Despite contributing up to 90% of palm oil emissions, Land Use Change is often under-reported due to its complexity.
The forthcoming GHG Protocol Land Sector and Removals Guidance (LSRG) will mandate rigorous, year-on-year monitoring of land-based emissions and carbon removals, raising the bar for compliance.
Palm oil companies must act now to close data gaps, upgrade tools, and avoid reputational and regulatory risks.
There’s a new development that should be on every palm oil company’s radar: the GHG Protocol’s long-awaited Land Sector and Removals Guidance (LSRG).
With an aim to standardize how corporations account for land-related emissions, the forthcoming LSRG will be the most significant reset in carbon accounting for companies working with palm oil. It will be mandatory under the GHG Protocol for all companies with land-sector exposure, regardless of size, sector, or place in the value chain. And it will also apply to any company reporting carbon removals.
For palm oil producers, land use change is the elephant in the room for any carbon accounting.
In my experience, LUC can account for over 90% of the palm oil commodity’s emissions for some producers. While sources like fertilizer and wastewater matter, their impact pales in comparison to the carbon released from deforestation, peatland degradation, and soil disturbance. These activities each contribute heavily to overall emissions associated with palm oil production.
Despite their magnitude, land use change emissions remain the most inconsistently measured part of the inventory.
Why?
Because it’s technically demanding.
Companies must account for multiple carbon pools - above ground biomass, below ground biomass, soil carbon, and peat. With so many carbon pools, emissions calculations can vary wildly based on the previous land type, climate zone, and even whether the land was cleared using fire. The level of precision required for accurate measurement can overwhelm even massive teams of seasoned analysts.
This challenge is compounded by two main factors:
If anything, the forthcoming LSRG will make precise, defensible measurement non-negotiable. What this looks like for palm oil producers is future-proof and fit-for-purpose accounting.
This level of scrutiny is designed to close loopholes and prevent greenwashing. It will raise the bar for third-party assurance, investor trust, and supply chain credibility.
Customers ask me what to do in circumstances like this.
The transition to LSRG compliance will be a significant undertaking, but it is an unavoidable one. Starting now is the only way to navigate it confidently.
If you are a palm oil company and you are worried whether your accounting is compliant with the LSRG, Terrascope is offering a series of complimentary one-to-one workshops that’ll dive straight into the complexities of measurement. In this 1:1 session, we’ll walk you through what matters, how it impacts your business, and how to prepare confidently.