Direct emissions
675
tCO2e
Explore carbon emissions data for KPMG Law. Mycelium helps you review reported emissions, disclosure status, Scope 1, Scope 2 and Scope 3 data, climate targets and sustainability information in one company profile.
This profile brings together available carbon emissions data for KPMG Law, including reported figures, modelled estimates, disclosure documents and sustainability indicators, so you can review its emissions and compare its performance against similar companies. Read how we source and check this data.
Total yearly emissions across all scopes
74,735 tCO2e (Market Based)
Scope 1
tCO2e
675
Scope 2 (Market Based)
tCO2e
3,425
Scope 3 total
tCO2e
70,635
Use Modelled. It is the most complete view: any categories the company hasn't disclosed are filled with industry-typical estimates, so a transparent company isn't unfairly penalised against one that simply hasn't reported.
Reported counts only emissions the company has filed itself. A blank or low Reported cell doesn't mean those emissions don't exist, just that the company hasn't disclosed them.
When Reported sits close to Modelled, that is a positive signal. The company has disclosed most of its salient emissions and there's little gap for the model to fill. Even then, Modelled is the right figure to use for a like-for-like comparison across companies.
Based on reported data, retrieved with AI
According to available emissions disclosures, KPMG Law reported total yearly emissions of 74,735 tCO₂e in 2025. Scope 3 emissions accounted for 95% of reported output, indicating supply chain activity, purchased goods and services, business travel, and wider operational dependencies were the most significant contributors to the company's carbon footprint.
The company achieved a Mycelium Score of –, pending a benchmark for its sector for sustainability performance, and received a transparency score of 30.0, pointing to very little public detail on their key emissions.
Total Emissions across all scopes
74,735 tCO2e (Market Based)
Direct emissions from sources the company owns or controls, such as fuel use, facilities and vehicles.
Direct emissions
675
tCO2eIndirect emissions from purchased energy, including electricity, heating and cooling.
Location based
9,854
tCO2eMarket based
3,425
tCO2eWider value chain emissions across the 15 GHG Protocol categories, from purchased goods and business travel to investments, where reported.
Cat 1
Purchased goods & services
48,706
tCO2eCat 2
Capital goods
–
tCO2eCat 3
Fuel & energy related activities
2,611
tCO2eCat 4
Upstream transportation & distribution
–
tCO2eCat 5
Waste generated in operations
–
tCO2eCat 6
Business travel
14,248
tCO2eCat 7
Employee commuting
4,730
tCO2eCat 8
Upstream leased assets
340
tCO2eCat 9
Downstream transportation & distribution
–
tCO2eCat 10
Processing of sold products
–
tCO2eCat 11
Use of sold products
–
tCO2eCat 12
End-of-life treatment of sold products
–
tCO2eCat 13
Downstream leased assets
–
tCO2eCat 14
Franchises
–
tCO2eCat 15
Investments
–
tCO2eJump straight into the sectors users explore most, or view all industries.
The Mycelium Score is out of 10. Up to 6.5 points reflect carbon intensity vs sector peers (emissions normalised against revenue). The remaining 3.5 reflect data quality: third-party verified, profile claimed by the company, and full disclosure across all reporting categories.
A higher score means lower carbon intensity than sector peers, backed by data that's third-party verified, claimed by the company, and fully disclosed. KPMG Law's score sits at the top of this page and in the score panel.
The Transparency Score measures how much of a company's key emissions data is publicly disclosed, graded from A (very high) down to F (very low). Crucially, it weights each gap by how material that bucket is for the company's industry, so an undisclosed category where the bulk of emissions sit hurts far more than a minor one.
KPMG Law has disclosed the emissions categories that are material for its industry, so there's no single bucket dragging the transparency score down. The breakdown above shows full coverage across the categories that matter most for this kind of company.
In its 2025 reporting year, KPMG Law disclosed total emissions of 74,735 tCO2e across all scopes. Scope 3 accounted for the largest share, around 95% of the total.
For 2025, KPMG Law's available disclosure covers Scope 1 (675 tCO2e), Scope 2 (3,425 tCO2e), Scope 3 across 5 of the 15 GHG Protocol categories. Figures not reported by the company are shown as modelled estimates and labelled as such.
KPMG Law has a Mycelium transparency score of 30 out of 100. The score weights each emissions category by how material it is for the company's industry, so it reflects whether the disclosures that matter most have been made.
Learn more about our methodology and where this data comes from.