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Team Name:

​Emission Impossible 🏭💨


Team Members:


Evidence of Work

'Corporation Emissions Rating' System ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐

Project Info

​Emission Impossible 🏭💨 thumbnail

Team Name


​Emission Impossible 🏭💨


Team Members


Bryce Cronin

Project Description


The Corporation Emission Rating system simplifies and standardises the reporting of carbon emissions to consumers and policy makers, while also being scalable and adaptable, ensuring that informed decisions can be made using meaningful insights. Corporations with a low rating will have far more incentive to strive for better emissions levels when consumers actually understand what their disclosures mean and when good ratings are rewarded.


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Description

Climate change is bringing a lot of changes.
Governments and regulators are now enforcing stringent norms for businesses to reduce emissions and address environmental risks. Under current regulations, corporations in Australia are required to report emission and energy consumption data every year. This is what that looks like:

Boring Data

But what does this data even mean? Can you interpret it??

Most people don’t know how to interpret the above emissions and energy consumption data - and that’s a huge problem for policy makers, consumers, and general audiences.

The Corporation Emission Rating project takes this scary data, standardises it, and presents it as a 6-star scale on a user-friendly badge.

User-Friendly Data

Measuring and tracking emissions data is a difficult task for organisations, but reporting it to the public is even more so.

The Corporation Emission Rating system presents a standardised framework for reporting ESG and climate related risks to consumers, policy makers, and general audiences.

This allows organisations to better report their emissions in a user-friendly manner.

This system is designed to provide incentives for organisations to reduce their emissions, and to reward organisations that are already making steps to reduce emissions.

Rewards

For this project, I created a tool to generate a badge for every Australian corporation.
Imagine if each corporation was also required to display this badge on their advertising material, or website for example.

Corporations with a low rating, will have far more incentive to strive for better emissions levels when consumers actually understand what their disclosures mean and when good ratings are rewarded.

Generating Badges

This rating system works within the existing National Greenhouse and Energy Reporting (NGER) framework that requires large corporations to report. This project also utilises open data from the Australian Clean Energy Regulator, but can easily be updated to take in data from other sources and be expanded across the globe.

Future expansion of the Corporation Emissions Rating system could include data from the Corporate Emissions Reduction Transparency report, which includes voluntarily reported data from smaller organisations.

The Corporation Emissions Rating system simplifies and standardises the reporting of carbon emissions to consumers and policy makers, while also being scalable and adaptable, ensuring that informed decisions can be made using meaningful insights.

Lots of User-Friendly Data

Screenshots

My project produced over 400 automatically generated badges for Australian corporations:
Many Badges
Many Badges


#⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ #esg #climate change #emissions #energy consumption #standardisation #visualisation

Data Story


Corporate emissions and energy data 2020-2022 from the Australian Clean Energy Regulator was used extensively for this project.
This data was first normalised and compared with previous years. Additional business data from ASIC was used to complete data without human-readable business names.
This data was ranked against itself to inform a 6-star scale, where corporations with less emissions have more stars.
Year-over-year trends also dictates rankings.
5-stars is reserved to the best of the best, comparatively to the other organisation stats. 6-stars full self sufficiency.
Exact formulas and full data sources can be found on the GitHub.


Evidence of Work

Video

Homepage

Project Image

Team DataSets

ASIC Company Dataset

Description of Use Used to find human-readable business names for corporations with only a Australian Company Number (ACN) listed.

Data Set

Corporate emissions and energy data 2020-21

Description of Use This data was analysed in order to rank Australian corporations based on their scope 1 and scope 2 emissions, as well as their net energy consumed. Previous year data was also used to calculate the year-over-year change.

Data Set

Corporate emissions and energy data 2021-22

Description of Use This data was analysed in order to rank Australian corporations based on their scope 1 and scope 2 emissions, as well as their net energy consumed. Previous year data was also used to calculate the year-over-year change.

Data Set

Challenge Entries

Measuring and reducing carbon emissions from physical infrastructure assets

Build a platform / solution to raise awareness of the importance of decarbonisation and to provide resources to help people and businesses make changes to their lifestyles and practices. By enabling a data-driven, collaborative, and user-friendly platforms for decarbonisation, Australia can accelerate its journey to net zero emissions.

Go to Challenge | 11 teams have entered this challenge.

Measuring Emissions – Where should we start? Standardising data for tracking, monitoring, and reporting emissions

Climate change is forcing governments and regulators to enforce stringent norms for businesses to reduce emissions and address environmental risks. There is no standard framework for reporting ESG and climate related risks, leading to non-uniform data. How can this issue be addressed to help organisations better report on their emissions?

Go to Challenge | 13 teams have entered this challenge.

Best Creative Use of Data in Response to ESG

How can you showcase data in a creative manner to respond to ESG challenges? How can we present and visualise data to stimulate conversation and promote change?

Go to Challenge | 33 teams have entered this challenge.