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Scope 3 for Sustainability Managers in New Zealand and Australia: An Essential Guide

Developed, built and supported exclusively for New Zealand and Australia

Understanding and reporting Scope 3 emissions can feel daunting for organisations in New Zealand and Australia. However, comprehensive Scope 3 measurement and management sit at the heart of both the New Zealand Climate-related Disclosures (CRD) regime and Australia’s evolving Sustainability Reporting Standards (ASRS). For sustainability leaders, managing the Scope 3 requirement is now essential to ensure regulatory compliance, unlock green investment, and build credible, future-proof climate strategies.

This guide provides a detailed guide to Scope 3 reporting for sustainability managers across Australasia based on BraveGen’s deep experience. It explains what Scope 3 emissions are, outlines key reporting categories, and offers a practical step-by-step process for identifying, estimating, and managing value chain emissions.

You’ll find guidance on relevance testing, regional hotspots, and strategies for robust and transparent data collection – even if you’re starting out with imperfect information.

Progress begins with action on Scope 3 begins with action. The most important step is to get started, build on what you know, and commit to continuous improvement over time using the best available tools and strategies.

What is Scope 3?

Scope 3 emissions are indirect greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions occurring throughout an organization’s value chain, outside of its direct operations (Scope 1) and purchased electricity (Scope 2). These include both:

  • Upstream emissions: From the production and transportation of goods and services purchased, business travel, employee commuting, waste generation, and more.
  • Downstream emissions: From the use, disposal, and end-of-life treatment of products, leased assets, investments, and other activities beyond direct control.

Scope 3 frequently represents the largest portion of an organization’s overall emissions footprint, often exceeding 80% of total GHG emissions. For most companies, managing Scope 3 is crucial for comprehensive climate risk management and compliance in both Australian and New Zealand contexts, especially given the prevalence of complex, global supply chains and unique regional dependencies.

Why Scope 3 Reporting is Challenging:

Scope 3 is inherently complex because emissions sources are spread across an entire value chain – including many suppliers, customers, transport providers, and service partners. Data quality and consistency vary substantially. It requires ongoing engagement with a large number of stakeholders, many of whom may be located internationally and may not yet report their own emissions.

Why Scope 3 matters in New Zealand and Australia

For most organisations, Scope 3 emissions represent the largest share of their overall carbon footprint – often more than 80 percent – because they capture emissions embedded throughout complex supply and distribution chains.

In New Zealand, climate-related disclosures are regulated by the External Reporting Board (XRB). Large listed companies, financial institutions, and certain managed investment schemes are required to report on Scope 3 emissions where these are deemed material through a relevance assessment. In practice, given the supply chain exposures typical of most entities, Scope 3 will be expected to form part of the majority of disclosures.

Australia is phasing in its own requirements through the Australian Sustainability Reporting Standards (ASRS). Large entities will need to include Scope 3 emissions from their Year 2 reporting cycles, with progressively higher expectations for data quality and coverage, aligned with global standards such as IFRS S2. In the first year, organisations are permitted to explain any exclusions, but mandatory reporting and assurance requirements quickly become more stringent.

Both New Zealand and Australian organisations operate in environments characterised by import-heavy and cross-border supply chains. This creates a strong need for region-specific emissions factors and for structured engagement with suppliers across Asia-Pacific and other trading regions.

At the same time, investor and market expectations are rising. Access to green finance and supplier eligibility increasingly depend on credible Scope 3 data. From a risk perspective, mapping these emissions reveals vulnerabilities such as reliance on high-carbon materials or on particular geographies, insights that are vital for strategic sourcing and business continuity planning.

In addition to compliance and risk, strong Scope 3 management also provides competitive advantage. Organisations with robust data and ambitious targets are increasingly favoured in procurement processes and by investors and capital markets. Finally, both countries are moving toward mandatory assurance of reported emissions, which heightens the importance of building assurance-ready systems early and embedding proper governance over emissions reporting.

What are the Scope 3 Categories and Examples

According to the Greenhouse Gas Protocol, Scope 3 emissions are organised into 15 upstream and downstream categories:

UpstreamDownstream
Purchased goods and servicesUse of sold products
Capital goodsEnd-of-life treatment of sold products
Fuel- and energy-related activities (not Scope 1/2)Downstream transportation and distribution
Upstream transportation and distributionLeased assets
Waste generated in operationsFranchises
Business travelInvestments
Employee commuting

Sector-Specific Hotspots:

  • Finance: Financed emissions (Category 15) are often largest – banks/funds should consider PCAF methodology.
  • Property & Infrastructure: Materials, construction, and capital goods dominate.
  • Agriculture & Food: Input materials and downstream distribution.
  • Retail & Consumer Goods: Purchased goods, distribution, and product use phase.
  • Energy & Extractives: Use of sold products creates the largest emissions.

