Assessment of Organizational Carbon Footprints in a Rubber Plantation Company: A Systematic Approach to Direct and Indirect Emissions

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Abstract

This study presents a comprehensive organizational carbon footprint assessment that integrates Scope 1, 2, and 3 emissions for a rubber plantation company, including often-overlooked non-energy sources such as fertilizer application, employee commuting, company-owned vehicle operations, and wastewater discharge. Using the Greenhouse Gas Protocol standard, IPCC 2006 guidelines, and locally adapted emission factors, the assessment quantified the company’s total organizational carbon footprint at 3125 tCO2e—revealing a previously undocumented emission profile where methane from wastewater discharge, nitrous oxide from fertilizer application, and carbon dioxide from purchased electricity collectively account for over 75% of total emissions. This finding challenges conventional rubber industry practice, which has historically focused on energy-related emissions alone. Three targeted mitigation scenarios were evaluated: (1) optimized nutrient management to reduce fertilizer usage, (2) solar photovoltaic installation to offset grid electricity consumption, and (3) advanced wastewater treatment using Fenton’s reagent combined with activated carbon. Results demonstrate that substantial emission reductions are achievable while maintaining or enhancing productivity and profitability. By establishing a replicable methodological framework grounded in comprehensive emission accounting, this study advances environmental management practices in the rubber sector and provides actionable strategies for plantation-based industries to meet national sustainability agendas and international climate commitments.

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