No. 177: Corporate Carbon Accounting: Current Practices and Opportunities for Research

Year: 2025
Type: Working Paper

Abstract

This article reviews current practices in corporate carbon accounting and highlights opportunities for future research. The common framework for determining and reporting corporate greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions today is the GHG Protocol. Like financial accounting standards, this framework includes overarching objectives, principles for conceptual guidance, and procedures for determining key outcome variables. Their design and implementation, however, often result in disclosures that obscure firms’ actual emissions and decarbonization progress. Recognizing the growing demand for transparency, standard-setters worldwide have recently introduced regulations for carbon accounting and reporting. These regulations require companies to disclose decision-useful information on their emissions. Yet, they have also largely adopted the GHG Protocol for how companies should determine and report their emissions. Accounting scholars now have the opportunity to develop solutions that will make corporate carbon accounting an effective tool in combating climate change.

Participating Institutions

TRR 266‘s main locations are Paderborn University (Coordinating University), HU Berlin, and University of Mannheim. All three locations have been centers for accounting and tax research for many years. They are joined by researchers from LMU Munich, Frankfurt School of Finance and Management, Goethe University Frankfurt, University of Cologne and Leibniz University Hannover who share the same research agenda.

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