
7. Supplier Invoices & Purchase Orders
You’ll need:
Total spend
Supplier names
Product/service categories
Quantities (if available)
These help estimate emissions using spend-based or activity-based factors.
Optional (higher quality)
Supplier carbon footprint reports
Environmental Product Declarations (EPDs)
Category 2: Capital Goods
8. Capital Expenditure (CAPEX) Records
Includes invoices for:
Machinery
IT equipment
Furniture
Buildings or fitouts
CAPEX often carries significant embodied carbon.
Category 3 & 4: Fuel- & Energy-Related Activities
9. Historical Utility Bills
Electricity and gas bills are used again here to estimate upstream emissions.
Category 5: Waste Generated in Operations
10. Waste Transfer Notes & Waste Contractor Reports
These documents include:
Waste type (general, recycling, hazardous)
Tonnes collected
Treatment method (landfill, recycling, incineration)
This allows for accurate activity-based calculations.
Category 6: Business Travel
11. Travel Booking Reports
From travel management systems or booking platforms:
Flight routes
Rail journeys
Hotel stays
Taxi receipts
If none exist, employee expense claims can be used.
Category 7: Employee Commuting
12. HR Records
You’ll need:
Number of employees
Office locations
Working patterns (hybrid, remote, on-site)
Optional (for greater accuracy):
Employee commuting surveys
Category 8: Upstream Transportation & Distribution
13. Logistics & Freight Invoices
These include:
Weight shipped
Distance
Mode (road, sea, air)
Carrier information
Many carriers can also supply emission reports.
Category 9: Downstream Transportation
Documents are similar to upstream but refer to how your products reach customers.
Category 12: End-of-Life Treatment of Sold Products
14. Product Bill of Materials (BoMs)
You may need:
Material composition
Packaging types
Disposal routes
For manufacturers this is essential; for service businesses optional.
Cross-Cutting Documents
15. Procurement/ERP Data
Your procurement system may hold:
Supplier directories
Annual spend reports
Contract metadata
A goldmine for Scope 3.
16. Financial Statements
Useful for:
Spend-based calculations
Triangulating missing data
Cross-checking completeness
How to Prepare These Documents for Carbon Accounting
To streamline the process:
1. Collect 12 months of data
Carbon footprints are typically produced for a full reporting year.
2. Organise by category
Group documents by:
Energy
Travel
Waste
Procurement
Logistics
3. Request missing information early
Suppliers often take time to respond.
4. Use a standardised template
This prevents back-and-forth and maintains auditability.
5. Upload everything into your carbon accounting platform
Platforms like Emerald Power automate emissions calculations, convert documents into activity data, and produce audit-ready outputs.
Final Thoughts
Knowing what documents you need is the key to calculating a carbon footprint efficiently and accurately. Most businesses already have 70–80% of the required data—the rest can be gathered through suppliers, HR, or travel partners.
FAQ: Documents Needed to Calculate Your Carbon Footprint
1. What are the essential documents I need to start calculating my carbon footprint?
You’ll typically need energy bills, fuel receipts, waste invoices, water bills, and business travel records. Larger businesses may also need procurement data, supplier emissions info, and logistics reports.
2. Do I need data from my suppliers?
If you want to measure Scope 3 emissions, yes. Supplier spend data, procurement logs, and/or supplier-specific emission factors help you quantify the carbon impact of purchased goods and services.
3. Can I calculate my carbon footprint if I don’t have complete records?
Yes—most frameworks allow the use of estimates or proxies when data gaps exist. However, you should work toward improving your data quality each year.
4. What documents do I need for Scope 1 emissions?
You’ll need fuel purchase invoices, gas bills, generator logs, fleet mileage, and any other data related to company-owned combustion.
5. What documents do I need for Scope 2 emissions?
Scope 2 focuses on purchased energy, so gather electricity bills, heating invoices, cooling/steam bills, and any metering data you have.
6. What documents are needed for Scope 3 emissions?
This varies but often includes:
Procurement/spend reports
Employee travel information
Waste invoices
Courier and freight data
Water bills
Supplier-specific emissions documents
7. How far back should my documents go?
A full calendar year is standard. If your company reports on a fiscal year, use the same cycle for consistency.
8. Can accounting software exports be used instead of invoices?
Absolutely. Exporting vendor, spend, or travel data from your accounting system (e.g., Xero, Sage, QuickBooks) is often faster and cleaner than compiling individual documents.
9. Do I need specialist software to manage these documents?
Not mandatory, but tools like Emerald Power streamline data collection, automate calculations, and prepare audit-ready carbon reports for CSRD, B Corp, and GHG Protocol.
10. Are digital copies acceptable?
Yes. PDFs, spreadsheets, and email confirmations are all valid—you don’t need physical documents.