Materiality:

Assess which categories are most significant for your sector, supply chain, and business geography using a relevance (materiality) test. Not all categories will have material emissions for every organisation, and estimates can start high-level, improving over time as supplier engagement matures.

What are Measurement Methodologies?

When calculating Scope 3 emissions, organisations have several methodological approaches, each with different levels of precision and practicality. A hybrid spend-based method combines elements of spend-based and activity-based data. It draws on average emissions factors per dollar spent within industry sectors while incorporating activity indicators where available. This approach is fast to implement and useful where supplier data is limited, though it usually provides less precision than more detailed methods.

A purely spend-based method relies on financial data, matching dollars spent to industry-average emissions factors. It is the quickest to apply and often the first step for organisations beginning their reporting journey, but accuracy is constrained by the generalisations inherent in industry averages.

Activity-based methods go a step further by using physical units – such as tonnes of material purchased, kilometres travelled, or litres of fuel consumed – to generate footprint estimates. This produces more accurate results but requires detailed tracking and consistent data collection.

The highest level of precision comes from supplier- or product-specific data, which draws on emissions disclosures directly from suppliers, Life Cycle Assessments (LCAs), or Environmental Product Declarations (EPDs). While most credible, this method requires close cooperation with suppliers and appropriate verification measures.

To improve reliability further, regional specificity is essential. Organisations operating in New Zealand or Australia should use local government datasets, such as those from the Ministry for the Environment (MfE), thinkstep-anz, the National Greenhouse Accounts (NGA), or the National Greenhouse and Energy Reporting (NGER) scheme. Adjusting for regional electricity grids and localised emissions factors can significantly improve accuracy.

Finally, both New Zealand and Australia encourage progressive completeness. This means organisations are expected to begin with reasonable estimates while steadily enhancing the scope, depth, and quality of reported data over time, aligning with evolving regulatory expectations and best practice.

Step-by-Step guide for Scope 3 Measurement & Strategy

Familiarize with National and International Frameworks

  • Review the Greenhouse Gas Protocol Scope 3 Standard, XRB / ASRS national standards, voluntary frameworks (SBTi, CDP), and relevant industry guidance (e.g., PCAF for finance).
  • Identify which Scope 3 categories are relevant and material.

Map Your Value Chain

  • List key suppliers, contractors, customers, and product flows.
  • Recognise cross-border supply chain and procurement dependencies.

Collect and Structure Emissions Data

  • Gather procurement, spend, and activity data; seek supplier disclosures and activity-based data wherever possible.
  • Document capital projects, purchased goods, and services, along with downstream uses and end-of-life handling.

Utilize Emissions Factor Databases

  • Use region-specific databases (MfE, CEDA, NGA factors) for ANZ businesses, and supplement with international sources for offshore supply chains. Always disclose sources and assumptions.

Prioritize High-Impact Areas

  • Conduct “hotspot” analysis to identify categories, suppliers, or geographies driving major Scope 3 impacts.
  • Focus enhanced data collection, supplier engagement, and scenario planning here.

Engage Suppliers and Embed Climate in Procurement

  • Begin with simplified supplier questionnaires; mature over time to detailed activity- or product-specific requests (LCAs, EPDs).
  • Support and educate SME suppliers; offer templates, workshops, and phased expectations.
  • Integrate climate considerations into procurement policies and contracts.

Plan for Continuous Improvement and Compliance

  • Refresh Scope 3 inventories annually (or on major operational changes) to meet CRD/ASRS review cycles and regulatory requirements.
  • Archive all calculation methods, assumptions, and supporting evidence to prepare for future assurance.
  • Employ scenario modelling to test impacts of supply chain or business model changes.
  • Monitor evolving policy/regulatory changes in New Zealand and Australia; respond to updates or consultation papers.

What are common Scope 3 mistakes?

Effective Scope 3 management requires attention to several common challenges that can undermine data quality, compliance readiness, and stakeholder confidence. Understanding these pitfalls helps organizations build robust systems that support both current reporting requirements and future assurance needs.

