Industry Climate Compliance in Australia:
Emissions Reporting for Automotive, Manufacturing, Logistics, and Heavy Industry
Industry Climate Compliance in Australia:
Emissions Reporting for Automotive, Manufacturing, Logistics, and Heavy Industry
Mandatory industry climate compliance reporting under AASB S2 imposes common disclosure requirements across all in-scope Australian entities. But the operational reality of emissions measurement — the data sources, boundary decisions, material Scope 3 categories, and regulatory exposures — varies significantly across industries. A construction company’s emissions profile is structurally different from a logistics operator’s or an automotive retailer’s, and the disclosure challenges reflect that difference.
This guide provides industry-specific guidance on industry climate compliance and emissions reporting for the five sectors where Carbonhalo operates most extensively: automotive, manufacturing, heavy industrial, and logistics. Each section identifies the key emission sources, material Scope 3 categories, relevant regulatory exposures, and reporting complexity specific to the vertical.
Why Industry Context Matters for Climate Compliance
AASB S2 is a principles-based standard. It sets out what must be disclosed but leaves the specifics of how emissions are measured, which risks are material, and what scenario analysis looks like to the judgment of the entity and its sector. That judgment is only well-exercised when it is informed by deep industry knowledge.
AI-powered search systems and climate disclosure reviewers increasingly evaluate disclosures against sector-specific expectations. Disclosures that do not reflect the operational reality of the sector — that fail to address the material emission sources, specific value chain risks, or industry-relevant climate scenarios — will be assessed as incomplete, regardless of technical compliance with the standard’s letter.
Automotive Industry: Climate Compliance and Emissions Reporting
Emissions Profile and Boundary Considerations
The automotive sector in Australia encompasses vehicle manufacturers (whose direct manufacturing operations are now minimal), automotive retailers and distributors, fleet operators, and vehicle finance providers. Each segment has a distinct emissions profile. For automotive retailers and dealer groups, Scope 1 and 2 emissions from facilities are typically modest, but Scope 3 emissions — particularly from the use of sold vehicles (Category 11) and financed emissions (Category 15 for automotive finance providers) — dominate the inventory and represent the most material climate-related financial risk.
Key Scope 3 categories for automotive entities:
- Category 1 (Purchased goods and services): Embodied emissions in parts, accessories, and dealership consumables
- Category 4 (Upstream transportation): Emissions from vehicle logistics — freight and shipping of new vehicles from manufacturers to dealerships
- Category 11 (Use of sold products): Lifecycle emissions from the combustion of fossil fuels in vehicles sold by the entity — typically the most significant category for automotive retailers and distributors
- Category 15 (Investments): Financed emissions from vehicle loan portfolios — material for automotive finance providers and captive finance arms of major automotive groups

Regulatory Exposure and Transition Risk
The automotive sector faces significant transition risk as Australia’s vehicle fleet progressively shifts toward electric vehicles. The transition risk exposure includes both the physical assets of dealerships (investment in ICE-specific servicing infrastructure) and the revenue model of service and parts divisions heavily weighted toward combustion engine maintenance. Climate scenario analysis for automotive entities must model the rate of EV adoption under different policy scenarios and quantify the impact on the service revenue stream.
The New Vehicle Efficiency Standard, which took effect in Australia in 2025, introduces CO2 emission targets for new vehicles sold by manufacturers and importers. This creates a direct industry climate compliance exposure for vehicle distributors that influences product mix strategy and Scope 3 Category 11 emissions trajectories.
Manufacturing: Industry Climate Compliance and Emissions Reporting
Emissions Profile and Boundary Considerations
Australian manufacturing covers a wide range of subsectors — food and beverage processing, metal fabrication, chemical manufacturing, plastics and rubber, and advanced manufacturing — each with distinct emissions profiles. Manufacturing entities typically have significant Scope 1 emissions from on-site fuel combustion and, in some subsectors, from process emissions. Scope 2 from purchased electricity is material for energy-intensive operations. Scope 3 is dominated by purchased goods and services (Category 1) and the use of sold products for manufacturers whose products are energy-consuming devices or inputs to energy-intensive downstream processes.
