Uncategorized PDFs

Sustainability and Energy Glossary

Issue link: https://resources.tangoanalytics.com/i/1523119

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 44 of 50

45 energywatch-inc.com / 212.616.5100 / 1261 Broadway, Suite 510 New York, NY 10001 Scope 1, 2, 3 emissions Many companies measure and set their emissions reduction goals via a framework of three "scopes." They are as follows: Scope 1 This encompasses emissions resulting from the direct activities of your company, e.g., fuel used by facilities and vehicles that your company owns or operates. Scope 2 These are emissions resulting from the generation of procured electricity your company consumes, e.g., electricity and steam. Scope 3 This includes the emissions from indirect sources in your company's supply chain, e.g., purchased raw goods, distribution and transportation, employee commuting, use of sold products and end of life treatment. Related content: Carbon Accounting – Everything You Need to Know Sequestration Often discussed in relevance to Greenhouse Gas or Carbon Dioxide sequestration, sequestration is the act of storing a substance for removal or isolation, i.e. for sequestration. For carbon sequestration, for example, carbon is store, or sequestered, in a carbon pool so that it may not affect biological and chemical processes in the atmosphere. A carbon pool, or "sink," is not a "sink" in the literal sense, but more of a naturally occurring area in which carbon exists and can be stored in the environment. A pool or sink might be a geologic formation underground, a biological formation such as a grassland, or a body of water. Carbon sequestration is often discussed in tandem with Carbon capture and storage (CCS), however, the main difference is that CCS involves the transportation of carbon to another location.

Articles in this issue

Links on this page

view archives of Uncategorized PDFs - Sustainability and Energy Glossary