Data Management and Organization Issues

Poor data infrastructure creates ongoing challenges for reliable Scope 3 reporting:

  • Decentralized data management – Organizations struggle without digital platforms or centralized databases to record source documents, supplier responses, and calculations with secure version control
  • Inadequate data archiving systems – Failing to systematically archive evidence, calculations, and assumptions needed for audit trails and upcoming assurance requirements
  • Poor version control – Missing proper systems to track data updates, changes, and source documentation over time
  • Avoiding Scope 3 reporting altogether – Organizations that put Scope 3 in the “too hard” basket and ignore it completely, rather than starting with available methods like spend-based approaches to establish baselines

Data Currency and Update Problems

Treating emissions reporting as a one-off exercise compromises ongoing accuracy:

  • Outdated or infrequent updates – Data review cycles that don’t align with CRD and ASRS reporting timelines, treating disclosure as a one-off compliance exercise rather than an ongoing process
  • Lack of continuous data refresh – Not establishing regular processes to update supplier data, emissions factors, and calculation methodologies
  • Missing integration with reporting cycles – Failing to synchronize Scope 3 data collection with broader sustainability reporting requirements

Supplier Engagement and Cooperation Issues

Poor supplier relationships limit data quality and completeness:

  • Lack of supplier education and incentives – Not educating and incentivizing suppliers early in the process, missing opportunities to secure reliable primary data
  • Inadequate SME support – Failing to provide targeted support to help small and medium enterprises build capacity for emissions data collection and reporting
  • Poor supplier relationship management – Missing systematic approaches to engage suppliers as partners in Scope 3 data improvement efforts

Regional and Methodological Accuracy Problems

Generic approaches compromise data relevance and accuracy:

  • Ignoring regional emission variations – Not applying relevant New Zealand and Australian emissions factors or using local datasets, weakening accuracy for regional operations
  • Poor offshore supply chain transparency – For offshore supply chains, not being transparent about assumption limitations or outlining plans to improve data quality over time
  • Inappropriate emissions factors – Using generic global factors instead of region-specific data that better reflects actual emissions profiles
  • Wrong calculation method selection – Not choosing appropriate methods (activity-based, production-based, or spend-based) based on data availability, complexity, and accuracy requirements for specific emission sources
  • Perfectionism paralysis – Being scared away by perceived “low quality” data rather than starting with available methods like spend-based approaches to establish baselines and improve over time

Audit Trail and Assurance Readiness Gaps

Weak documentation systems create risks as assurance requirements evolve:

  • Weak audit trail preparation – Not systematically archiving all evidence, calculations, and assumptions needed for upcoming mandatory assurance requirements
  • Poor assurance readiness – Missing preparation for evolving regulatory and market requirements toward mandatory assurance of Scope 3 data
  • Inadequate documentation standards – Failing to maintain documentation quality that meets emerging assurance and verification standards

Key Success Strategies

To build effective Scope 3 management systems:

  • Implement centralized data platforms – Use digital platforms with secure version control to manage source documents, supplier responses, and calculations systematically
  • Establish continuous data refresh cycles – Align data review and update processes with CRD and ASRS reporting timelines for ongoing accuracy
  • Develop comprehensive supplier engagement programs – Educate and incentivize suppliers early while providing targeted support to build SME capacity for reliable data provision
  • Choose appropriate calculation methods – Select from activity-based (high accuracy, detailed activity data), production-based (medium complexity, production volumes), or spend-based (simpler implementation, financial data) methods based on data availability, resources, and accuracy requirements for specific emission sources
  • Start with available methods – Begin Scope 3 reporting with accessible approaches like spend-based methods to establish baselines, rather than avoiding reporting due to perfectionism or perceived data quality concerns – you can never improve what you never start
  • Plan for data evolution – Recognize that starting with lower quality data is acceptable to create initial baselines, identify improvement opportunities, and refine data quality over time through systematic upgrades
  • Build robust audit trails – Systematically archive all evidence, calculations, and assumptions to prepare for mandatory assurance requirements as regulators and markets move rapidly toward verification requirements

As regulators and markets move rapidly toward mandatory assurance of Scope 3 data, organizations that build robust systems now will be better positioned for compliance and stakeholder confidence.

How BraveGen helps with Scope 3 Emissions Management in New Zealand and Australia

Scope 3 data is the largest, most complex, and most heavily scrutinised area of carbon reporting under CRD and ASRS. BraveGen is designed to make Scope 3 measurement, supplier engagement, and audit-ready compliance simple and reliable – whether you’re just getting started or scaling to advanced value chain programs.

