The International Organisation for Standardisation (ISO) and the Greenhouse Gas Protocol (GHG Protocol) have recently announced a joint partnership to standardise global greenhouse gas emissions reporting. The aim is to harmonise their existing frameworks and co-develop new GHG accounting standards. This partnership is highly significant for businesses grappling with fragmented requirements, as it promises a coherent global language for measuring, reporting and verifying greenhouse gas emissions.
For years, the ISO and the GHG Protocol have been the major frameworks guiding carbon measurement and disclosure for companies. This means organisations have had to navigate adherence to two different frameworks, making carbon accounting more complex than it needs to be.
ISO standards: The ISO 1406X family, including ISO 14064, guides regulations in many jurisdictions (including many EU countries). For example:These standards provide methodologies for quantifying and reporting corporate emissions, product carbon footprints and verification processes. They are often embedded directly into legislation, offering formal structure and compliance rigour.
While both approaches have strengths, their separate evolution created inconsistencies. Organisations often faced duplication of effort, translating data between ISO and GHG accounting standards to meet investor or regulatory requirements. The ISO and GHG Protocol partnership directly addresses this problem.
The new collaboration will deliver co-branded, harmonised carbon accounting standards covering corporate, product and project-level emissions. Specifically:
Sergio Mujica, ISO’s Secretary-General, framed it as a “new era for the carbon accounting landscape,” while Geraldine Matchett, Chair of the GHG Protocol Steering Committee, called it a “historic agreement” that would simplify tasks for all stakeholders.
The ISO and GHG Protocol partnership has practical implications across reporting, supply chain management and investor relations.
Simplified Reporting
Currently, organisations often juggle both ISO and GHG Protocol requirements. This partnership will mean one consistent framework, reducing time, cost and complexity in GHG reporting.
Greater Consistency
A unified standard creates comparability across sectors and borders, essential for global companies reporting under multiple regimes. This addresses one of the biggest criticisms of sustainability data today: lack of consistency.
Enhanced Credibility
By combining ISO’s technical rigour with the GHG Protocol’s market dominance, the partnership creates a trusted reference point for auditors, investors and regulators.
Increased Efficiency
Supply chains will face less duplication, with suppliers only needing to provide one set of emissions data instead of tailoring it for different frameworks.
The timing of the ISO and GHG Protocol partnership is convenient for organisations as sustainability reporting increasingly becomes mandatory for various sectors. Governments and investors have been calling for the convergence of sustainability frameworks, particularly as reporting requirements expand. The ISO and GHG Protocol partnership will help ease the regulatory burden for EU-based organisations preparing to start reporting under the Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive (CSRD).
One of the most complex areas of GHG reporting is tracking Scope 3 emissions. These emissions occur in the value chain, from purchased goods and services to customer use of products. For many companies, Scope 3 represents more than 70% of their total footprint. The ISO and GHG Protocol partnership is expected to deliver clearer, more consistent methodologies for Scope 3 data. This includes the new product carbon footprint standard, which will help procurement teams and supply chain managers gather comparable, reliable data from suppliers. This is particularly important for companies planning to set science-based targets, as without scope 3 data, your decarbonisation pathway may be inadequate.
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Although the harmonised standards are still in development, here’s how your organisation can begin preparing:
The ISO and GHG Protocol partnership aims to ensure global consistency by combining methodologies, terminology and verification approaches, creating one coherent framework for GHG reporting. Right now, it is not yet clear when the harmonised standards will be finalised and implemented. Businesses may face a transition period where both old and new frameworks must be supported. Organisations that prepare now will be best positioned to thrive under the new unified system and to demonstrate meaningful climate leadership in the decade ahead.