California’s SB 253 — also known as the Climate Corporate Data Accountability Act — mandates one of the most comprehensive greenhouse gas (GHG) disclosure regimes in the world. If your company meets the $1B revenue threshold and operates in California, you’ll soon be required to report emissions across Scope 1, Scope 2, and Scope 3 — each representing different layers of your carbon footprint.
In this guide, we break down what each scope covers, what the law expects, how timelines differ, and what it takes to actually get your data ready.
Quick Overview: What Is SB 253?
SB 253 requires all companies with over $1 billion in annual revenue that do business in California to report full-scope emissions — Scope 1, 2, and 3 — starting as early as 2026.
The bill emphasizes standardized, verified data and mandates public disclosure via a central platform. It also requires third-party assurance for Scope 1 and 2 starting in 2026, with Scope 3 assurance to be phased in later.
Learn more: What is California’s SB 253?
What Are Scope 1, 2, and 3 Emissions?
Scope
Description
Examples
Scope 1
Direct emissions from assets your company owns or controls
Fuel burned in company vehicles, on-site manufacturing processes
Scope 2
Indirect emissions from purchased electricity, heating, cooling
Electricity from the grid powering offices or data centers
Scope 3
All other indirect emissions in your value chain
Purchased goods and services, employee commuting, upstream freight, product use-phase
Scope 3 is typically the largest chunk of emissions — and the hardest to measure.
What SB 253 Requires for Each Scope
Scope 1 and 2:
Must be reported annually starting 2026
Must be publicly disclosed through a state-contracted platform
Must follow the GHG Protocol Corporate Standard
Require limited assurance by an accredited third party
Scope 3:
Reporting starts in 2027, 180 days after Scope 1 and 2 disclosures
Must follow the GHG Protocol Corporate Value Chain Standard
Third-party assurance isn’t required yet, but the law allows for future updates
Primary and secondary data sources — including proxy data — are allowed for Scope 3, but must be clearly documented.
Reporting Timelines You Need to Know
Emissions Scope
First Reporting Year
Deadline
Assurance Requirement
Scope 1 & 2
FY2025 data → due in 2026
TBD by CARB
Yes, limited assurance
Scope 3
FY2026 data → due in 2027
180 days after Scope 1/2
Not required yet
How to Prepare: Data Sources, GHG Protocol, and Tools
Start With These Steps:
Conduct a data inventory: List all assets and activities across business units that produce emissions.
Map emission sources to Scope 1, 2, or 3
Align with GHG Protocol:
Use the Corporate Standard for Scope 1 & 2
Use the Value Chain Standard for Scope 3
Choose the right calculation methods:
Direct measurement (e.g., fuel logs, meter data)
Emission factors (e.g., EPA, DEFRA databases)
Spend-based or hybrid models for Scope 3
Document methodologies: Transparency matters. CARB expects clear disclosure of assumptions and sources.
Prepare for assurance: Align your internal process with limited assurance frameworks (like ISAE 3000 or equivalent).
Common Pitfalls in Scope Reporting
Incomplete Scope 3 value chain mapping
Inconsistent emission factors across business units
Overreliance on proxy data without explanation
Misaligned fiscal year vs reporting year
No audit trail for changes or data overrides
How Sprih Supports Scope 1, 2, and 3 Disclosures
Sprih’s platform was built with SB 253 in mind. Here’s how we help:
Automated data collection across Scope 1, 2, and 3
GHG Protocol-compliant calculators and emission factor libraries
Integrated workflows to collaborate across teams and business units
Audit-ready exports for third-party assurance
Dynamic Scope 3 modeling for complex supply chains
Support for multiple reporting frameworks (SB 253, CSRD, SEC)
You don’t have to build your emissions process from scratch — Sprih plugs into your current systems and evolves with your compliance needs.
Talk to our team or Download our SB 253 Checklist.
FAQs
What is the difference between Scope 1, 2, and 3 emissions?
Scope 1 covers direct emissions from sources your company owns or controls. Scope 2 includes indirect emissions from purchased energy. Scope 3 refers to all other indirect emissions across your value chain, like supplier emissions, logistics, and product use.
Is third-party assurance mandatory for Scope 3 under SB 253?
No. As of now, only Scope 1 and 2 require limited assurance starting in 2026. Scope 3 assurance is not yet required but may become mandatory after 2030. It’s still good practice to prepare data with review in mind.
Can I use estimates or proxy data for Scope 3?
Yes. Proxy data and estimates are allowed under SB 253, especially for Scope 3, but they must be aligned with the GHG Protocol and fully documented. You need to explain your assumptions, data sources, and estimation methods clearly in your report.
What if I already report under CDP or CSRD?
That work can definitely help. If your emissions reporting aligns with GHG Protocol standards, you can reuse some of the analysis. But SB 253 has specific format, platform, and assurance requirements, so your disclosures may need adjustments to be compliant.