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The most important GHG accounting concept you may not have heard of: the attributional-consequential distinction

Matthew Brander

2022Carbon Management24 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

There are two major types of GHG accounting, attributional methods and consequential methods. Often practitioners are not aware of the distinction and use an inappropriate method for a given purpose. Attributional methods are inventories of emissions and removals within a defined inventory boundary and are appropriate for allocating carbon budgets and setting reduction targets. However, attributional methods can lead to actions that unintentionally increase emissions as they only provide information on emissions/removals within the inventory boundary. Consequential methods aim to provide information on the system-wide or global change caused by actions and are the appropriate method for informing decisions aimed at reducing emissions.

Topics & Concepts

Greenhouse gasAttributionCarbon accountingAccounting methodAccounting information systemBoundary (topology)Environmental economicsBusinessAccountingEconomicsPsychologySocial psychologyMathematicsMathematical analysisBiologyEcologyEnvironmental Impact and SustainabilityClimate Change Policy and EconomicsEnergy, Environment, and Transportation Policies
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