Scope 1 & 2 Emissions for Manufacturers in 2026: A Starter Kit to Measure, Report, and Get Ahead
Emissions reporting has moved from voluntary to required — and it starts with Scope 1 and 2. California’s SB 253 requires companies with over $1 billion in revenue doing business in the state to disclose Scope 1 (direct) and Scope 2 (purchased energy) emissions beginning in 2026, with Scope 3 following in 2027 and assurance requirements phasing in over time. Similar frameworks echo proposed SEC rules. Even if you’re under the threshold, your large customers must report Scope 3 — which means your emissions become their disclosure, and they will ask. This starter kit helps you measure and report before you’re forced to.
Why this lands on manufacturers now
Two forces converge in 2026: regulation and the supply chain. Large companies must disclose Scope 1 and 2 now and Scope 3 from 2027 — and Scope 3 is the sum of their suppliers’ footprints. That pushes the requirement downstream: manufacturers of any size that sell to large customers are being asked for emissions data as a condition of doing business. Waiting until you’re contractually required means scrambling; getting ahead turns a compliance burden into a procurement advantage.
Scope 1 vs Scope 2, in plain terms
Scope 1 is direct emissions from sources you own or control — fuel burned in furnaces, boilers, ovens and company vehicles. Scope 2 is indirect emissions from the energy you purchase, primarily electricity. For most manufacturers, Scope 2 — the power running the plant — is the larger and most actionable share. The good news is that Scope 2 is fundamentally an energy-data problem, and energy data is something you can already meter and manage on the floor.
Energy data is emissions data
This is the key insight that makes reporting tractable: your Scope 2 footprint is your electricity consumption multiplied by a grid emissions factor. If you already capture energy use by line, machine and shift with energy monitoring, you’re most of the way to a defensible Scope 2 number — and to the granular detail that auditors and customers increasingly want. Plants stuck on monthly utility bills face a far harder reporting task than those with real-time, sub-metered data.
Reporting reduction is the same project
Measuring emissions and reducing them are not separate initiatives. The same granular energy data that produces your Scope 2 disclosure also reveals where to cut it — idle consumption, off-shift load, and high energy-per-unit lines. So the work you do to report becomes the foundation for reduction, and every kWh you eliminate improves both your carbon number and your cost. Compliance and savings travel together.
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What auditors and customers want
Disclosure regimes are phasing in third-party assurance over time, which raises the bar from rough estimates to defensible, documented data. Customers running Scope 3 programs increasingly want supplier-specific figures, not industry averages. Both point the same way: toward measured, traceable, time-stamped energy data rather than back-of-envelope calculations. Building that data foundation now is what separates suppliers who win sustainability-weighted contracts from those who get screened out.
Common first-timer mistakes
Three traps slow first-time reporters. Starting with Scope 3 (the hardest) instead of nailing Scope 1 and 2 first. Relying on annual estimates that can’t be audited or improved. And treating it as a one-off report rather than an ongoing data system — emissions reporting recurs every year and gets stricter, so a repeatable, data-driven process beats an annual fire drill. Begin with the scopes you control and the data you can measure.
Your Scope 1 & 2 starter plan
Sequence it: (1) inventory your Scope 1 sources (fuels, on-site combustion, fleet) and Scope 2 (purchased electricity); (2) get granular energy data by line and shift; (3) apply emissions factors to produce your baseline; (4) identify reductions in the same data. The free starter kit includes a data-source map, a measurement worksheet and a reporting checklist — and you can stand up real-time energy visibility in weeks with a free POC. Always confirm current disclosure timelines with your compliance team.
Frequently asked questions
Who has to report Scope 1 and 2 emissions in 2026?
Under California’s SB 253, companies with over $1 billion in revenue doing business in California must disclose Scope 1 and 2 emissions beginning in 2026, with Scope 3 following in 2027. Even smaller manufacturers are affected because their large customers must report Scope 3, which includes suppliers’ emissions.
What is the difference between Scope 1 and Scope 2 emissions?
Scope 1 is direct emissions from sources you own or control, such as fuel burned in furnaces, boilers and company vehicles. Scope 2 is indirect emissions from purchased energy, primarily electricity — usually the larger and most actionable share for manufacturers.
How do manufacturers calculate Scope 2 emissions?
Scope 2 equals electricity consumption multiplied by a grid emissions factor. Plants that capture energy use by line, machine and shift with real-time monitoring can produce a defensible, granular Scope 2 figure far more easily than those relying on monthly utility bills.
Report it — then reduce it.
TeepTrak turns real-time energy data into the foundation of your Scope 2 reporting and your reduction plan at once.
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