Past event: Carbon Data Tracking & Reporting Summit 2023

Improving Your Carbon Transparency and Taking Control of Your Emissions

Miscalculating your carbon emissions can result in financial risks, reputational damage and severely reduced operational efficiency.

To avoid these risks, energy leaders are relying on their data to quantify their emissions across the value chain, monitor their progress and optimize carbon transparency while gaining insights for making the most impactful decisions.

Join us in Houston February 27 - March 1, 2023 at Carbon Data Tracking & Reporting to exchange best practice and learn from global trailblazers how to:
  • Gain clear and accurate visibility across your carbon footprint
  • Develop a measurable sustainability and ESG roadmap against your ESG goals
  • Assess your emissions data and identify the most urgent, actionable issues
  • Monitor asset specific metrics - while keeping operational efficiency and excellence high
  • Create a data and workflow "engine" for real time carbon component cost tracking
  • Connect and analyze data that is scattered across multiple systems
  • Improve data evaluation, mining and predictive analysis across all of your assets
  • Aggregate, sort and filter emissions data
  • Use advanced analytics and data science to unlock the potential of alternative data sources
  • Automate Scope 1, 2 and 3 emissions reporting

Why the Carbon Data Tracking & Reporting Summit?

If energy giant Shell were a country, it would be the sixth-largest emitter of greenhouse gases, with the company and its products generating the equivalent of 1.375 billion tonnes of carbon dioxide in 2021, about 2.8% of humanity’s total. By 2050, it has pledged to reduce that number to zero, with software and data playing a significant role.

The industry has created three categories to classify their emissions sources, with each featuring its own challenges and solutions. Those are:
  • Scope 1 - Direct GHG emissions from company operations
  • Scope 2 - Indirect emissions from energy consumed by the company
  • Scope 3 - Indirect emissions generated by the products i.e. emissions from suppliers, transport and distribution, and purchased goods
The GHGRP (EPA) requires reporting of greenhouse gas (GHG) data and other relevant information from large GHG emission sources, fuel and industrial gas suppliers, and CO2 injection sites in the United States. Approximately 8,000 facilities are required to report their emissions annually, and the reported data are made available to the public in October of each year.

Then in 2022, the Inflation Reduction Act was introduced. The Inflation Reduction Act represents a historic, $369 billion investment in the modernization of the American energy system. The legislation would get the U.S. a significant way towards the overall 2030 climate goals - 50-52% GHG emission reductions below 2005 levels in 2030.

There is also increasing pressure from the US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) to require companies that it regulates to disclose their emissions from their own operations and those from energy suppliers, as well as those from their other suppliers and customers.

In response, the oil and gas sector must prepare and position themselves to respond to a low carbon operating environment and identify innovative new ways to measure and track carbon emissions from direct and indirect sources, get a clear picture of their footprint and the best opportunities for making reductions.

Who should attend?

Leaders responsible for:
  • Sustainability
  • ESG
  • Low Carbon Strategy
  • Carbon Accounting
  • Carbon Analytics
  • Environmental Assurance
  • Environment
  • Carbon Compliance
  • Carbon Reporting
  • Carbon Management
  • Carbon Solutions
  • Low Carbon Technology
  • Data Analysis
  • Energy Transition
  • Data Science
  • Operations
  • Asset Management


"Such a terrific summit. It's so good to be in person again. These gatherings give us a boost of activation energy"

BPX Energy

"My take-away was not only the benchmarking information but networking and being able to continue to share best practices going forth"
Duke Energy

"The conference was fantastic and all the sessions were very informative and speakers were highly accomplished. It was quite refreshing and I was able to learn quite a few concepts and it provided me with an opportunity to network with my industry peers"
Suncor

"A lot of value specially to people who are just engaged on this subject. Opportunity for collaboration between companies ( Operators, technology and consulting companies)"
Schlumberger

Your 2023 Event Speakers

  • Trina Engels, Director of ESG, Talos Energy
  • Oscar G. Herdacio, Shell U.S. Energy Transition & Sustainability Advisor, Shell
  • David S. Ferris, Chief Sustainability Officer, Laredo Petroleum
  • Wendy Wilson, Global Director Sustainability, Weatherford International
  • Julie Moore, Global Energy Work Process Leader, The Dow Chemical Company
  • Sean Stephan, Director of Commercial & Sustainability, Occidental Chemical Corporation
  • Ian Sealy, Environment Director, Ipieca
  • Jason Burr, Scope 3 Emissions Project Manager, Baker Hughes
  • Rusty Shaw, Environmental Compliance Manager, Denbury Inc
  • Ash Shepherd, Director - Business Development, CCUS, Talos Energy Inc
  • Jessica Roman, Manager of Sustainability Strategy, Policy and Engagement, Phillips66
  • Andrew Willard, Manager - Emissions Reduction, TC Energy
  • Kenneth Langlois, Consulting Engineer, Electrical Infrastructure and ESG Initiatives, DCP Midstream
  • Jackson Hegland, Executive Director, Methane Emissions Leadership Alliance
  • Blake Phillips, Senior Manager Carbon Solutions, EnLink
  • Kevin Hendricks, Environmental Engineering Technical Lead, Denbury Inc
  • Abhi Kohli, CCS Area Development Lead, Shell
  • Dave Gajadhar, Business and Automation Advisor, Consultant
  • Dr Michelle K. Kidder, Senior Research and Development Staff Scientist, Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL)
  • Greeshma Gadikota PhD, Assistant Professor and Croll Sesquicentennial Fellow, Cornell Atkinson Center for Sustainability Fellow, Cornell University
  • Rob Schuwerk, Executive Director, Carbon Tracker Initiative

Please fill in your name and email to receive the Summit Agenda of this event.

Venue

Norris Conference Center - City Centre Location
816 Town and Country Blvd , 77024
Houston, Texas, USA

Phone: +1 (713) 590-0950

Accommodation
The Moran CityCentre (Adjacent to the Conference Venue)
800 Sorella Court
Houston, TX 77024

Method of Reservation: Guests can make guestroom reservations by calling 1-713-973-1600; guests must identify themselves as being with the group, IQPC - Carbon Tracking & Reporting Summit, at the time the reservation is made to receive the special group rate.

You can also use this booking link to secure the group reservation.

This group rate will be valid until February 12, 2023. Any rooms booked after this cut off date will be made on a space and rate available basis.

Please note: We will never recommend, approve or appoint any third party rooming service to act on our behalf. Please be extremely wary if you are approached by any such companies. We will always endeavor to negotiate the best available rates for you. More details are to follow or if you'd like to speak with a member of the event team, you can contact us here.

Event details
Organizer : IQEU
Event type : Conference
Reference : ASDE-24048