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Food Safety Foundation

ISO 14067 Product Carbon Footprint Consulting

Measure product-level carbon emissions, identify reduction opportunities, and build credible sustainability systems for global compliance.

The Challenge

Why Organizations Struggle to Measure Emissions

Lack of Emission Data

Organizations struggle to collect accurate data across complex supply chains, making carbon measurement unreliable.

Unclear Lifecycle Boundaries

Without clear system boundaries, emission hotspots remain hidden and reduction strategies become ineffective.

Reporting Challenges

Inconsistent methodologies and frameworks lead to non-comparable, non-credible carbon disclosures.

Compliance Pressure

Growing regulatory mandates (CBAM, EU Green Deal) require verified product-level carbon footprint data.

Value Delivered

What ISO 14067 Enables

Carbon Visibility

Complete product-level emission transparency across the entire lifecycle.

ESG Compliance

Meet regulatory requirements including CBAM, EU Taxonomy, and sustainability reporting mandates.

Reduction Strategy

Identify emission hotspots and develop targeted, data-driven carbon reduction plans.

Global Credibility

Build stakeholder trust with verified, ISO-standard carbon footprint disclosures.

Our Methodology

Our ISO 14067 Implementation Approach

Scope Definition

Define system boundaries, functional units, and lifecycle stages for product carbon footprint assessment.

Data Collection

Gather activity data across raw materials, energy, transport, production, usage, and end-of-life stages.

Emission Calculation

Apply emission factors and calculate carbon footprint using ISO 14067-compliant methodologies.

Reporting

Develop carbon footprint reports with transparent methodology, data sources, and reduction recommendations.

Verification

Prepare for third-party verification and support through the external assurance process.

Most Important

Where Carbon Emissions Occur Across the Lifecycle

ISO 14067 maps emissions at every stage of a product’s life — from raw material extraction to end-of-life disposal.

Raw Material

Extraction and processing of raw materials — mining, agriculture, forestry.

15–25%

Production

Manufacturing processes including energy consumption, waste generation, and direct emissions.

30–45%

Transport

Logistics and distribution across the supply chain — inbound, outbound, and inter-facility.

5–15%

Usage

Energy and resource consumption during the product's use phase by the end consumer.

10–30%

Disposal

End-of-life treatment including recycling, incineration, and landfill impacts.

5–10%

Key Differentiator

How Your Emissions Are Distributed

Understanding Scope 1, 2, and 3 emissions is critical to building an effective carbon reduction strategy.

Scope 1

Direct Emissions

10–20%

Emissions from owned or controlled sources — fuel combustion, company vehicles, on-site manufacturing processes.

Includes

Scope 2

Indirect Energy

15–25%

Emissions from purchased electricity, steam, heating, and cooling consumed by the organization.

Includes

Scope 3

Value Chain

55–75%

All other indirect emissions across the value chain — supply chain, transport, product use, and disposal.

Includes

Core Elements of ISO 14067

Lifecycle Assessment

Cradle-to-grave analysis of environmental impacts across the entire product lifecycle.

Carbon Measurement

Quantification of greenhouse gas emissions using ISO-compliant calculation methodologies.

Emission Hotspots

Identification of high-impact stages and processes for targeted reduction efforts.

Reduction Strategy

Data-driven action plans to reduce product carbon footprint and improve sustainability.

Reporting

Transparent carbon footprint reports aligned with ISO 14067 disclosure requirements.

Business Impact of ISO 14067

Emission Reduction

Identify and act on carbon hotspots to measurably reduce product footprint

ESG Compliance

Meet growing regulatory and investor demands for carbon transparency

Export Readiness

Prepare for CBAM and other carbon border adjustment requirements

Stakeholder Trust

Build credibility with verified, third-party assured carbon data

Sustainability Edge

Position your products as climate-responsible in competitive markets

Who This Is For

Manufacturing

Heavy and light manufacturing operations measuring product-level carbon impact.

Consumer Goods

FMCG and consumer product companies responding to carbon labeling demands.

Exporters

Companies exporting to EU and other markets requiring carbon footprint data under CBAM.

Industrial Products

B2B industrial manufacturers seeking competitive advantage through carbon transparency.

Our Engagement Model

01

Diagnostic

Assess current carbon data maturity and identify gaps against ISO 14067 requirements.

02

Data Collection

Establish data collection frameworks across the product lifecycle and supply chain.

03

Analysis

Calculate product carbon footprint using ISO-compliant emission factors and methodologies.

04

Reporting

Develop transparent PCF reports with methodology documentation and reduction roadmaps.

05

Verification

Support through third-party verification and ongoing carbon management improvement.

FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

What is ISO 14067?
ISO 14067 is the international standard for quantifying the carbon footprint of products (CFP). It specifies principles, requirements, and guidelines for the quantification and communication of product-level greenhouse gas emissions.
A PCF is the total greenhouse gas emissions generated by a product throughout its lifecycle — from raw material extraction through production, distribution, use, and end-of-life disposal — expressed in CO₂ equivalents.
Any organization that manufactures, exports, or sells products in markets with growing carbon disclosure requirements — particularly those affected by CBAM, EU sustainability regulations, or buyer-driven carbon reporting mandates.
While not universally mandatory, ISO 14067 is increasingly required by regulations like the EU CBAM and by global buyers demanding verified carbon data. It is commercially essential for exporters and sustainability-focused organizations.
The timeline depends on product complexity and data availability, but typically ranges from 3 to 6 months — covering scope definition, data collection, emission calculation, reporting, and third-party verification.