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Tuesday, 23 June 2026
Sustainability Review
NEWS / Environment

Scope 3 Emissions Will Expose Weak Supply Chain Management

The hardest emissions data sits outside the company. That is why Scope 3 reporting will test procurement, supplier relationships and data discipline.

By Paul Wafula | June 18, 2026 | Environment
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At a glance

• Climate, water, land-use and energy decisions are moving into boardroom risk discussions.
• The strongest companies will connect environmental exposure to finance, operations and strategy.
• The weak point remains evidence: data, baselines and verification.

The difficult emissions are outside the fence

Many companies can start by measuring electricity, fuel and owned operations. The harder work begins with Scope 3 emissions, which sit across suppliers, transport, products, customers, waste and other parts of the value chain.

This is where sustainability reporting becomes a supply chain management test.

Why this matters

The hardest emissions data sits outside the company. That is why Scope 3 reporting will test procurement, supplier relationships and data discipline.

Supplier data will be uneven

Large suppliers may have sustainability teams and emissions data. Smaller suppliers may not. Some will rely on estimates. Others will not understand the request. Companies will need practical collection methods that improve over time without paralysing procurement.

The first year will rarely be perfect. But it must be documented, transparent and improving.

Procurement needs a new role

Procurement teams will increasingly need to assess suppliers on more than price and delivery. Environmental performance, labour practices, safety, governance and data readiness will shape supplier risk.

This does not mean excluding smaller suppliers automatically. It means helping strategic suppliers build capability while setting minimum standards.

Estimates must be defensible

Scope 3 reporting often requires estimation. That is acceptable when methodology, assumptions and limitations are clear. It becomes risky when companies present weak estimates as precise facts.

Assurance providers will look for logic, consistency and evidence. A number without a method is not a disclosure; it is a liability.

What to fix first

Map the value chain. Identify high-emission categories. Segment suppliers. Start with the biggest risk areas and build data requests into procurement systems. Scope 3 is not a one-month exercise.

Questions for the boardroom

Who owns this risk at board and management level?
What evidence would satisfy an external assurer or investor?
Which part of the strategy, budget or operating model changes because of this issue?

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