GLEC and ISO 14083: Carbon accounting methods for logistics and shipping
If you have ever tried to calculate freight emissions, you know how quickly things get complicated.
What seems straightforward at first — moving goods from point A to point B — quickly turns into a web of incomplete shipment data, multiple carriers, unclear responsibility boundaries, and inconsistent carbon accounting methods. For logistics and shipping companies, this is not just a technical challenge. It is becoming a real business risk as customers, regulators, and reporting frameworks expect more transparency and consistency in Scope 3 emissions.
Freight emissions accounting has become one of the most important (and most difficult) parts of Scope 3 reporting for logistics-heavy businesses. The challenge is not just calculating emissions, but doing so in a way that reflects how freight actually moves through real-world transport networks. Shipment records are often incomplete, handoffs between carriers can blur responsibility, and multi-leg journeys make it difficult to consistently assign emissions to the right customer, route, or reporting category.
This is where the GLEC Framework and ISO 14083 come into focus.
THE CORE CHALLENGE
Why freight emissions are uniquely difficult
Freight is fundamentally different from most other emissions sources.
Unlike electricity or fuel use, where data is often centralized and consistent, logistics emissions are distributed across systems, vendors, and geographies. A single shipment may include drayage, port handling, ocean freight, warehousing, and final-mile delivery—often managed by different parties with varying levels of data quality.
Even when companies have shipment-level data, they are often missing key inputs such as distance or routing, equipment type, fuel type, and consistent weight or volume data.
At scale, the problem compounds. Freight businesses often manage hundreds of thousands—or even millions—of shipment records across global operations. Because of this, freight emissions accounting is not just a factor lookup exercise. It requires a defensible methodology for filling data gaps, allocating emissions across multi-leg journeys, and maintaining consistency across modes and geographies.
THE GLEC FRAMEWORK
The leading methodology for logistics emissions
The Global Logistics Emissions Council (GLEC) Framework is the leading methodology for calculating emissions from freight and logistics operations. It is designed specifically for logistics and provides calculation guidance across all major transport modes—including road, rail, air, ocean, inland waterways, and logistics hubs.
At its core, GLEC is an activity-based methodology. It relies on physical transport data such as shipment weight or volume, distance traveled, mode of transport, and fuel and equipment assumptions to calculate emissions in a way that reflects actual transport activity.
This is a critical distinction. GLEC is not designed for pure spend-based accounting. While it can accommodate different levels of data quality, it is fundamentally built on operational data, and that is what allows it to produce results that are more representative of real-world logistics emissions.
ISO 14083
Where ISO 14083 fits in
ISO 14083 builds on the GLEC foundation. Developed by the International Organization for Standardization, ISO 14083 provides guidance for quantifying, allocating, and reporting transport emissions across logistics chains. It introduces more formal expectations around setting clear system boundaries, allocating emissions across shared or multi-leg transport, treating hubs, transshipment, and storage consistently, documenting assumptions and data quality, and reporting results in a transparent and comparable way.
A simple way to think about the relationship: GLEC defines how to calculate emissions; ISO 14083 defines how to structure and report them.
The two are closely aligned. In practice, GLEC is often used as the methodological backbone for ISO 14083-style reporting—meaning companies already using GLEC are well positioned to move toward more standardized, audit-ready disclosures.
IMPLEMENTATION
Moving from messy data to defensible results
For most logistics and manufacturing companies, the real challenge is not understanding the methodology. It is applying it at scale.
Freight datasets are often large, inconsistent, and incomplete. Turning that into a GLEC-aligned emissions model requires more than manual analysis, it requires structured data processing and engineering-backed logic.
For large-volume shipping datasets, Greenplaces supports standardizing and cleaning shipment-level data, inferring missing inputs such as distance or routing, applying mode-specific calculation logic aligned with GLEC, allocating emissions across multi-leg journeys, and producing outputs that support ISO 14083-style reporting.
This combination of methodology and data engineering allows companies to move beyond high-level estimates and build a freight emissions model that is both scalable and credible.
WHY IT MATTERS NOW
The business case for getting this right
Freight emissions are becoming a focal point for customers, especially in logistics and manufacturing value chains. Companies are increasingly being asked not just for emissions totals, but for methodology, transparency, and auditability.
GLEC and ISO 14083 provide the structure to meet those expectations. But the real challenge — and opportunity — lies in implementation. Companies that invest in activity-based, data-driven freight carbon accounting methods will be better positioned to respond to customer requests, support decarbonization strategies, and stay ahead of evolving reporting requirements.








