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How we measure carbon avoided (C02e)
How we measure carbon avoided (C02e)

Learn about how we calculate the carbon impact of an exchange.

Samantha Schurr avatar
Written by Samantha Schurr
Updated this week

Learn all about how we calculate the estimated embodied carbon of an exchange for our reports.


This article is helpful if:

  • You are an admin wondering how we calculate carbon avoided in our Reports.

  • You are looking for information on ideas about how to talk about the carbon impact of reuse.

Who can do this?

  • Only admins will have access to view Reports.

Where is it done?


Background

Embodied carbon refers to the greenhouse gas emissions associated with raw material sourcing, supplier processing, and manufacturing of items. A simple act of reuse via the Rheaply platform reduces the likelihood for unnecessary purchases, thus avoiding the attributed embodied carbon of a new item.

Rheaply was among the first circular economy platforms to report on embodied carbon avoided, utilizing a displacement-based methodology and category-level emissions factors to estimate the embodied carbon not added to an organization’s embodied carbon footprint when they source reused materials. This empowers key individuals at organizations to talk about the impact of exchanging resources as an environmental benefit.

The displacement of new product purchases through reuse helps organizations reduce scope 3 emissions related to purchased goods and services (category 1).


Methodology

Formula:

  • Estimated embodied carbon = (embodied carbon factor) x (weight per unit of item in kg) x (quantity of item)

Scope of data:

  • Includes accepted and completed internal offers with weight and category data for internal exchanges, and accepted and completed external offers with weight and category data when your organization is the receiving party.

  • Includes active, deactivated, and deleted user accounts.

  • Excludes deleted listings.

  • Excludes listings with withdrawn and canceled offers.

Key assumptions:

  • Exchanging an item via the Rheaply platform is an instance of reuse.

  • Reusing an item avoids the creation of embodied carbon associated with manufacturing a new product of the same kind.

  • Embodied carbon factors are powered by WAP Sustainability and various industry sources.

  • Rheaply allocates embodied carbon factors to item categories based upon the representative products WAP established as life cycle assessment practitioners.

  • Life cycle assessments estimate the embodied carbon associated with a product as they have been produced. The scope of these assessments is from A1-A3 lifecycle stages of a product as defined under ISO 21930 with influence from ISO 14040/14044.

  • Emissions associated with transportation and distribution phases have not been factored in.


Sources for embodied carbon factors

The large majority of embodied carbon factors on Rheaply were created by WAP Sustainability, a leading Life Cycle Assessment consulting firm. WAP's LCA practitioners developed EC factors using both LCA analysis and EPD data for representative products, and assisted in mapping these factors to the appropriate Rheaply product categories.

Additional embodied carbon factors have been sourced from other industry sources, including the Carbon Leadership Forum and various peer-reviewed papers.


Disclaimers and Limitations

This report is in beta. It shows the estimated embodied carbon avoided based on user-generated fields of weight per unit and Rheaply's standard item categories with associated emissions factors. Associated emissions factors may not cover all potential categories at this time. Significant variation may occur based on the uniqueness of the listed items.

This data can be used for:

  • Estimating a quantitative value for the embodied carbon not added to your organization’s footprint due to reuse on the Rheaply platform.

  • Assigning a value of "0" to scope 3 carbon accounting for your organization when noting impacts due to reuse within the Purchased Goods & Services category.

This data cannot be used for:

  • Any claims of offsetting greenhouse gas emissions.

  • Any claims reducing existing emissions within the purchased goods and services category.

  • Any claims relating to carbon offsets or carbon credits.

Guidelines for data use

If this data is shared outside of viewing on the Rheaply platform, kindly follow the requirements below:

  • Values for estimated embodied carbon avoided must be presented separately from scope 3 carbon accounting in a greenhouse gas inventory.

  • Values for estimated embodied carbon avoided must be presented either as zero impact or as a non-zero value by additionally applying a "worst-case" 40% bounded margin of error to the CO2e avoidance calculation per item.

  • Sample phrasing for zero impact: [X number] of items in [Y categories] were reused and thus assigned an impact of zero.

  • Sample calculation using the margin of error: a chair has an embodied carbon value of 27.83 kg CO2e. 27.83 - (40% * 27.83) = 16.70 kg CO2e avoided.


Definitions

Embodied carbon – As defined by our partner, WAP Sustainability Consulting, embodied carbon refers to the greenhouse gas emissions associated with raw material sourcing, supplier processing, and manufacturing.

Embodied carbon emission factors – As indicated by the Environmental Protection Agency, emission factors essentially represent the quantity of emissions released with the activity attributed to the release of emissions (Source: EPA). Rheaply has integrated embodied carbon emission factors as derived from our partnership with WAP Sustainability Consulting. These factors represent the quantity of the emissions released from raw material sourcing, supplier processing, and manufacturing of items.

Carbon dioxide equivalent (CO2e) – According to the EPA, this measure is “the number of kg of carbon dioxide emissions with the same global warming potential as one kg of another greenhouse gas” (Source: EPA). The EPA has a great Greenhouse Gas Equivalencies Calculator to translate C02e emissions into real world examples, like "miles driven by an average gasoline-powered passenger vehicle" or "number of homes' electricity use for one year," to help make this number more approachable.

Global warming potential (GWP) – According to the EPA, the global warming potential of a greenhouse gas is the quantification of “how much energy the emissions of 1 ton of the gas will absorb over a given period of time, relative to the emissions of 1 ton of carbon dioxide” (Source: EPA).

Greenhouse gas – Refers to any gas that has the chemical properties to retain heat and reflect that energy toward the Earth’s surface, contributing to the greenhouse effect and climate change (Source: EPA).

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