Carbon footptint: how to measure and control it?
Iberdrola calculates your carbon footprint, registers it with the Ministry and helps you reduce emissions.
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Why to measure carbon footprint?
A carbon footprint measures the amount of greenhouse gases (GHG) emitted directly or indirectly by a company's activities, reflecting its environmental impact.
Calculating it is key to understanding the impact of your activities and starting to reduce emissions, optimise resources and combat climate change.
Understand the Scope of Emissions
We calculate your carbon footprint across all three scopes and help you reduce it with Net Zero Emissions Manager technology
01
Direct emisions
01Direct emisions
Produced directly by the company, including those from boilers, corporate vehicles and other company-owned facilities.
Generated by company vehicles, including goods transport and
vehicles used by employees during their work activities.Emissions originating from the company's facilities, such as industrial processes,
combustion equipment and use of machinery.
Our solution
- Smart Mobility Electrification of fleets and charging points to reduce emissions in transport.
- Smart Climate: Efficient climate control with heat pumps for lower energy consumption.
- Improvement of the Envelope Optimisation of insulation to reduce heating and cooling requirements.
- Aerothermy Efficient technology for climate control using energy from the air.
02
Indirect emisions
02Indirect emisions
Derived from purchased and consumed energy, such as electricity for climate control or electric vehicles.
Purchase of electricity, steam, heating and cooling for own use, including consumption in offices, factories or logistics centres.
Emissions generated by energy consumption for the operation of the company's electrical and electronic equipment.
Our solution
- Green Energy We offer you 100% renewable electricity to reduce the emissions associated with your energy consumption.
- Smart Solar: We develop customised photovoltaic solar energy solutions, allowing you to generate your own clean energy and reduce your consumption from the grid.
03
Other indirect emissions
03Other indirect emissions
Emissions associated with the value chain, such as raw materials, travel, product use and waste generated.
Goods and services bought: Raw materials, purchased goods and their transport.
Equipment and fuel: Use of leased equipment, emissions and waste.
Travel and logistics: Business trips, travel and transport of goods.
Use and disposal of products: Impact of the use and end of life of products sold.
Our solution
- Net Zero Emissions Manager The platform that facilitates the comprehensive decarbonisation of your company. Allows you to design customised plans, monitor emissions in real time, manage data and ensure regulatory compliance, all in a single tool.
- Decarbonisation of the Supply Chain We help you identify and reduce emissions in your value chain, working with your suppliers to optimise processes and select more sustainable resources.
Direct emisions
01Direct emisions
Produced directly by the company, including those from boilers, corporate vehicles and other company-owned facilities.
Generated by company vehicles, including goods transport and
vehicles used by employees during their work activities.Emissions originating from the company's facilities, such as industrial processes,
combustion equipment and use of machinery.
Our solution
- Smart Mobility Electrification of fleets and charging points to reduce emissions in transport.
- Smart Climate: Efficient climate control with heat pumps for lower energy consumption.
- Improvement of the Envelope Optimisation of insulation to reduce heating and cooling requirements.
- Aerothermy Efficient technology for climate control using energy from the air.
Indirect emisions
02Indirect emisions
Derived from purchased and consumed energy, such as electricity for climate control or electric vehicles.
Purchase of electricity, steam, heating and cooling for own use, including consumption in offices, factories or logistics centres.
Emissions generated by energy consumption for the operation of the company's electrical and electronic equipment.
Our solution
- Green Energy We offer you 100% renewable electricity to reduce the emissions associated with your energy consumption.
- Smart Solar: We develop customised photovoltaic solar energy solutions, allowing you to generate your own clean energy and reduce your consumption from the grid.
Other indirect emissions
03Other indirect emissions
Emissions associated with the value chain, such as raw materials, travel, product use and waste generated.
Goods and services bought: Raw materials, purchased goods and their transport.
Equipment and fuel: Use of leased equipment, emissions and waste.
