Greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions are no longer a distant environmental issue.
For companies in Malaysia, GHG emissions are increasingly linked to regulatory expectations, financing decisions, customer requirements, and long-term business risk.
The question is no longer whether GHG emissions matter—but why businesses should act now instead of later.
Greenhouse gas emissions refer to:
Gases that trap heat in the atmosphere
Emissions measured in carbon dioxide equivalent (CO₂e)
Emissions produced directly or indirectly by business activities
Common GHGs include:
Carbon dioxide (CO₂)
Methane (CH₄)
Nitrous oxide (N₂O)
Fluorinated gases (F-gases)
GHG emissions are a core component of:
ESG assessments
Sustainability disclosures
Climate risk evaluations
Malaysian companies face pressure from:
Banks and financial institutions
Large corporate customers
International supply chains
Investors and stakeholders
While Malaysia may not have a nationwide carbon tax yet:
Climate-related policies are evolving
Carbon management frameworks are developing
Reporting expectations are increasing
Businesses that wait risk:
Compressed compliance timelines
Higher future costs
Operational disruption
Banks increasingly assess:
Environmental risk exposure
Energy dependency
Carbon management maturity
Good GHG management can lead to:
Better loan terms
Access to sustainability-linked financing
Lower risk ratings
Many multinational companies:
Track supplier emissions
Require ESG data disclosure
Prefer low-risk, climate-ready suppliers
SMEs may be asked to:
Provide carbon data
Explain emission reduction plans
Align with customer climate goals
GHG emissions often point to:
Energy inefficiency
Process waste
Fuel overconsumption
Reducing emissions can result in:
Lower energy bills
Reduced waste costs
Improved productivity
GHG data is the foundation for:
Carbon tax readiness
Carbon credit participation
Carbon pricing exposure analysis
Companies without emission data:
Cannot estimate future carbon cost
Cannot plan reduction strategies effectively
GHG management is particularly relevant for:
Manufacturing companies
Food and beverage processors
Logistics and transportation firms
Energy-intensive operations
Export-oriented businesses
However:
Even service-based companies face indirect exposure
❌ Only large corporations need to care
❌ GHG tracking is too complex for SMEs
❌ Emissions management has no business value
✅ SMEs are part of global supply chains
✅ Simple tracking can deliver real insights
✅ Early action reduces long-term risk
Identify main energy and fuel sources
Track electricity and fuel usage
Review refrigeration and cooling systems
Monitor waste and wastewater generation
Prioritize high-impact emission sources
Commonly used ISO standards include:
ISO 14064 – Greenhouse Gas Accounting
ISO 14067 – Product Carbon Footprint
ISO 14001 – Environmental Management System
ISO 50001 – Energy Management System
These standards provide:
Structure
Credibility
Continuous improvement
Potential risks include:
Higher compliance costs in the future
Reduced access to financing
Loss of key customers
Reputational damage
Ignoring GHG emissions is increasingly a business risk, not just an environmental one.
For Malaysian companies, caring about greenhouse gas emissions is no longer optional.
It is about:
Risk management
Cost control
Market access
Long-term competitiveness
Companies that act now gain time, flexibility, and strategic advantage—while those who delay may face higher pressure later.
Indonesia