SUSTAINABILITY DESK
Week of April 7
The GHG Protocol is getting its first Scope 3 reporting makeover in decades, CBAM certificates now have a real price tag (€75), renewables quietly hit half of global power capacity, China’s clean tech companies are having a moment, and the administration’s second budget takes another $30 billion bite out of climate programs. Happy Friday — grab a coffee.
GHG PROTOCOL UPDATE
The Scope 3 standard is finally getting a rewrite
The Greenhouse Gas Protocol released its first progress update on revising the nearly 30-year-old Scope 3 standard, developed in cooperation with ISO. Here’s where Scope 3 reporting is headed:
- New boundary rules: Companies would need to report at least 95% of Scope 3 emissions and quantitatively assess 100% to verify that exclusions stay within a 5% threshold
- Data quality upgrade: Tiered data quality requirements, updated emissions factors, stronger verification—pushing toward supplier-specific data over spend-based estimates
- Category 15/16 split: Category 15 (investments) would isolate investments only; a new optional Category 16 covers “other value chain activities” including insured emissions, aligned with PCAF guidance. Financial institutions: read the boundary-setting section on Page 25 carefully
This is a progress update, not a final draft—public consultation comes later this year. But if you’re building your Scope 3 program, build to these specs.
CARBON BORDER POLICY
CBAM now has a price: €75.36 per tonne
The EU’s carbon border tariff has a real number: €75.36 per tonne of CO₂, based on average Q1 2026 allowance auction results. CBAM certificate purchases are required starting February 2027.
- UK is right behind: The UK published its own CBAM rules this week. The first measurable period starts January 1, 2027, with payments beginning early 2028. Coverage includes building products, fertilizer, and iron and steel
- U.S. CBAMs: Three different U.S. carbon border proposals now have bipartisan sponsors in Congress. Carbon border pricing is going global—the question is structure, not whether
- Over 4,100 authorized declarants have onboarded in the EU ahead of the January 1 launch; a new de minimis threshold exempts importers under 50 tonnes
CLEAN TECH SUPPLY CHAINS
The clean tech supply chain is tilting toward China — fast
The Iran war ceasefire this week dropped oil prices, but the energy shock has already reshuffled clean tech supply chains. Energy rationing across Asia is accelerating renewable adoption, and Chinese manufacturers are the primary beneficiaries.
- BYD exports up 65% year over year in March; battery giant CATL’s shares jumped 29.5%
- Used EV sales in the U.S. rose 12% this quarter, even as new EV sales dropped more than 25% following the withdrawal of the EV tax credit
- Cuba is turning to Chinese solar imports to offset its energy blockade, aiming to nearly triple solar parks by 2028
- Worth watching: By April 30, China’s three largest stock exchanges become the biggest to mandate sustainability reporting, covering 450-plus companies. China is also bidding to host the UN High Seas Treaty body, offering $70 million
RENEWABLE ENERGY MILESTONE
Half the world’s power capacity is now renewable
IRENA’s annual report landed this week: global renewable capacity hit 5,149 GW after adding a record 692 GW in 2025—a 15.5% jump. Renewables now represent nearly half of all global power capacity.
- Solar added 511 GW (75% of new renewables). Wind added 159 GW. Together they accounted for 96.8% of net additions
- Asia led at 74% of new capacity. Africa hit its highest-ever increase (15.9%). The Middle East grew 28.9%
- This growth happened during a year of tariff chaos, subsidy cuts, and war. Renewables economics are increasingly policy-proof
U.S. BUDGET
Trump’s second budget: $30 billion more in climate cuts
The administration’s second budget features an unprecedented 44% jump in military spending to $1.5 trillion. The bill comes due on climate and environment.
- EPA budget cut in half
- Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act clean energy funding canceled
- Funding eliminated for climate research, energy efficiency, and renewables programs
- All told: more than $30 billion in cuts to environmental, disaster recovery, and clean energy programs
- Forest Service shutting down two-thirds of research facilities; scientists warn climate and wildfire research could be permanently lost
There’s more
Also notable
Global conditions
Climate and weather: Forecasters are warning of a potential super El Niño — temperatures 2°C or more above average. Non-survivable heat waves are on the rise. 2026 could be a rough year.
Regulatory updates
- California SB 253: CARB’s Scope 3 pre-rulemaking comment period closes April 13. Three implementation paths remain on the table for 2027. Scope 1 and 2 are still due August 10.
- Switzerland: Aligned its sustainability reporting rules with the EU Omnibus. Covered reporting companies drop from 230 to 100.
Climate litigation
- Oklahoma: The state Supreme Court struck down a law requiring the state to boycott financial firms seen as hostile to energy companies. A similar Texas law was already overturned.
- Utah: Passed a law shielding fossil fuel companies from climate damage lawsuits. Republicans are working on a federal version.
Standards updates
- SBTi: APAC companies with validated science-based targets jumped 53% in 2025 to 2,297. 39% of the S&P 500 is now validated. Healthcare spiked 76%.
- PCAF: The standard is now used by 719 financial institutions representing approximately $100 trillion in assets.
Company moves
- JPMorgan signed a 60,000-tonne carbon removal deal with Graphyte. The Arizona facility uses forest thinning material to reduce wildfire risk—carbon credits that double as fire prevention.
- CATL is moving into shipping, aiming to electrify smaller vessels in global fleets.
Frequently asked questions
Corinne Hanson is VP of ESG Strategy at Greenplaces, the all-in-one sustainability platform helping businesses turn climate goals into results. She brings over a decade of experience in corporate sustainability, including leadership roles at SH Hotels & Resorts, Global Footprint Network, and the NRDC. A George Washington University grad with degrees in International Relations and Philosophy, Corinne spends her time outside the office the same way she spends it inside: trying to keep the planet in good shape.