• Advertise
  • Contact Us
  • Supplier Directory
  • SCB YouTube
  • About Us
  • Login
  • Subscribe
  • Logout
  • My Profile
  • LOGISTICS
    • Air Cargo
    • All Logistics
    • Facility Location Planning
    • Freight Forwarding/Customs Brokerage
    • Global Gateways
    • Global Logistics
    • Last Mile Delivery
    • Logistics Outsourcing
    • LTL/Truckload Services
    • Ocean Transportation
    • Parcel & Express
    • Rail & Intermodal
    • Reverse Logistics
    • Service Parts Management
    • Transportation & Distribution
  • TECHNOLOGY
    • All Technology
    • Artificial Intelligence
    • Cloud & On-Demand Systems
    • Data Management (Big Data/IoT/Blockchain)
    • ERP & Enterprise Systems
    • Forecasting & Demand Planning
    • Global Trade Management
    • Inventory Planning/ Optimization
    • Product Lifecycle Management
    • Robotics
    • Sales & Operations Planning
    • SC Finance & Revenue Management
    • SC Planning & Optimization
    • Supply Chain Visibility
    • Transportation Management
  • GENERAL SCM
    • Business Strategy Alignment
    • Customer Relationship Management
    • Education & Professional Development
    • Global Supply Chain Management
    • Global Trade & Economics
    • Green Energy
    • HR & Labor Management
    • Quality & Metrics
    • Regulation & Compliance
    • Sourcing/Procurement/SRM
    • SC Security & Risk Mgmt
    • Supply Chains in Crisis
    • Sustainability & Corporate Social Responsibility
  • WAREHOUSING
    • All Warehouse Services
    • Conveyors & Sortation
    • Lift Trucks & AGVs
    • Order Management & Fulfillment
    • Packaging
    • RFID, Barcode, Mobility & Voice
    • Warehouse Automation
    • Warehouse Management Systems
  • INDUSTRIES
    • Aerospace & Defense
    • Apparel
    • Automotive
    • Chemicals & Energy
    • Consumer Packaged Goods
    • E-Commerce/Omni-Channel
    • Food & Beverage
    • Healthcare
    • High-Tech/Electronics
    • Industrial Manufacturing
    • Pharmaceutical/Biotech
    • Retail
  • THINK TANK
  • WEBINARS
    • On-Demand Webinars
    • Upcoming Webinars
    • Webinar Library
  • PODCASTS
  • WHITEPAPERS
  • VIDEOS
Home » Solving the Scope 3 Reporting Challenge for Freight
ESG

Solving the Scope 3 Reporting Challenge for Freight

The Earth depicted as a green grassy globe, with four brown blocks in front displaying icons of a ship, train, truck, and aircraft.

Photo: iStock / Boy Wirat

May 5, 2025
Lauren Miller, Sustainability Manager, ITS Logistics

its-Miller.pngAnalyst Insight: Scope 3 transportation emissions remain among the most difficult to measure accurately. However, advances in data aggregation and tracking methodologies are enabling more precise insights. Now, shippers can improve transparency and align with evolving sustainability expectations.

Emissions tracking is becoming a key requirement for businesses worldwide. New regulations, such as California’s Climate Corporate Data Accountability Act (SB 253), are driving mandatory disclosures of greenhouse gas emissions, while investors and customers increasingly expect sustainability commitments to be backed by measurable data.

Companies that rely on third-party logistics providers must account for Scope 3 emissions — indirect emissions from their supply-chain partners — yet many lack the necessary data to report accurately. 

Tracking Scope 3 emissions from transportation presents several industry-wide obstacles:

Limited carrier data availability. Many companies lack direct visibility into the fuel efficiency, equipment types, and operational details of their transportation providers. Without this information, emission estimates are often based on broad assumptions rather than actual carrier performance.

Highly fragmented carrier networks. The U.S. has over 800,000 trucking companies, most of which are small operators with minimal emissions reporting capabilities. Standardizing data across such a diverse landscape remains a challenge.

Evolving regulatory standards. As state and federal climate regulations develop, companies must ensure their reporting methodologies align with frameworks such as the Global Logistics Emissions Council (GLEC) and other emerging emissions disclosure requirements.

To improve emissions tracking and reporting accuracy, industry stakeholders are turning to the following data-driven methodologies:

Standardized emissions frameworks. Established guidelines such as the GLEC framework allows for consistent and comparable emissions reporting across transportation networks.

Government-backed data sources. Aggregating emissions factors from organizations like the DOT, Environmental Protection Agency, and National Highway Traffic Safety Administration provides a more reliable foundation for estimating freight emissions.

Granular, shipment-level tracking. Moving beyond broad estimates to capture truckload-level and lane-specific emissions enables a more precise understanding of transportation-related carbon impact.

These advances provide companies with more accurate emissions insights, enabling them to not only meet compliance requirements but also identify potential areas for carbon reduction within their supply chains.