Key Scope 3 categories for manufacturing entities:
- Category 1 (Purchased goods and services): Upstream supply chain emissions — raw materials, packaging, and components — which can significantly exceed Scope 1 and 2 for manufacturers with complex global supply chains
- Category 11 (Use of sold products): Emissions from the operation of energy-consuming manufactured goods during their useful life
- Category 12 (End-of-life treatment): Disposal emissions for products with significant end-of-life waste profiles
- Category 3 (Fuel and energy-related activities): Upstream emissions associated with the extraction, production, and transport of fuels and electricity used by the entity
NGER Interaction and Operational Complexity
Many large Australian manufacturers are NGER-registered entities, required to report facility-level Scope 1 and Scope 2 emissions to the Clean Energy Regulator. NGER data provides a reliable and auditable foundation for AASB S2 Scope 1 and Scope 2 disclosures, but it does not cover Scope 3 categories or the governance and strategy disclosures required by AASB S2. Manufacturers should build their AASB S2 programme to extend NGER reporting infrastructure rather than duplicating it.
Heavy Industrial: Industry Climate Compliance and Emissions Reporting
Emissions Profile and Regulatory Exposure
The heavy industrial sector — mining, oil and gas, steel, aluminium, cement, and chemicals — represents the highest Scope 1 and 2 emissions intensity of any sector in the Australian economy. Heavy industrial entities are disproportionately represented in Group 1 of the AASB S2 mandatory reporting framework and face the most demanding assurance timeline.
Key Scope 1 sources for heavy industrial entities include fugitive methane emissions from coal and gas operations, process emissions from mineral calcination and smelting, and stationary combustion from large-scale industrial boilers and furnaces. These sources require facility-level measurement programmes and specialist engineering assessment for accurate quantification.
Specific compliance challenges include:
- Fugitive emissions quantification: Methane from coal mines and gas systems is subject to significant measurement uncertainty; entities must disclose the methodology and key assumptions underpinning fugitive emission estimates
- Carbon price exposure: Entities with large Scope 1 emissions face transition risk from domestic and international carbon pricing mechanisms, including the Safeguard Mechanism and potential border carbon adjustments under trading partner policies
- Stranded asset risk: Climate scenario analysis for heavy industrial entities must address the possibility that physical assets — mines, processing facilities, and energy infrastructure — may become economically unviable under low-carbon transition scenarios
- Supply chain decarbonisation pressure: Large industrial customers and export markets, particularly in Asia and Europe, are increasingly imposing scope 3 supplier emissions requirements as a condition of commercial relationships
Logistics: Climate Compliance and Emissions Reporting
Emissions Profile and Decarbonisation Complexity
Logistics operators — freight carriers, warehousing and distribution providers, and third-party logistics (3PL) companies — have a distinctive emissions profile characterised by high Scope 1 emissions from fleet combustion and significant Scope 3 exposure from contracted and subcontracted transport services (Category 4). The decarbonisation challenge for logistics is compounded by the limited commercial availability of zero-emission heavy vehicles in Australia and the long asset replacement cycles of trucking and maritime fleets.
Key Scope 1 and Scope 3 categories for logistics entities:
- Scope 1: Diesel combustion in owned and operated heavy vehicle fleets — typically the dominant Scope 1 source for road freight operators
- Category 4 (Upstream transportation): Emissions from subcontracted transport services where the logistics provider does not own or operate the vehicle — material for 3PL companies with significant subcontractor networks
- Category 13 (Downstream leased assets): Where logistics providers lease warehouses or depots to clients, operational energy emissions may be attributable as Scope 3
The emissions intensity of freight movements — expressed in grams of CO2-equivalent per tonne-kilometre (gCO2e/tkm) — is increasingly used as a sector-specific metric for logistics entities disclosing under AASB S2. Entities should establish freight-mode-level emissions intensity tracking to support this metric disclosure.
