5 min. read
Last updated Nov 24, 2025
Key takeaways
Voice your opinion: The Greenhouse Gas (GHG) Protocol is updating its scope 2 guidance with final standards expected in 2027, which may require hourly and regional matching of renewable energy certificates (RECs), potentially changing how companies claim their electricity-related emission reductions. The first public consultation period remains open through December 19, 2025.
Act now to secure renewable energy contracts: Companies should move forward with their scope 2 climate commitments today. The GHG Protocol is expected to grandfather in contracts entered into under existing rules.
Beyond the megawatt hour (MWh): High-impact forward REC contracts measure impact beyond the current annual MWh match requirement, maximizing near-term carbon abatement and social impact for every dollar invested.
Why 2027 rule changes matter for 2030 targets
Companies racing to meet 2030 climate targets face converging pressures: surging electricity demand, constrained renewable energy supply, and scope 2 accounting rules that could undergo significant changes by 2027.
In a recent webinar, power market experts from Carbon Direct and Ever.green explored these changes. Patti Smith, Electricity Decarbonization Lead at Carbon Direct; Julia Millot, Carbon Accounting Lead at Carbon Direct; and Liz Pearce, Chief Revenue Officer at Ever.green, unpacked what's changing and how companies can respond.
The stakes are high. Based on recently released GHG Protocol Scope 2 Public Consultation materials, companies may need to match RECs to electricity consumption on an hourly and locational basis as early as 2028. However, we expect the GHG Protocol to grandfather forward REC contracts signed before new rules take effect, enabling companies to continue advancing toward 2030 targets amid rule uncertainty.
Big changes to the power grid
The US power grid is entering sustained demand growth for the first time in decades. "Over the next five years, data centers alone are going to put [the equivalent] of four New York Cities onto the grid," Smith explains, citing forecasts that project around 200 terawatt hours of new data center load through 2030.

Source: Carbon Direct, based on information from Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (LBNL), Electric Power Research Institute (EPRI), Goldman Sachs, and the International Energy Agency (IEA).
Meanwhile, new renewable projects face headwinds. Smith points to interconnection queue delays: "Solar and battery projects are taking three to five years from initial request to operation." At the same time, clean energy tax credits, which were driving wind and solar expansion, have been curtailed. New restrictions on foreign supply chain materials, which are critical to renewable project development, are further hampering the development of new clean electricity projects.
The result: Power demand is rising while new renewable electricity supply is getting throttled.
The messy reality of electricity emissions accounting
Quantifying the emissions from an individual power plant is straightforward. Allocating those emissions to the companies that consume power is far more complicated.
Grid-supplied electricity comes from many generators that shift constantly, sometimes even second to second. Companies can’t directly measure emissions from a grid-connected load because the generators serving it continuously change.
Without direct measurement, companies need rules to estimate the emissions they are responsible for. The GHG Protocol’s Scope 2 Guidance provides that framework, establishing how companies estimate electricity-related emissions and how to reduce them through renewable energy purchases.
How companies currently claim renewable energy
For the past decade, companies have used renewable energy purchases to achieve their scope 2 emission reduction goals. The most widely used mechanism is the REC, each representing clean energy attributes for one MWh of renewable electricity generated and added to the grid. Currently, when a company buys RECs equal to its annual electricity consumption, it can claim 100% renewable electricity. Under current rules, companies can use purchased renewable energy from anywhere in North America and apply it to any load in North America at any time during the year.
Importantly, emissions from different power grids vary widely across North America depending on time of day, time of year, and the power grid makeup.
This flexibility allows companies to match a REC from a clean grid against electricity consumption from a dirtier one, creating a potential mismatch between emissions claimed and actual emissions avoided. This gap has drawn scrutiny, contributing to the motivations for the scope 2 rules rewrite.
What's changing in GHG Protocol scope 2 accounting?
On October 19, 2025, after years of consultation, the GHG Protocol released two separate proposals for public consultation:
1. Scope 2 changes: Moving away from annual REC matching to an ‘hourly and regional’ REC matching requirement.
2. New consequential methodology: A new approach to estimating emissions caused by a company’s consumption and avoided by its renewable energy contracts.

