Carbon Footprint Calculator

Calculate Scope 2 CO2 emissions from electricity usage

Calculates Scope 2 greenhouse gas emissions from purchased electricity using regional grid emission factors. Emission factors vary significantly by region based on the energy generation mix (coal, gas, nuclear, renewables).

What is a Carbon Footprint?

A carbon footprint is the total greenhouse gas emissions caused directly or indirectly by an activity, organization, or product, expressed in CO₂ equivalent (CO₂e). The GHG Protocol divides emissions into three scopes: Scope 1 (direct), Scope 2 (purchased energy), and Scope 3 (value chain).

Scope 2 emissions from electricity are calculated by multiplying consumption (kWh) by the grid emission factor (g CO₂/kWh). This factor varies dramatically by region: France ~55 g/kWh (nuclear-dominant), Germany ~350 g/kWh (coal/gas mix), India ~700 g/kWh, and Norway ~20 g/kWh (hydro-dominant).

Organizations use two approaches for Scope 2: location-based (using regional grid average factors) and market-based (reflecting specific electricity procurement choices like renewable energy certificates). The market-based approach incentivizes purchasing green energy.

Formula: CO₂ Emissions (kg) = Electricity (kWh) × Emission Factor (g CO₂/kWh) / 1000 Trees Equivalent = CO₂ (kg) / 21.77 (avg annual CO₂ absorption per tree) Cars Equivalent = CO₂ (kg) / 4,600 (avg annual car emissions)

Example Calculation

A facility using 500,000 kWh/yr in South Korea (EF = 459 g/kWh). CO₂ = 500,000 × 459/1000 = 229,500 kg = 229.5 tonnes CO₂e. Trees equivalent = 229,500/21.77 = 10,542 trees. Cars equivalent = 229,500/4,600 = 50 cars.

When to Use This Calculator

Common Mistakes to Avoid

Related Standards & References

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the difference between CO₂ and CO₂e?

CO₂e (CO₂ equivalent) is a standard unit that converts all greenhouse gases (CH₄, N₂O, HFCs, etc.) to an equivalent amount of CO₂ based on their Global Warming Potential (GWP). For example, 1 kg of methane = 28 kg CO₂e (GWP100). For electricity Scope 2, CO₂ and CO₂e are nearly identical since combustion primarily produces CO₂.

How can I reduce my Scope 2 emissions?

Three strategies: (1) Reduce consumption through energy efficiency (lighting, HVAC, motors). (2) Switch to lower-carbon electricity sources (on-site solar, renewable energy PPAs, green tariffs). (3) Purchase Renewable Energy Certificates (RECs/GOs) to claim zero-carbon electricity under market-based accounting.

What are Scope 1, 2, and 3 emissions?

Scope 1: direct emissions from owned or controlled sources (on-site fuel combustion, company vehicles). Scope 2: indirect emissions from purchased electricity, heat, or steam. Scope 3: all other indirect emissions in the value chain (business travel, purchased goods, waste disposal). This calculator addresses Scope 2 only. For most companies, Scope 3 is the largest category but hardest to measure accurately.