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Climate Now Episode 69

September 20, 2022

Follow the carbon trail: quantifying a corporate carbon footprint

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Featured Experts

Charles Cannon
Manager, Climate Intelligence, RMI

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Charles Cannon

Manager, Climate Intelligence, RMI

Charles is a Manager with RMI’s Climate Intelligence program, working at the intersection of environmental reporting, technology, and industrial decarbonization. Charles oversees a team that improves disclosure and exchange of GHG data in mining, metals, fuels, and electricity by developing impact-based reporting guidance. By developing a community of practice across NGO, governmental, and corporate practitioners, Charles works within RMI’s Horizon Zero team to close the ambition action gap between corporate sustainability goals and emissions reduction.

Before joining RMI, Charles went to school for mechanical engineering at Stevens Institute of Technology and worked as an engineer for a solar company, designing 50MW+ of commercial & industrial solar projects across the US.

In this Episode

Calls for transparent information on the carbon footprint of a product, service, company or government are getting louder from consumers and investors, and will likely be soon codified in regulations like the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission’s proposed rule on climate risk reporting for publicly traded companies. But how do you actually account for all the emissions released in the production process or in a company activity? Is it even possible to accurately quantify?

Charles Cannon, a manager of RMI’s climate intelligence program, investigates ways to improve the quality of product level greenhouse gas information (like how much CO2 was released to manufacture your new refrigerator?). He sat down with Climate Now to explain the challenges involved in carbon accounting – the term for quantifying greenhouse gas emissions – and how those challenges might be addressed.

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