Automated and Centralised Scope 3 Data Collection

Automate Evidence Gathering: Collect and consolidate emissions data across all 15 Scope 3 categories using BraveGen’s automated ingestion tools – spanning invoices, supplier questionnaires, PDFs, utility files, and more.

Supplier Engagement at Scale

Issue, track, and store supplier surveys and disclosures through a secure portal, making it easy for value chain partners of all sizes (including SMEs) to participate and update data.

Single Source of Truth

Aggregate disparate and complex Scope 3 inputs into one auditable, structured repository, ready for internal review or external assurance.

Data Quality, Validation, and Audit Trail Validation and Traceability

Built-in approval workflows, completeness checks, and audit trails ensure every Scope 3 data point can be traced back to its source – critical for achieving assurance for CRD and ASRS.

Assurance-Grade Evidence

Every data change, calculation method, and supplier input is documented, building a robust, auditor-friendly history for each Scope 3 disclosure.

Scope 3-Specific Emissions Factor Application Region-Ready Calculations

Easily apply emissions factors relevant to New Zealand and Australia – using MfE, NGA, NGER databases – plus global factors for international suppliers.

Category Mapping and Normalisation

Align all supplier and activity data to precise Scope 3 categories required under local and global reporting frameworks.

Reporting and Analytics for Scope 3 One-Click Scope 3 Reporting

Instantly generate CRD, ASRS, and framework-aligned Scope 3 reports, with breakdowns by category, supplier, or product.

Hotspot and Gap Analysis

Identify high-impact suppliers, products, or geographies for targeted engagement and improved data completeness.

Scenario Tools

Model the carbon impact of supplier changes, material substitutions, and engagement strategies across your Scope 3 inventory.

Expert Support for Scope 3 Success Supplier Engagement Consulting

BraveGen’s team helps you design supplier programs, run materiality workshops, and build readiness for Scope 3 data requests.

Audit and Assurance Support

Hands-on help during audit or assurance processes specific to Scope 3, streamlining regulator reviews or investor scrutiny.

Continuous Improvement

Regular guidance on closing Scope 3 data gaps, improving estimation methods, and aligning with evolving CRD and ASRS requirements.

BraveGen’s Scope 3 tools and advisory services transform the complexity of value chain emissions into a manageable, credible, and actionable process - helping you move quickly from first estimates to world-class, audit-ready reporting.

Frequently Asked Questions

What are the key Scope 3 reporting obligations under New Zealand's CRD and Australia's ASRS?

Both regimes require robust disclosure of material Scope 3 emissions. In New Zealand, this is under a materiality and relevance test for large entities, while Australia’s regime phases in mandatory Scope 3 disclosures for large entities starting Year 2. Both expect progressive improvements in data scope, granularity, and quality to support climate risk assessment and market transparency.

Begin with spend-based or proxy estimates using recognised factors. Ramp up direct supplier engagement over time, using simplified questionnaires and progressively requesting activity-based or product-specific data. Document and disclose all sources, exclusions, and improvement plans; regulators value transparency and continuous improvement over “perfection”.

Refresh annually or on significant business/supply chain changes, always aligned with the CRD or ASRS annual reporting cycle.

Provides centralized, auditable data management; links to ANZ-specific emissions factors; automates supplier engagement; and keeps teams up to date with evolving deadlines and policy shifts.

Enhanced risk management, access to green finance, improved investor confidence, and opportunities for cost savings and innovation. Demonstrates credible progress toward net zero and supports competitive differentiation in Australasia and global markets.

Start by archiving evidence, calculation sheets, and supplier responses for all Scope 3 categories. Build a clear audit trail from the outset, as assurance will soon be mandatory under both regimes.

Use best-available industry factors, proxy data, and undertake a thorough relevance test. Clearly disclose data limitations and make plans for staged improvement as international supply chain engagement matures.

Ensure climate risk governance (including Scope 3) is considered by the board and integrated with procurement and business strategy, per both CRD and ASRS regulatory expectations.

Use PCAF and XRB’s “Financed Emissions Guidance” for banks, asset owners, insurers, and funds – these are quickly becoming regional and global norms.

Scope 3 is the critical frontier for climate action and risk management in Australia and New Zealand. By blending robust data collection, supplier engagement, strategic focus, and the right technology platform, sustainability managers can not only comply with emerging regulation but also unlock supply chain opportunities, enhance reputational value, and contribute meaningfully to a net zero future.

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