Operationalising a Carbon Regulator - Review of Existing Regulatory Landscape
This report is the second in our Operationalising a Carbon Regulator series where we consider the feasibility of setting up an independent regulator to plug some of the gaps in carbon accounting regulation and move to a more robust, data driven Net Zero economy.
Key insights
The report highlights seven major gaps in carbon accounting regulation:
Lack of coordination between regulators and government
Absence of detailed methodologies and calculations guidance within existing regulations and standards
Lack of third-party verification requirements on disclosures and claims, and inconsistent verification processes
Limited action on misleading claims. Lack of mediation for competing claims on the carbon intensity of products and/or services
Lack of standardised emissions factor datasets and significant gaps in availability of Scope 3 emissions factors
No standardised qualifications/accreditations for carbon accountants
No digital oversight to encourage interoperability and data sharing
The report sets a series of proposed regulatory functions that a carbon regulator could support:
Improve alignment between existing regulators
Oversee third-party verification requirements and accreditation of verifiers
Support the Competition and Markets Authority and the Advertising Standards Authority in investigating green claims
Issue guidance on accurate emissions factor use and set requirements on dataset owners to keep them updated and aligned.
Support bodies such as the Carbon Accounting Alliance in developing qualifications for carbon accountants
Data best practice guidance and open data licensing conditions could be developed or coordinated by a proposed regulator to improve exchange of emissions data.
Keep an eye out for future reports in this series, where we dive into international considerations for a Carbon Regulator.
Read the Report
Operationalising a carbon regulator (report two)
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In July 2023, Energy Systems Catapult kicked off a two-year project that aims to set out how the concept of a Carbon Regulator could be brought to life. As part of the cross-Catapult Carbon Accounting Programme, funded by Innovate UK and led by the High Value Manufacturing Catapult, we are aiming to answer the question: What does regulatory oversight for carbon accounting and emissions data look like in a Net Zero economy?
Net Zero Carbon Policy is an Energy Systems Catapult thought leadership project, focusing on how the UK can develop an innovation-friendly, economy-wide framework for Net Zero.