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By Sustainability Data Specialist (ex-Big 4 assurance)·14 March 2026·3 min read

Scope 3 Data Collection in France: Why Most French Companies Get It Wrong

1375 carbon accounting companies in our French directory. Most French Scope 3 numbers are fabricated from industry averages. Here's why — and what French procurement teams actually need.

Let me start with a number that should make every French sustainability officer uncomfortable: 87% of Scope 3 emissions reported in European filings are calculated using industry-average emission factors, not actual supplier data. The reports look precise — "12,847 tonnes CO2e" — but the underlying data is a sophisticated guess.

France's Reporting Landscape

France's carbon accounting is shaped by nuclear electricity: France's grid intensity (~55g CO2/kWh) is 5-7x lower than Germany's (~350g), fundamentally changing Scope 2 calculations for French operations. ADEME (Agence de la transition écologique) maintains the Base Carbone, France's official emission factor database — a methodological reference used across the Francophone world. The Loi Climat et Résilience (2021) requires carbon auditing for companies with 500+ employees. French companies report via the Bilan Carbone methodology (developed by ADEME, predating GHG Protocol in France) or the GHG Protocol — the dual-standard landscape creates compliance complexity.

Why Industry Averages Are Dangerous

An industry-average emission factor for steel says "one tonne = X tonnes CO2e." But actual carbon intensity varies 4-6x:

  • Blast furnace (BF-BOF): ~2.1 tonnes CO2e/tonne
  • Electric arc furnace, grid average: ~0.6 tonnes CO2e/tonne
  • EAF with renewable electricity: ~0.15 tonnes CO2e/tonne
  • Green hydrogen DRI + EAF: ~0.05 tonnes CO2e/tonne

France's nuclear-dominated grid (~55g CO2/kWh) means French manufacturing has inherently lower Scope 2 emissions than Germany (350g) or UK (200g). Industry-average factors erase this competitive advantage for French suppliers.

The French Compliance Trap

The Loi Climat et Résilience requires carbon auditing for 500+ employee companies. France's Bilan Carbone methodology predates the GHG Protocol in French practice — many French companies must reconcile two methodologies that handle biogenic emissions differently.

What Actually Works

The companies getting real Scope 3 data follow a pattern:

Step 1: Identify your top 20 suppliers by emission impact — not by spend.

Step 2: Request three data points from those suppliers: total production volume, total energy consumption, energy source mix. From those, you can calculate product-level emission factors 10x more accurate than industry averages.

Step 3: Use industry averages only for the long tail (80% of suppliers contributing 20% of emissions).

Step 4: Build carbon intensity into procurement — as a line item in RFQs, next to price and lead time.

French Data Sources

  • France 2030
  • Loi AGEC
  • Loi Climat et Résilience
  • Base Carbone
  • SIRENE / RCS — Company verification: sirene.fr

Our directory indexes 1375 carbon accounting and decarbonization companies in France. 404 hold validated SBTi targets. 791 participate in EU-funded Horizon Europe research projects.

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Data sourced from SIRENE / RCS, SBTi Target Dashboard, and CORDIS. 1328 companies register-verified.

Data Sources
  • SIRENE / RCS
  • CSRD regulatory text
  • GHG Protocol
  • France 2030
  • Loi AGEC

Frequently Asked Questions

What are France's Scope 3 reporting requirements?
French companies must comply with Loi Climat et Résilience (500+ employees) and CSRD. The Bilan Carbone methodology is the primary French standard.
How many carbon accounting companies are in France?
Our directory indexes 1375 carbon accounting and decarbonization companies in France, of which 1328 are register-verified. 404 hold validated SBTi climate targets.