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Exxon's carbon accounting group will appoint an independent panel, says CEO

Chief executive of Carbon Measures, an initiative to create a carbon accounting system backed by many large energy companies and multinationals, said that the panel will be independent.

The group, which was launched by ExxonMobil and BASF, among others, is aimed at creating a system of carbon emissions accounting for companies. This will help to reduce double counting and reward them for being more sustainable.

There are other carbon accounting guidelines, like the Greenhouse Gas Protocol. However, comparing companies is difficult. Carbon Measures wants to develop a ledger system similar to that used in financial accounting within the next two to three years.

Carbon Measures CEO Amy Brachio stated that "the organisations who invest ahead of the curve are not necessarily rewarded for doing so". She added that if the markets and industries move together, there is a level playing ground which provides an incentive to invest in innovation.

Brachio, who was previously the global vice-chair of sustainability for EY consultants, took on his new role as CEO in January.

Carbon Measures will, with the International Chamber of Commerce's (ICC) help, appoint academics, accountants, business leaders, and civil society representatives to sit on a panel of independent experts and assist in the design of the global accounting system.

Andrew Wilson, deputy secretariat-general of the ICC said that 10 years after the Paris Agreement was signed, companies still needed a standardised accounting system to speed up action. The initiative could be a "game changer" but "it can't be a talk shop, it must deliver".

Brachio, along with Karthik Raanna, Professor of Business and Public Policy and Director of the Transformational Leadership Fellowship of the University of Oxford (England), will co-chair a panel of independent experts.

Ramanna said that the initiative was similar to efforts made 90 years ago when the Generally Accepted Accounting Principles were established.

If done correctly, these principles could unleash the full potential of capitalism in order to accelerate decarbonisation and drive energy abundance. (Reporting and editing by Susan Fenton; Simon Jessop)

(source: Reuters)