18.09.2025

·

2 Min Lesezeit

how to use epds for scope 3 reporting

Key Summary

  • From low-carbon public procurement to green-building credits, the market now expects transparent, standard-compliant EPDs.
  • Yet the prospect of chasing dozens of numbers across plants, suppliers and spreadsheets feels… daunting.
  • Follow the map below, grab a handy cheat-sheet on the way, and you’ll be ready to hit Publish without drowning in Excel.

An Environmental Product Declaration (EPD) contains third-party verified lifecycle impact data for a product, often cradle-to-grave. For Scope 3 greenhouse gas (GHG) reporting under the GHG Protocol, this data can be disaggregated and mapped to the appropriate Scope 3 categories.

Step 1 – Understand Scope 3 Categories

The GHG Protocol defines 15 Scope 3 categories (e.g. purchased goods, capital goods, transportation, use of sold products, end-of-life). Not all apply to every product, but EPD data typically contributes to:

  • Category 1: Purchased goods & services
  • Category 2: Capital goods
  • Category 4/9: Upstream/downstream transport & distribution
  • Category 11: Use of sold products
  • Category 12: End-of-life treatment

Step 2 – Break EPD into Life Cycle Stages

EPDs follow EN 15804 (construction products) or ISO 14025 standards and are structured in modules. Each module provides EPD data that aligns with a corresponding Scope 3 category:

  • A1–A3 (Product stage): Raw material supply, transport, manufacturing → Scope 3 Category 1: Purchased goods and services.
  • A4–A5 (Construction stage): Transport to site, installation → Category 4: Upstream transport and distribution or Capital goods (if part of assets).
  • B1–B7 (Use stage): Use, repair, replacement, maintenance, energy, water → Category 11: Use of sold products.
  • C1–C4 (End-of-life): Deconstruction, transport, processing, disposal → Category 12: End-of-life treatment of sold products.
  • D (Beyond system boundary): Benefits & loads beyond system (e.g. recycling credits) → reported separately, not counted directly in Scope 3 but can inform avoided emissions.

Step 3 – Map Data Into Scope 3 Reporting

Turning EPD data into Scope 3 reporting involves four key steps:

  • Extract the GHG emissions (kg CO₂e) per module from the EPD.
  • Allocate those values to the corresponding Scope 3 categories.
  • Scale results: EPDs often give results per functional unit (e.g. 1 m² of material). For Scope 3, scale to actual purchased or sold quantities.
  • Adjust for reporting boundaries:
    • Decide on cut-off rules: if your Scope 3 inventory is corporate-wide, only include categories relevant to your activities.
    • Ensure consistency: EPD impacts are cradle-to-gate by default unless full life cycle declared.


Step 4 – Assemble the Scope 3 Report

When preparing your Scope 3 report, structure the data as follows:

  • Purchased goods (A1–A3): Category 1.
  • Capital goods (A1–A5 if asset incorporated): Category 2.
  • Transport & distribution (A4, C2): Category 4 (upstream) or Category 9 (downstream).
  • Use phase (B modules): Category 11.
  • End of life (C modules): Category 12.
  • Module D: reported separately as avoided emissions, not included in Scope 3 totals.

Illustrative Example – Concrete EPD

  • A1–A3: Raw material + production: 300 kg CO₂e per m³, Scope 3, Category 1
  • A4: Transport to site: 20 kg CO₂e, Scope 3, Category 4
  • C1–C4: Demolition, disposal: 50 kg CO₂e, Scope 3, Category 12.
  • D: Recycling credits: –40 kg CO₂e (reported separately as avoided emissions, not included in Scope 3 totals).
  • In essence: EPDs provide the “building blocks” of Scope 3 data. To use them, you map each lifecycle module to the corresponding Scope 3 category, scale it to real quantities purchased or sold, and then report in line with GHG Protocol rules.

To access the full detailed report and extended mapping guidance, sign up below.

EPD to scope 3 mapping

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