Global industry leaders call on GHG standards-setting body to incentivize renewable gases

November 6, 2025. Ahead of COP30, 30 leading industrial and utilities companies around the world have joined coordinators of the Let Green Gas Count campaign (including ADBA, the American Biogas Council, EBA, eNG Coalition, Eurogas, Molecule Group, RNG Coalition, World Biogas Association) in call to the Green House Gas Protocol to explicitly recognize market-based instruments for renewable gases such as biogas and renewable natural gas (RNG) in a joint letter. (RNG is referred to as biomethane outside North America.)

Due for revision by 2028, the GHG Protocol framework guiding 97% of the Fortune 500 does not explicitly allow companies to claim credit for purchasing green gas certificates among other tools, despite repeated calls from over 230 organizations.

The Brazilian COP Presidency recently pledged to boost production and use of renewable gases, issuing a call for greater global investment into these alternatives to reach Net Zero.

Leading European gas trade association and Let Green Gas Count coordinator Eurogas has called the GHG Protocol revision a prime opportunity to boost investor confidence in renewable gases.

The Let Green Gas Count campaign and industrial and utilities leaders specifically call for the GHG Protocol to issue an interim statement, back market-based certificates, and fast-track its review.

The GHG Protocol is the most widely used framework for greenhouse gas accounting in the world, meant to provide transparency to emissions measuring, managing and reporting. Policymakers and regulators across the globe refer to its guidance, as do 97% of the Fortune 500. With such influence, its revision could shape how industries cut emissions for years to come. However, the GHG Protocol has yet to respond to calls from over 200 industrial representatives in February 2025 to urgently revise standards in support of green gases.

The letter from industrial and utilities leaders aligns with the Brazilian COP Presidency’s recent pledge to quadruple production and use of renewable fuels, including gases, by 2035, and call for further investment into these alternatives as an essential tool for achieving Net Zero.

According to the International Energy Agency (IEA)’s 2025 Outlook for Biogas and Biomethane, policymakers around the world have introduced over 50 new policies to support biogas uptake since 2020. In the EU, renewable gases like biogas, RNG and e-methane are already recognized as having a vital role to play in decarbonizing the economy and supporting European security of supply. But despite consensus on their benefits, only around 5% of the total potential for sustainable production of biogas and RNG is currently being used.

The joint letter therefore calls for the upcoming GHG Protocol revision to boost investor confidence by explicitly recognizing market-based tools which incentivize producers and consumers to decarbonize. These include, for example, certification schemes, such as guarantees of origin or proof of sustainability certificates, which verify the environmental attributes and sustainability of energy sources.