How is Carbon Emissions defined in a legal contract?
- Carbon Emissions means the direct and indirect release of carbon dioxide into the environment. This includes emissions directly produced by an entity and those resulting from the energy it has purchased. Seen in 3 SEC filings.
- Carbon Emissions means the total carbon equivalent greenhouse gas emissions associated with energy consumption during a specified period, which are quantified in metric tonnes of equivalent carbon dioxide. Seen in 2 SEC filings.
- Carbon Emissions means the carbon dioxide released when fossil fuels are burned across various platforms. Often denoted as carbon dioxide equivalent (CO2e), it covers both carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases. Seen in 2 SEC filings.
- Carbon Emissions means the total amount of carbon dioxide, measured in tonnes, derived from the emissions factor applied to each quantity of fuel. Seen in 1 SEC filing.
- Carbon Emissions means the emissions arising from the combustion of fossil fuels like coal, petroleum, natural gas, oil, shale, and bitumen, expressed in metric tons. Seen in 1 SEC filing.
Note: pulled this data out of the SEC EDGAR Database of 500,000 records from the past 22 years of filings. We regularly update this page as new filings and definitions come in.
yourself to verify these results. We are always keen to point people to source documents.
Which definition should you use?
🤔 has combined and improved the above descriptions to create market-standard 'Genie definitions' below, with guidance on which documents and which industry to use for each.
Genie Definition 1
- Carbon Emissions means the release of carbon dioxide equivalent (CO2e), encompassing direct, indirect, and purchased energy-produced emissions.
Relevant Contract Types
- Environmental Impact Agreement
- Supply Chain Agreement
- Sustainability Contract
- Corporate Social Responsibility Agreement
- Energy Purchase Agreement
Relevant Circumstances
- When a company is auditing its carbon footprint
- When an organization intends to purchase carbon offsets
- When a business is undertaking sustainable energy projects
- During environmental due diligence in M&A deals
- When an institution is reporting its sustainability practices to regulators or investors
Relevant Sectors
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