Vrocure Blog · Sustainability
Cutting Scope 3 Emissions Starts at the RFQ
By The Vrocure Team · 2026-05-04 · 7 min read
When a manufacturer sets out to cut its carbon, the instinct is to look at the factory — the lighting, the machines, the company vans. Those are Scope 1 and 2, and they matter. But for most manufacturers they are the minority of the footprint. The majority is Scope 3: the emissions embedded in what you buy. And what you buy is decided in procurement.
What Scope 3 is, briefly
Scope 1 is emissions you produce directly. Scope 2 is the energy you purchase. Scope 3 is everything else in your value chain — most importantly, for a manufacturer, the purchased materials, components, and sub-contracted machining that go into your product. It is often the largest slice and the hardest to see, precisely because it happens in someone else’s facility.
Why the RFQ is the lever
Every material choice, every supplier selection, every "we’ll ship it express" is an emissions decision made at the sourcing stage. By the time a part is on a truck, the footprint is locked. The RFQ is where it is still fluid — where choosing a recycled alloy, a nearer supplier, or a standard lead time instead of expedite actually changes the number.
Four Scope 3 decisions hiding in a normal RFQ
- Material and grade. Recycled aluminium can carry a fraction of the embodied carbon of virgin stock. The spec is set in the RFQ.
- Supplier location. A shop 40 miles away versus one 4,000 miles away is a freight-emissions decision disguised as a price decision.
- Lead time. "Need it tomorrow" often means air freight. A realistic date lets goods move by road or sea.
- Order consolidation. Ten small urgent orders ship ten times. One planned batch ships once.
Start with data you already generate
You do not need a full life-cycle assessment to begin. You need to capture, per order, what most teams already decide informally: the material, the supplier and where they are, the freight mode, and the quantity. Structure those and you have the raw material for a footprint estimate — and, more usefully, a way to spot the express shipments and long-haul suppliers worth challenging.
The overlap with cost
The encouraging part: the lowest-carbon decision is frequently the lower-cost one too. Nearer suppliers cut freight cost and emissions. Standard lead times avoid expedite premiums and air freight. Consolidated orders reduce both shipping spend and trips. Sustainable procurement is rarely a trade-off against price at the margins that matter — it is often the same decision viewed twice.
Make it structural
A platform that already records the material, supplier, location, and delivery for every order is doing most of the data work a Scope 3 programme needs. Vrocure structures sourcing this way by default — and its supplier discovery lets you weigh a nearer, well-matched shop against a distant one on the same screen. The greenest RFQ is the one where the low-carbon option was easy to see.