Carbon Footprint Assessments

National Climate Law 4936/2022 introduces new obligations for key business sectors, municipalities, and the majority of projects/activities.

Each year, these entities are required to calculate their carbon footprint and set realistic emission-reduction targets in order to achieve the intermediate milestones of Law 4936/2022 and, ultimately, climate neutrality by 2050.

Article 19 – Projects & Activities

According to Article 19 of Law 4936/2022, the following groups of projects or activities are required to assess their carbon footprint, provided they are classified as Category A1 or A2 under Law 4014/2011 and are subject to the issuance of an Environmental Terms Approval Decision (ETA/AEPO):

Group 4 – Environmental infrastructure systems (e.g. wastewater treatment plants, landfills, sanitary landfills)
Group 6 – Tourism facilities and urban development projects, building sector, sports and recreational facilities
Group 7 – Poultry and livestock farming facilities
Group 8 – Aquaculture
Group 9 – Industrial, manufacturing, and related activities

Entities subject to Article 19 of Law 4936/2022 are required to:

Upload a Compliance Report to the Electronic Environmental Registry (EER), including the emissions reduction target.
Upload an Annual Verified Emissions Report to the EER.

Article 20 – Businesses

According to Article 20 of Law 4936/2022, the obligation to submit a Verified Carbon Footprint Report applies to specific categories of businesses, such as:

Obligated businesses must prepare and submit an Annual Verified Carbon Footprint Report to OFYPEKA by 31 October each year.

Article 16 –  Municipalities

According to Article 16 of Law 4936/2022, municipalities are required to prepare Municipal Emissions Reduction Plans (MERPs), which constitute a key instrument for the local implementation of the National Climate Policy.

MERPs include:

  1. An inventory of energy consumption and emissions for municipal buildings and facilities, street lighting and public spaces, municipal water supply, wastewater and irrigation facilities, and the municipal vehicle fleet.
  2. Integration of the Building Energy Efficiency Plan, in accordance with Article 7(12) of Law 4342/2015 (Government Gazette A’ 143).
  3. Definition of targets for reducing net emissions by 10% by 2025 and 30% by 2030, compared to the 2019 baseline year.
  4. Five-year revision of the Plans and annual monitoring through a Technical Progress Report, which may be prepared by the Municipality’s Energy Manager or an external body.

The preparation of a MERP is a prerequisite for funding energy-saving projects and climate change mitigation actions.

Our company supports municipalities at all stages: from data collection and emissions calculation to the drafting, monitoring, and submission of the Plans to OFYPEKA (NECCA).

For more information please do not hesitate to Contact us