Travel and logistics: Business trips, travel and transport of goods.
Use and disposal of products: Impact of the use and end of life of products sold.
Our solution
- Net Zero Emissions Manager The platform that facilitates the comprehensive decarbonisation of your company. Allows you to design customised plans, monitor emissions in real time, manage data and ensure regulatory compliance, all in a single tool.
- Decarbonisation of the Supply Chain We help you identify and reduce emissions in your value chain, working with your suppliers to optimise processes and select more sustainable resources.
Obtain customised advice
We advise you to find the perfect solution for your company.
We help you calculate your carbon footprint and register it with the Ministry to ensure regulatory compliance.
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At Iberdrola, we help you calculate your carbon footprint and offset the emissions you cannot reduce. All you need is your fuel and coolant consumption. We make it easy!
Any questions?
Here are some of the most frequently asked questions
Law 7/2021, of 20 May, on Climate Change and Energy Transition establishes that companies will be obliged to reduce their carbon footprint, moving from a voluntary to a mandatory measure. The obligations of Spanish companies are specified in Royal Decree 214/2025 of 18 March, which creates the carbon footprint, offsetting and carbon dioxide absorption project register and establishes the obligation to calculate the carbon footprint and to draw up and publish greenhouse gas emission reduction plans.
- Mandatory areas of application
- Companies That must include non-financial information in accordance with: Art. 49.5 of the Code of Commerce and Art. 262.5 of the revised text of the Capital Companies Law. This applies to large companies that:
- Draw up consolidated accounts, or
- Have more than 500 employees,
- And are either public interest entities or meet at least two of the following three criteria for two consecutive financial years:
- Total assets: > €20 million
- Turnover: > €40 million
- Average workforce: > 250 employees
- State public sector: Ministerial departments, autonomous bodies, management entities and common services of the Social Security system.
- Required scope
- Scope 1 : Direct emissions.
- Scope 2 : Indirect GHG emissions from energy.
- Scope 3: This will only be mandatory for the state public sector for the calculation of the carbon footprint for 2028 and beyond.
- Publication / Registration
- Companies: Required to publish their footprint
- Public sectorRequired to register on the state footprint registry.
The carbon footprint generated by each emission source is the result of multiplying the result of the consumption data (activity data) by its corresponding emission factor. Activity data is the parameter that defines the degree or level of activity that generates GHG emissions. For example, amount of natural gas used for heating (kWhPCS of natural gas). The emission factor (EF) represents the amount of GHG emitted per unit of the "activity data" parameter. These factors vary depending on the activity in question. For example, in relation to the activity described above (natural gas consumption for heating), the emission factor for 2022 would be 0.183 kg CO2 eq/kWhPCS of natural gas. As a result of this formula, we will obtain a specific amount (g, kg, t, etc.) of carbon dioxide equivalent (CO2 eq).
To calculate your carbon footprint, we need to: Establish organisational boundaries and operational limits: this will involve deciding which areas of the organisation will be included in the information gathering and calculations, as well as identifying the emission sources associated with operations within those areas, differentiating between direct and indirect emissions. Select the period for which the carbon footprint will be calculated: this will normally coincide with the calendar year immediately preceding the year in which the calculation is made. Collect activity data from these operations: this is usually consumption data.
The main ways to reduce your carbon footprint are to reduce energy consumption and use clean energy. Some examples are: Generate your own electricity with photovoltaic solar energy. Install aerothermal systems as a solution for climate control. - Improve insulation in rooms and throughout the building. - Switch to electric mobility. - Achieve energy efficiency by controlling your consumption. - Best practices in making green purchases.
If you can't reduce your emissions any further, you can offset your carbon footprint: Neutralise your organisation's CO2 emissions through financial support for environmental projects. You can do this through Carbon2Nature, where you can purchase carbon credits to offset emissions. These credits are allocated to a project that captures an equivalent amount of CO2 or prevents the emission of the same amount of carbon dioxide.