Calculate GHG Protocol Scope 1 emissions from direct fuel combustion. Enter fuel quantities for natural gas, diesel, gasoline, and propane to estimate direct CO2.
Scope 1 emissions, as defined by the GHG Protocol, are direct greenhouse gas emissions from sources owned or controlled by your organization. These include fuel burned in boilers, furnaces, and vehicles, as well as process and fugitive emissions. Scope 1 is one of the three mandatory reporting scopes.
This Scope 1 Emissions Calculator helps you estimate direct CO2 from fuel combustion. Enter annual quantities for each fuel type — natural gas, diesel, gasoline, propane — and the calculator applies standard emission factors to produce a total.
Accurate Scope 1 accounting is foundational for corporate sustainability reporting, science-based targets, CDP disclosure, and regulatory compliance in jurisdictions requiring GHG reporting.
Tracking this metric consistently enables energy professionals and facility managers to identify consumption trends and implement efficiency improvements before costs escalate unnecessarily. This measurement provides a critical foundation for energy auditing and sustainability reporting, helping organizations meet regulatory requirements and voluntary environmental commitments.
Scope 1 is the core of corporate GHG reporting. This calculator provides a quick, transparent estimate using standard emission factors so you can begin or verify your inventory. Data-driven tracking enables proactive energy management, helping organizations reduce operational costs while progressing toward environmental sustainability goals and carbon reduction targets. This quantitative approach replaces rough estimates with precise figures, enabling facility managers to identify the most cost-effective opportunities for reducing energy consumption.
Scope 1 CO2 = Σ(Fuel_i × EF_i). Natural gas: 5.3 kg/therm. Diesel: 10.16 kg/gal. Gasoline: 8.89 kg/gal. Propane: 5.74 kg/gal.
Result: 76,000 kg CO2 (76 tonnes)
Gas: 5,000 × 5.3 = 26,500. Diesel: 2,000 × 10.16 = 20,320. Gasoline: 3,000 × 8.89 = 26,670. Propane: 500 × 5.74 = 2,870. Total: 76,360 kg.
Scope 1 is where corporate climate action starts. It represents what you directly control and can most readily reduce. Many companies begin their sustainability journey by inventorying Scope 1 before tackling the larger Scope 2 and Scope 3 categories.
Office-based companies: fleet vehicles and building heating. Manufacturing: process heat, kilns, and chemical reactions. Logistics: company-owned trucks and equipment. Agriculture: fuel for tractors and on-site combustion. Each sector has characteristic Scope 1 profiles.
Centralize fuel purchase records from all facilities. Use utility bills for piped gas and delivery receipts for bulk fuels. Install sub-meters for large combustion equipment. Maintain refrigerant logs for all HVAC systems. Document methodology for third-party verification.
Scope 1 covers all direct GHG emissions from sources you own or control: on-site fuel combustion (furnaces, boilers), company fleet vehicles, process emissions (e.g., cement kilns), and fugitive emissions (e.g., refrigerant leaks). If you burn it or it leaks from your equipment, it's Scope 1.
This calculator uses EPA default emission factors for common fuels. These are widely accepted for U.S. corporate reporting. For international operations, the IPCC and national inventory agencies provide country-specific factors.
Fuel combustion also produces small amounts of CH4 and N2O. For most fuels, CO2 represents 97–99% of the GHG impact. This calculator focuses on CO2; for full GHG accounting, add CH4 and N2O using IPCC factors.
In the U.S., EPA requires reporting for facilities emitting over 25,000 tonnes CO2e/year. SEC climate rules, state mandates, and voluntary frameworks (CDP, SBTi) also require Scope 1 disclosure. Even without mandates, investors and customers increasingly expect it.
Scope 1 is direct: you burn the fuel. Scope 2 is indirect from purchased electricity, steam, or chilling. If the power plant burns gas to make your electricity, that's Scope 2 for you, Scope 1 for the utility.
Electrify heating and fleet vehicles (shifts to Scope 2, then reduce that). Improve boiler efficiency. Switch from oil/propane to natural gas. Install on-site renewables. For process emissions, explore alternative chemistries or carbon capture.