As emissions tracking capabilities evolve, the next step is integrating these insights into broader sustainability strategies. Some key developments on the horizon include:

Optimizing freight routes for lower emissions. Aligning emissions data with route optimization tools to identify fuel-efficient shipping options.

Increasing access to low- and zero-emission freight capacity. Expanding shipper access to carriers with lower carbon footprints to help reduce overall transportation emissions.

Enhancing digital visibility. Developing real-time emissions dashboards to support continuous monitoring and decision-making.

These innovations will allow companies to take a more proactive approach to emissions management, balancing regulatory compliance with strategic sustainability goals.

Scope 3 emissions tracking has long been a blind spot in freight sustainability efforts, but emerging data-driven solutions are beginning to bridge this gap. By improving transparency and standardizing emissions reporting, businesses can better understand their transportation footprint, comply with evolving regulations, and make more informed sustainability decisions.

As the industry continues to adapt, collaboration between shippers, carriers and logistics providers will be essential in ensuring the availability and accuracy of emissions data, so that supply chains can move toward a lower-carbon future.

    RELATED CONTENT

    RELATED VIDEOS

    Global Logistics Quality & Metrics Regulation & Compliance Sustainability & Corporate Social Responsibility
    • Related Articles

      Scope 3 Emissions Reporting: Under the Spotlight for All Businesses

      Watch: The Progress — or Lack of It — of Scope 3 Emissions Reporting

      Podcast | A Lab for Solving Urban Freight Congestion

    Lauren Miller, Sustainability Manager, ITS Logistics

    More from this author

    Subscribe to our Daily Newsletter!

    Timely, incisive articles delivered directly to your inbox.

    Popular Stories

    • A man wearing a blue long-sleeve shirt and jeans, with a yellow hard hat, kneeling down in front of a factory machine, with a similarly dressed man standing behind him in the background.

      'A Fool's Errand': The Fatal Flaw Behind a U.S. Manufacturing Revival

      Education & Professional Development
    • A brown delivery truck with "UPS" emblazoned on the passenger side in yellow lettering

      UPS in Talks with Startup to Deploy Humanoid Robots

      Last Mile Delivery
    • A GLEAMING TUNNEL OF LIGHTS CURVES AWAY INTO A HORN

      Manufacturers: Supply Chain Management Popular Use for AI

      Technology
    • A SEA OF CARS LINED UP IN ORDER OF COLOR

      Trump Signs Order Providing Tariff Relief to Automakers

      Global Trade & Economics
    • AN AIRPLANE TAXIS ON A RUNWAY AGAINST A ROSE COLORED SKY

      Airbus Tells U.S. Airlines They’ll Need to Pay Their Own Tariffs

      Air Cargo

    Digital Edition

    Scb q1 2025 cover

    2025 Resource Guide -- The Uncertainty Principle

    VIEW THE LATEST ISSUE

    Case Studies

    • Recycled Tagging Fasteners: Small Changes Make a Big Impact

    • A GRAPHIC SHOWING MULTIPLE FORMS OF SHIPPING, WITH A HUMAN STANDING AT THE CENTER, TOUCHING A SYMBOLIC MAP OF THE WORLD

      Enhancing High-Value Electronics Shipment Security with Tive's Real-Time Tracking

    • A GRAPHIC OF INTERLACING HONEYCOMBED ELEMENTS REPRESENTING GLOBAL BUSINESS TRANSACTIONS

      Moving Robots Site-to-Site

    • JLL Finds Perfect Warehouse Location, Leading to $15M Grant for Startup

    • Robots Speed Fulfillment to Help Apparel Company Scale for Growth

    Visit Our Sponsors

    Anaplan Cleo Dassault
    Enveyo Eva Air GAINSystems
    General Logistics Systems Geodis Georgetown University
    GEP Holman Logistics Integrity Staffing
    Korber LoadSmart Lucas Systems
    Made4Net Manhattan Associates MSC Air Cargo
    Old Dominion Packsize Peak Technologies
    Rockwell Automation SAP S&P Global Mobility
    TADA Thomson Reuters Werner Enterprises
    Zebra Technologies
    • More From SCB
      • Featured Content
      • Video Library
      • Think Tank Blog
      • SupplyChainBrain Podcast
      • Whitepapers
      • On-Demand Webinars
      • Upcoming Webinars
    • Digital Offerings
      • Digital Issue
      • Subscribe
      • Manage Email Preferences
      • Newsletters
    • Resources
      • Events Calendar
      • SCB's Great Supply Chain Partners
      • Supplier Directory
      • Case Study Showcase
      • Supply Chain Innovation Awards
      • 100 Great Partners Form
    • SCB Corporate
      • Advertise on SCB.COM
      • About Us
      • Privacy Policy
      • Contact Us
      • Data Sharing Opt-Out

    All content copyright ©2025 Keller International Publishing Corp All rights reserved. No reproduction, transmission or display is permitted without the written permissions of Keller International Publishing Corp

    Design, CMS, Hosting & Web Development :: ePublishing