Source: Carbon Direct. 2025.
The hourly matching proposal (24/7): Companies would match RECs to consumption hour by hour within the same grid region, rather than annually across any North American grid.
"A REC generated on a Texas wind farm would not be able to be used for electricity consumed in New York," Millot explains.
The consequential approach: This proposes a carbon matching methodology, which estimates emissions caused by a load and estimates the emissions a renewable project displaces.
"Projects in the Carolinas are avoiding 0.6 or 0.7 tons of CO2 per megawatt hour, whereas a California project is probably closer to 0.2 or 0.3," Smith explains.
Projects in the Carolinas deliver more than double the climate impact per REC under the consequential rules. In this methodology, the load and generator do not need to be located in the same region.
While the proposed rules and new methodologies work through the public consultation process, it will be important for companies to start to anticipate the potential impacts on their climate goals and strategies.
Timeline for scope 2 accounting changes
The GHG Protocol published the proposed rules on October 19, 2025, with public consultation open through December 19, 2025. A second public consultation period is expected in the latter half of 2026, and the final standards are anticipated in 2027. Compliance with any new rules would likely not be required before 2028.
Companies are encouraged to participate in the public consultation. The GHG Protocol is asking for comments on critical questions, such as:
Should proposed rules apply to energy consumers of all sizes?
Which geographical boundaries should be used for locational matching?
Should existing contracts be grandfathered in?
The public consultation period is an opportunity to shape the standards that will govern electricity-related emission accounting for years to come.

Source: Carbon Direct, based on information from: GHG Protocol.
Why act now instead of waiting
With final rules still in development, companies with scope 2 emission reduction goals or science-based targets face a decision: Wait for clarity or act now.
Several factors favor early action:
Inclusion of legacy contracts. "There are a lot of indications from the committees that existing long-term contracts will be grandfathered in," Pearce notes. The draft considers a legacy clause that would allow organizations to apply pre-existing contractual agreements, even if they don’t comply with new rules.
Throttled renewable project development. Interconnection delays for new renewable energy projects, elimination of clean energy tax credits by 2028, and limitations on foreign materials needed to develop renewable energy project components mean that new REC supply may be harder to access in future years.
Renewable project development timelines. "There's generally a lag, sometimes six to 18 months" between contract signing and project operation, Pearce explains. That means even if you sign today, the RECs won’t be generated for up to 18 months from the signing date.
High-impact opportunity. Through careful project selection, renewable energy investment can go beyond the annual energy match requirement and incorporate additional impactful metrics, such as higher avoided emissions and positive social impacts.
Renewable energy buying options for companies
Previously, companies have been able to buy renewable energy through the following three paths; however, they all come with their own tradeoffs.
Traditional REC buying options
REC spot markets make up most corporate renewable procurement. However, they mainly come from existing projects rather than financing new development, which is critical to expanding renewable energy supply to meet rising decarbonization needs.
Virtual power purchase agreements (VPPAs) are highly impactful but require large power loads and the ability to manage long-term financial risks. Unavailable to most companies.
Utility green tariffs have limited availability throughout the US (depending on the utility(s) that serve your load) and vary in quality.
Alternative REC procurement approach
For companies that want to go beyond the REC spot market and are not large enough to pursue a VPPA, there’s an alternative procurement option available: a high-impact forward REC contract. These multi-year contracts commit to purchasing RECs from specific new projects before they're built, providing the upfront revenue certainty developers need to secure financing at a fraction of the scale and complexity of a VPPA.
Comparing renewable energy procurement options | |||
|---|---|---|---|
Option | Commitment | Cost | Impact |
Spot market RECs | Annual, any size | $1–$2 per REC | No financing signal for new projects. |
Virtual PPAs | 15–20 years, 100,000+ MWh/year | Variable | Highly impactful; requires a large electricity load and risk management capacity. Unavailable to most companies. |
Green Tariffs | Matches the company load where offered | Variable | Subject to availability by utility(s) that serve the company load, varies in impact. |
High-impact forward RECs | Five years, 1,000+ RECs/year | ~$15 per REC | Material impact (10%+ to project finances); hourly data. |
The path forward
Despite rapidly increasing grid demand, renewable project headwinds, and changing accounting rules, companies can still meet 2030 scope 2 goals.
What companies should do now:
Submit feedback during the public consultation period (open through December 19, 2025)
Evaluate forward REC contracts to lock in terms before rule changes
Prioritize high-impact RECs that deliver measurable climate and social benefits









