Contracting for California climate disclosure
Use contracts and internal policies to get ahead of California disclosure obligations in light of evolving guidance
experimental We're still developing this guide. Give feedback to help us improve it.
Use contracts and internal policies to get ahead of California disclosure obligations in light of evolving guidance
experimental We're still developing this guide. Give feedback to help us improve it.
Please note that California’s climate disclosure laws and implementing regulations are actively evolving. The California Air Resources Board (CARB) continues to issue guidance, interpretations, and updates to the Climate Corporate Data Accountability Act SB 253 (CCDAA) and the Climate-Related Financial Risk Act SB 261 (CRFRA).
This guidance reflects the state of the law and regulatory guidance as of January 2026. You should verify current requirements, deadlines, and technical specifications by consulting the latest CARB guidance and official rulemaking materials before taking action. Consider engaging legal counsel to ensure your approach reflects the most current regulatory landscape.
California’s Climate Corporate Data Accountability Act (CCDAA) (Health and Safety Code § 38532) and Climate-Related Financial Risk Act (CRFRA) (Health and Safety Code § 38533) require large companies doing business in California to make annual or biennial climate-related disclosures. The CCDAA requires the California Air Resources Board (CARB) to develop and adopt regulations that largely dictate the program’s requirements and implementation. CARB released proposed versions of the regulations to implement the CCDAA and the CRFRA on December 9, 2025, published minor updates to the proposed regulations on December 23, 2025 and scheduled a hearing on the proposal on February 26, 2026. The proposed regulations focus mainly on the technical aspects of the legislation regarding applicability, deadlines, and the process for setting and communicating annual fees. The proposal does not address substantive reporting requirements, which CARB addresses in guidance it periodically posts on its website.
Key statutory requirements:
The scopes are defined as:
“Scope 1 emissions” means all direct greenhouse gas emissions that stem from sources that a reporting entity owns or directly controls, regardless of location, including, but not limited to, fuel combustion activities.
“Scope 2 emissions” means indirect greenhouse gas emissions from consumed electricity, steam, heating, or cooling purchased or acquired by a reporting entity, regardless of location.
“Scope 3 emissions” means indirect upstream and downstream greenhouse gas emissions, other than scope 2 emissions, from sources that the reporting entity does not own or directly control and may include, but are not limited to, purchased goods and services, business travel, employee commutes, and processing and use of sold products.
Reporting deadline: By statute, companies must report Scope 1 and 2 emissions in some form in 2026. CARB has proposed a deadline of August 10 and unofficially dropped the assurance requirement for 2026. The precise format is still under development, but CARB has released a draft reporting template for Scope 1 and 2 emissions. For the climate-related financial risk report, by statute, companies must make their reports publicly available by January 1, 2026, but CARB recently announced that it would not enforce that deadline pending the outcome of litigation challenging the CRFRA. (The litigation is also challenging the CCDAA, but CARB has not indicated any delay in enforcing its proposed deadline for Scope 1 and 2 emissions of August 10, 2026.)
Enforcement: The actual date of CARB enforcement is unknown but will not be before a hearing before the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals scheduled for January 9, 2026.
Primary sources: Always consult the latest official texts (Health and Safety Code § 38532, § 38533), CARB’s evolving guidance, and referenced standards (Greenhouse Gas Protocol, ISSB/IFRS).
This guide enables organizations to:
This guide is for:
Implementation: Early adoption mitigates transition risks from regulatory changes and legal exposure by building resilient operations, securing high-quality emissions data and demonstrating leadership ahead of deadlines.
Drafting new contract language:
Organizations should consider updating supplier policies alongside contracts to cascade obligations effectively downstream.
CARB’s evolving role:
Current status:
Classification is essential for compliance and contract drafting:
Doing business in California:
Under CARB’s proposed regulations “doing business in California” means actively engaging in any transaction for the purpose of financial or pecuniary gain or profit and meeting either of the following criteria:
Exemptions: CARB is currently proposing to exempt the following types of entities:
Foreign companies are only subject if they have US subsidiaries doing business in California and meet the applicable revenue thresholds.