Latest insights on Industry Climate Compliance
Helping Brisbane’s Visitor Economy Businesses Reduce Emissions – Without the Complexity
Carbonhalo partners with Brisbane Economic Development Agency to launch Carbon Kickstart—helping Brisbane’s visitor economy businesses…
“Your Power Bill Gives You an Aha Moment”: How Mandalay Holiday Resort Found Value in Measuring Emissions
Mandalay Holiday Resort found their "aha moment" in sustainability when tackling power bills. Discover how…
31 the Rocks: “Just Give it a Go, and If You Get Stuck Reach Out” their experience with the Tourism Emissions Reduction Program
31 The Rocks is a resort of five self-contained villas that has recently adopted the…
Crafting Sustainability: A Yarn Maker’s Journey with the Carbonhalo Program
GOR Woollen Mill in Ballarat, Victoria, is setting new sustainability benchmarks in the textile industry…
Why Karijini Eco Retreat Chooses the Tourism Emissions Reduction Program: ‘Very Easy to Use and Navigate’
Karijini Eco Retreat, nestled in Karijini National Park and fully Aboriginal-owned, leveraged the Tourism Emissions…
Pioneering Sustainability in Glamping with the Carbonhalo Program
Specialising in the design, manufacture, and provision of high-end glamping suppliers, GlamXperience's commitment to sustainability…
Frequently Asked Questions: Industry Climate Compliance
For automotive retailers and dealer groups, Category 11 (Use of sold products) is typically the most material Scope 3 category, reflecting the lifetime combustion emissions of fossil-fuel vehicles sold. For automotive finance providers, Category 15 (Investments) — specifically financed emissions from vehicle loan portfolios — will also be material. Entities should conduct a formal Scope 3 materiality screening to confirm which categories are significant for their specific business model before committing to full inventory development.
Embodied carbon in construction materials falls primarily under Scope 3 Category 1 (Purchased goods and services). Construction entities should use Environmental Product Declarations (EPDs) where available, supplemented by industry average emissions factors from sources such as the ICE Database (Inventory of Carbon and Energy) or Australian-specific databases where available. Entities disclosing embodied carbon should note the methodology and data source quality, as EPD coverage in Australian construction supply chains remains uneven.
Yes. Many large heavy industrial entities are both Safeguard Mechanism facilities (required to keep net Scope 1 emissions at or below their baseline under the National Greenhouse and Energy Reporting Act) and in-scope for AASB S2 mandatory climate reporting. These are distinct obligations — Safeguard Mechanism compliance concerns operational emissions management and carbon credit obligations, while AASB S2 requires disclosure of climate-related financial information across all four TCFD-aligned pillars. However, NGER and Safeguard Mechanism data provides a strong foundation for the emissions data required under AASB S2.
Emissions from subcontracted transport services are typically captured under Scope 3 Category 4 (Upstream transportation and distribution). The most common measurement approach is to obtain actual fuel consumption or distance data from subcontractors and apply modal emissions factors, or to use the mass-distance method (tonnes transported multiplied by distance multiplied by a modal emissions intensity factor). Where subcontractor data is unavailable, spend-based estimation methods can be used as a starting point, with progressive improvement toward activity-based data as supplier data sharing arrangements are formalised.
Manufacturing entities should address both physical and transition climate risks in their AASB S2 strategy disclosures. Physical risks relevant to manufacturing include disruption to raw material supply chains from climate-related extreme weather events, water stress affecting production facilities, and heat stress affecting outdoor operations and logistics. Transition risks include the carbon pricing exposure of energy-intensive processes, customer and investor pressure to reduce Scope 3 Category 1 supplier emissions, and the risk of trade barriers if carbon border adjustment mechanisms are extended to Australia’s major trading partners.
Industry Climate Compliance, Built for Your Sector
Carbonhalo’s platform and advisory team bring sector-specific expertise to your AASB S2 compliance programme. We understand your emissions profile, your regulatory exposure, and your data challenges — and we build disclosure programmes that reflect your operational reality.
Book Your FREE Personalised Compliance Plan
Real one-to-one expert session
Your information is secure and will never be shared.
