- December 12, 2025
Unpacking Scope 3: Category 2 – Capital goods
GHG Scope 3 Upstream activites | Category 2 – Capital goods and carbon: the footprint of your fixed assets
When businesses think about emissions, they often focus on day-to-day operations electricity, transport, or waste. But what about the long-term investments that make those operations possible? From buildings and machinery to IT infrastructure and vehicles, these assets carry a hidden carbon cost that’s often overlooked.
Welcome to Scope 3 Category 2 (Capital goods): the emissions associated with the production of your company’s fixed assets before they even arrive at your doorstep.
Understanding “capital goods” GHG emissions
Capital goods are the durable items your business buys and uses over several years. Think of manufacturing equipment, office buildings, construction materials, vehicles, or large-scale IT systems. The GHG emissions linked to producing these goods, mining raw materials, manufacturing components, and transporting them are defined as Scope 3 Category 2.
Even though these emissions occur “upstream” (before you purchase the asset), they’re a crucial part of your carbon footprint. After all, a new factory, data centre or fleet vehicle can carry significant embedded emissions long before it begins operating.
Why it matters
For capital-intensive industries such as construction, energy or manufacturing, Category 2 emissions can represent a major share of total Scope 3 impacts. Tracking them helps companies:
- Make informed investment decisions based on lifecycle impact
- Choose low-carbon building materials and suppliers
- Extend asset life and reduce unnecessary capital turnover
In short, understanding the carbon footprint of your investments helps build sustainability into your growth plans not after the fact, but from the start.
How to measure and manage
- Collect procurement data: Identify major capital projects and gather spend or quantity data for materials and equipment.
- Apply reliable emission factors: Use factors from trusted databases (e.g. DEFRA, EPA, or industry-specific LCAs).
- Engage with suppliers: Ask equipment manufacturers or construction partners for embodied carbon data.
- Design for longevity: Prioritise durable, efficient assets that reduce replacement cycles and embodied emissions over time.
- Consider circularity: Refurbishing, repurposing or leasing assets can significantly cut upstream emissions.
Looking ahead
As sustainability becomes central to financial decision-making, capital goods emissions are moving from the background to the boardroom. Companies are now incorporating embodied carbon into procurement criteria, investment appraisals and ESG disclosures.
Key takeaway
Every new building, machine, or system is more than an investment – it’s a climate choice. By accounting for capital goods emissions today, businesses can shape a low-carbon legacy for tomorrow.












