Understanding the Shift: From Voluntary to Compliance-Driven
Dimension
Legacy Standards (GRI, TCFD)
Mandatory for covered entities
Flexible (companies choose which metrics)
Comprehensive (Scope 1, 2 emissions) later additions to cover scope 3
Legal Consequence
Penalties up to $500,000/year per violation
Who Is Affected by SB 253?

5,400+ organizations are estimated to fall under SB 253 based on these thresholds

You don't need to be headquartered in California, only have significant business activity there

The definition of "doing business in California" remains somewhat fluid, but generally includes companies with sales, payroll, or property value exceeding certain thresholds in the state

Both public and private companies are covered

2026: Companies must report Scope 1 and 2 emissions for fiscal year 2025 data. These disclosures require limited third-party assurance

2027: Companies must begin reporting Scope 3 emissions (value chain emissions) under a protective safe harbor provision until 2030, meaning organizations won't face penalties for unintentional misstatements as they refine processes

2030: Transition to reasonable assurance for Scope 1 & 2 (much more rigorous); Scope 3 transitions to limited assurance. Safe harbor expires

Emissions from company vehicles (fleet fuel consumption)

On-site natural gas for heating

Manufacturing facilities operated directly

Company-owned equipment and generators
Scope 2: Purchased Energy Emissions
Scope 3: Value Chain Emissions, The Real Challenge

You must collect emissions data from suppliers who may not have measurement systems in place

Data quality varies dramatically, some suppliers report accurately; others provide estimates or nothing at all

Multi-tier supply chains complicate visibility (Tier 1 suppliers, their suppliers, and beyond)

Many small suppliers lack resources, expertise, or incentives to measure emissions
The Data Collection Crisis: Why AI Is Non-Negotiable

Automated data collection from suppliers, invoices, and financial systems

Real-time validation flagging inconsistencies before reports are submitted

Standardized calculations using GHG Protocol methodologies

Scalability to handle thousands of suppliers and millions of transactions

Auditability through documented data lineage and methodology

SB 253 (GHG Emissions Reporting): Up to $500,000 per violation (per reporting period)v

SB 261 (Climate Risk Reporting): Up to $50,000 per violation (per reporting period)
However, CARB has signaled that leniency will be granted until 2026 for organizations demonstrating good-faith compliance efforts. This grace period expires in 2026, after which enforcement becomes stricter.
Reputational Risk
Non-compliance becomes public. CARB publishes non-filer lists and enforcement actions. Investors, customers, and regulators all see that your company failed to comply.
Investor & Customer Pressure
Best Practices for SB 253 Compliance

Confirm your SB 253 coverage (revenue, California nexus)

Conduct an emissions data audit (what do you have? what's missing?)

Evaluate GHG accounting platforms and implementation timelines
Hire or Train Your Team
Small teams (4 people managing $150+ billion in inventory, for example) are already overwhelmed. Budget for additional headcount or consulting support.
Step 3: Engage Your Finance Team (This Is Critical)

SB 253 data will eventually live in your 10-K and 10-Q filings, not just standalone ESG reports

Financial teams bring rigor around auditability, traceability, and consistency, qualities that ESG teams, while well-intentioned, may not prioritize initially

Restatements due to emissions errors could harm stock prices, triggering shareholder liability
Action: Bring your Chief Accounting Officer (CAO), Controller, and audit committee into compliance planning now.
Step 4: Secure Third-Party Assurance Early

Confirm they have GHG Protocol expertise

Verify experience with your industry

Discuss their approach to Scope 3 estimation (given the 2027 safe harbor)
Step 5: Plan for Scope 3 Methodically
Prioritize These Scope 3 Categories:
Leave the most complex categories (end-of-life product use, supplier chain Tier 2+) for later refinement.
Step 6: Align SB 253 with Other Regulations

CSRD (EU Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive) - XBRL-tagged data highly material

SEC Climate Disclosure Rules

CDP Climate Questionnaire
Emerging Opportunities: Beyond Compliance
Procurement Advantages
Best Practices for SB 253 Compliance