What Is a Carbon Footprint? Definition, Emissions, and Impacts

A carbon footprint is the total greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions caused directly or indirectly by an activity, product, organization, or individual. It is typically expressed as carbon dioxide equivalent (CO₂e), a unit that converts different greenhouse gases into a common climate impact metric.

It is one of the most widely used indicators to understand climate impact.

Almost every economic activity generates emissions. Major sources include:

  • Electricity generation from coal, oil, and natural gas
  • Transportation by road, rail, air, and sea
  • Manufacturing and industrial processes
  • Agriculture and livestock farming
  • Construction activities
  • Waste disposal and landfills
  • Deforestation and land-use change

Energy production remains the largest contributor to global greenhouse gas emissions.

Carbon footprints include multiple greenhouse gases, not just carbon dioxide.

The major greenhouse gases covered under international climate reporting frameworks are:

GasChemical Formula
Carbon DioxideCO₂
MethaneCH₄
Nitrous OxideN₂O
HydrofluorocarbonsHFCs
PerfluorocarbonsPFCs
Sulphur HexafluorideSF₆
Nitrogen TrifluorideNF₃

Carbon dioxide accounts for the majority of global greenhouse gas emissions. However, some gases have a much higher warming effect.

For example, methane has a global warming potential more than 25 times greater than CO₂ over a 100-year period, making methane reduction a key climate strategy.

The Earth’s climate system naturally regulates carbon through carbon sinks.

Major carbon sinks include:

  • Forests
  • Oceans
  • Wetlands
  • Grasslands
  • Soils

Oceans alone absorb roughly 25% of human-generated CO₂ emissions annually.

The climate challenge arises when greenhouse gas emissions exceed the Earth’s capacity to absorb them. As this imbalance grows, atmospheric greenhouse gas concentrations increase, leading to long-term warming.

Reducing emissions is therefore essential to restore balance between carbon released and carbon absorbed.

Human activities emit approximately 40 billion tonnes of CO₂ annually. Natural carbon sinks such as forests, oceans, and soils absorb around 20 billion tonnes, leaving the remaining emissions in the atmosphere.

This excess builds up greenhouse gases in the air, which trap more heat and strengthen the greenhouse effect. As a result, global temperatures are rising.

Global average temperatures have already increased by about 1.2°C above pre-industrial levels, leading to more frequent heatwaves, floods, droughts, wildfires, and other extreme weather events.

Carbon reporting is generally divided into three categories.

Scope 1: Direct Emissions

Emissions from sources owned or controlled by the organization.

Examples:

  • Diesel generators
  • Company-owned vehicles
  • Industrial furnaces
  • LPG consumption

Scope 2: Indirect Energy Emissions

Emissions associated with purchased electricity, steam, heating, or cooling.

Scope 3: Value Chain Emissions

All other indirect emissions occurring across the value chain.

Examples:

  • Purchased goods and services
  • Business travel
  • Employee commuting
  • Transportation and distribution
  • Waste disposal
  • Product use and end-of-life treatment

For many organizations, Scope 3 emissions represent the largest share of total emissions, often accounting for 70–90% of the total carbon footprint.

Carbon footprints are calculated using a simple principle:

Activity Data × Emission Factor = Emissions

Examples of activity data include:

  • Electricity consumption (kWh)
  • Diesel consumption (litres)
  • LPG consumption (kg)
  • Distance travelled (km)
  • Waste generated (kg)

The resulting emissions are reported in tonnes of carbon dioxide equivalent (tCO₂e).

Carbon Reporting Standards

To ensure consistency and comparability, organizations use internationally recognized reporting frameworks.

The most widely used standards include:

  • GHG Protocol
  • ISO 14064
  • Science Based Targets initiative
  • International Sustainability Standards Board

These frameworks provide methodologies for measuring, reporting, and disclosing greenhouse gas emissions.