About the data

This metric is based on the Global Reporting Initiative (GRI) Standard Guidelines. 

GRI 302 addresses the topic of energy. An organization can consume energy in various forms, such as fuel, electricity, heating, cooling or steam. Energy can be self-generated or purchased from external sources and it can come from renewable sources (such as wind, hydro or solar) or from non-renewable sources (such as coal, petroleum or natural gas).

Using energy more efficiently and opting for renewable energy sources is essential for combating climate change and for lowering an organization’s overall environmental footprint. The disclosures in this Standard can provide information about an organization’s impacts related to energy, and how it manages them.

Non-renewable energy source - energy source that cannot be replenished, reproduced, grown or generated in a short time period through ecological cycles or agricultural processes. Non-renewable energy sources can include:

  • fuel distilled from petroleum or crude oil, such as gasoline, diesel fuel, jet fuel, and heating oil;
  • natural gas, such as compressed natural gas (CNG), and liquefied natural gas (LNG);
  • fuels extracted from natural gas processing and petroleum refining, such as butane, propane, and liquefied petroleum gas (LPG);
  • coal;
  • nuclear power

In 2018, the GRI G4 Sustainability Reporting Guidelines were superseded by the GRI Sustainability Reporting Standards (GRI standards). For this metric, the code G4-EN3 is used in company reporting prior to 2018, and the new GRI 302-1 code used in reporting from 2018 onwards. The methodology for the former G4 standard for this metric can be found here

For this metric question you are being asked to identify the total non-renewable fuel consumption of an the organization for a specific year. Start by searching publicly available documents like Annual and CSR reports. 

Keywords and search terms for this metric

- Energy

- Fuel

- Renewable

- 302-1

- GRI

- GRI Index

Answers & Calculations

Once you have found the answer, make sure the unit of measurement fits to the question on WikiRate. If it does not, convert or calculate the answer and document your approach in the Comments field below. Select the 'Unknown' answer box if the company has not published the data.

Always include the page number where you found the answer in the Comments field below. 

Units

Companies may report fuel consumption in hundreds, thousands or millions of gigajoules or joules. The answer for this metric must be entered into WikiRate in gigajoules (GJ). Make sure you check the unit of measurement and do any conversions necessary. Enter the full number into the answer field.

E.g. If the company reports its non-renewable fuel consumption as '5 million megajoules (MJ)' the answer should be converted to gigajoules (GJ) and entered on WikiRate as '5000 GJ'