Why this matters:
Only entities meeting these thresholds are directly subject to CCDAA/CRFRA. Contractual obligations should be tailored accordingly.
General approach:
Organizations should act quickly and not limit their approach to minimum statutory compliance.
Do not overburden small suppliers: Only impose direct CCDAA/CRFRA compliance obligations on counterparties who themselves meet statutory thresholds or are critical to your Scope 3 emissions. For others, use flexible clauses focused on data access, cooperation, and best efforts.
“In addition to general compliance obligations, [the Counterparty] shall provide [the Company] with reasonable access to emissions-related data necessary for [the Company] to comply with its obligations under California Health and Safety Code § 38532 (CCDAA), including but not limited to Scope 1 and 2 emissions, and, where relevant, Scope 3 emissions data, calculated in accordance with the Greenhouse Gas Protocol or such other methodology as may be required by CARB.”
“[The Counterparty] shall, upon request, provide [the Company] with information reasonably necessary to assess material climate-related financial risks associated with its operations, to support [the Company]’s compliance with California Health & Safety Code § 38533 (CRFRA) and evolving TCFD or ISSB/IFRS standards, to the extent such information is available and not commercially sensitive.”
“Where practicable and without undue cost or effort, [the Counterparty] shall use calculation tools and reporting frameworks consistent with the Greenhouse Gas Protocol and ISSB/IFRS Sustainability Disclosure Standards, as required by law and CARB’s latest guidance.”
Scope 3 reporting presents significant challenges, and large companies may cast a wide net to all others they do business with in order to gather all necessary information and protect themselves. This can result in requests for information from a broad array of suppliers and partners, even those not directly subject to the law.
Creative contractual solutions:
“In addition to any statutory obligations, [the Supplier] shall cooperate in good faith with [the Company] to provide timely and accurate Scope 3 emissions data, using primary activity data where available and appropriate Secondary Data otherwise, consistent with the Greenhouse Gas Protocol Corporate Value Chain (Scope 3) Standard and CARB’s guidance.”
“Suppliers are expected to measure and report GHG emissions using the Greenhouse Gas Protocol, and to support [the Company]’s efforts to comply with California’s climate disclosure laws and leading standards (ISSB/IFRS or TCFD), including providing data on request.”
Note: For critical suppliers or those with significant emissions, consider contractually requiring use of Greenhouse Gas Protocol calculation tools and sector-specific guidance.
Confidentiality:
Scope 3, Category 1 data may be proprietary. Use confidentiality clauses to protect sensitive information, while allowing for regulatory disclosure.
“[The Company] shall treat all emissions data provided by [the Supplier] as confidential and shall not disclose it except as required by law, regulation, or to comply with CCDAA/CRFRA, and then only in aggregated or anonymized form where feasible.”
Watchouts:
“[The Supplier] shall disclose the methodologies, emission factors, and data sources used in calculating reported GHG emissions, and shall identify any significant estimation uncertainties or limitations, consistent with Greenhouse Gas Protocol and ISSB/IFRS guidance.”
Some obligations are best addressed in internal governance documents:
Recommended internal governance actions:
“The Board’s Sustainability and Compliance Committee shall oversee compliance with California climate disclosure laws and best practices (Greenhouse Gas Protocol, ISSB/IFRS, or TCFD). The Committee shall review significant contracts and supplier relationships for climate risk and disclosure implications.”
Greenhouse Gas Protocol: Greenhouse Gas Protocol standards and guidance, including the Greenhouse Gas Protocol Corporate Accounting and Reporting Standard and the Greenhouse Gas Protocol Corporate Value Chain (Scope 3) Accounting and Reporting Standard developed by the World Resources Institute and the World Business Council for Sustainable Development.
ISSB: International Sustainability Standards Board.
IFRS: International Financial Reporting Standards for sustainability disclosures.
TCFD: Task Force on Climate-related Financial Disclosures.
Primary Data: direct activity data from owned or controlled sources.
Secondary Data: industry averages or proxies used where primary data is unavailable.