Purpose-built for growing businesses, Achilles Carbon Accounting automates carbon footprint measurement and simplifies emissions reporting. Stay compliant, hit sustainability goals, and focus on what matters.
Achilles Carbon Accounting software helps businesses automate and streamline their carbon footprint measurement and reporting processes. We focus on simplifying the complexities of data collection, processing, and reporting of greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions making it easier to meet carbon reduction and reporting requirements – including CSRD, SBTi, and CDP.
Automate data collection from utilities, accounting software, and other relevant systems, making it faster and easier to gather accurate carbon accounting data.
A user-friendly set of tools generate audit-ready reports and visualizations, making it easier to demonstrate compliance with regulations and meet reporting obligations.
Solve the challenge of Scope 3 reporting with supply chain expertise, supplier collaboration, and portfolio-level data management that delivers accurate, auditable results.
Turn your sustainability goals into actionable strategies with helpful tools to support the shift to renewable energy, improve efficiency, and low-carbon technology adoption. From solar and wind power to sustainable transport and green buildings, cut emissions across Scope 1, 2, and 3 covering everything from direct operations to supply chain impact.
Achilles Carbon Accounting is designed to be affordable and user-friendly, making it accessible to a wide range of businesses, regardless of their size, industry, or ESG maturity. And better still, personalized customer support from our carbon experts is on-hand to guide your business through the carbon accounting process.
Our Achilles Carbon Management Solutions in Action White Paper explores how businesses are achieving real progress in managing and reducing emissions with Achilles.
WHY ACHILLES
With 30+ years at the forefront of risk and compliance, Achilles brings unmatched understanding of sustainability and global supply chain risk management — essential for accurate carbon emissions reporting.
More than just tracking, Achilles Carbon Accounting helps turn insight into action—supporting decarbonisation strategies across operations, energy use, and the supply base.
From supplier due diligence to carbon accounting and non-financial reporting, Achilles offers an integrated set of tools to meet evolving business resilience, ESG compliance and sustainability goals – all in one place.
Unlike other carbon accounting solutions, Achilles offers the option of internationally-recognised independent emissions auditing and verification to enhance your carbon credentials and meet decarbonisation goals.
FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS
Understanding your carbon footprint is essential in today’s regulatory and sustainability landscape. Our Carbon Accounting FAQ answers the most common questions about emissions tracking, reporting frameworks, and how carbon accounting software can help your business meet climate targets and compliance obligations with confidence.
Carbon accounting, also known as greenhouse gas (GHG) accounting, is the process of measuring, tracking, and reporting carbon dioxide and other GHG emissions produced across an organization’s operations, products, and supply chains. It forms the basis for understanding a company’s climate-related impact and is the first step towards setting reduction targets, disclosing emissions, and meeting compliance standards.
It enables organizations to understand their environmental impact, comply with regulations, identify emission reduction opportunities, and demonstrate sustainability commitments to stakeholders.
The Greenhouse Gas (GHG) Protocol is the most widely used international accounting tool for government and business leaders to understand, quantify, and manage greenhouse gas emissions. Other standards include ISO 14064 (which can be achieved with the support of the Toitu Carbon Reduce program offered by Achilles) and the International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS) S1 and S2 for sustainability-related disclosures.
It depends on the jurisdiction and the size or type of the company. In many regions, large companies are required to report their emissions, and suppliers to these companies may also need to provide emissions data.
Data can be collected from various sources, including utility bills, fuel consumption records, supplier information, and transportation logs. Automated carbon accounting with platforms like Achilles Carbon Accounting streamlines this process.
Several tools and software platforms assist with carbon accounting, such as:
Scope 3 emissions encompass a wide range of indirect emissions across a company’s value chain, making data collection complex due to the involvement of multiple external parties and varying data quality.
Begin by identifying relevant categories within your value chain, such as purchased goods and services, business travel, and waste disposal. Engage with suppliers and partners to gather necessary data, and consider using spend-based or activity-based methods for estimation.
A carbon credit represents the reduction or removal of one metric ton of carbon dioxide or equivalent greenhouse gases from the atmosphere. Organizations can purchase carbon credits to offset their emissions, but it is recommended that credits are used only when other means of reduction have been exhausted.
While often used interchangeably, carbon credits are tradable certificates representing emission reductions, whereas carbon offsets refer to the actual projects or activities that reduce emissions, such as reforestation or renewable energy initiatives.
Start by assessing your current data availability and determining the appropriate boundaries for your emissions inventory. Employ standardized methodologies like the GHG Protocol, and consider engaging with experts or using specialized software like Achilles Carbon Accounting to facilitate the process.
Beyond regulatory compliance, carbon accounting can lead to cost savings through energy efficiency, enhance brand reputation, attract environmentally conscious investors and customers, and identify opportunities for innovation and improvement in operations.