Skip to main content

Product impact dashboard

R
Written by Root Support
Updated over a year ago

Welcome to the onboarding manual for our impact dashboards. This manual will guide you through navigating our dynamic dashboards, enabling you to interpret insights and make data-driven decisions effectively.​

This article will guide you through how the product impact dashboard works.

Environmental & carbon footprints

We calculate two types of footprints: carbon and environmental.

The carbon footprint is determined using the IPCC 2021 methodology and the GWP100 indicator.

Our results align with the Greenhouse Gas Protocol, reporting emissions in three scopes:

  1. Scope 1 covers direct emissions from owned or controlled sources

  2. Scope 2 includes indirect emissions from purchased energy generation, and

  3. Scope 3 encompasses all other indirect emissions in the company’s value chain.

Curious to learn more about the Greenhouse Gas Protocol? Read our blog here.

The environmental footprint provides insights into the overall environmental impact of the company or product portfolio across a broad range of metrics including climate change, ecosystem quality, material resources, pollution, toxicity and water use.

The environmental footprint is calculated using the Environmental Cost Indicators from CE Delft combined with ReCiPe 2016 v1.03 (H). Our environmental Footprint assesses a range of environmental metrics, creating a holistic overview of the company’s impact, unlike other Life Cycle Assessment SaaS solutions that only assess a limited number of environmental metrics.

Environmental footprint

What is this dashboard about?

This dashboard provides a detailed analysis of the environmental impact of individual products across each life cycle stage of your products.

Product footprint metric

Our environmental footprint metric assigns a monetary value to your company's environmental impacts, such as carbon emissions and water usage. If Planet Earth had a bank account, this would be the amount invoiced.

In this dashboard, the monetary value shows the total product footprint for a selected timeframe, expressed in euros.

Curious to learn more about our environmental footprint metric? Read our blog here.

Company impact over time

This graph displays your total product footprint over time.

Top contributing products

This table shows the most impactful products contributing to your total product footprint.

You can see which product categories contribute the most and which individual products have the highest impact.

Company impact per category

This pie chart illustrates your total product footprint across six impact categories. Each impact category represents several environmental factors, such as climate change or pollution, that are affected by your company’s activities. This chart highlights the environmental impact of the products your company produces.

Product impact per life cycle phase

This pie chart shows the total product footprint distributed across all life cycle phases.

Impact per product

For each product, the total environmental footprint is displayed, highlighting the total impact across different life cycle phases and impact categories.

The 'Absolute' view option offers insight into each product’s environmental impact as a monetary value, which is related to Root’s environmental footprint metric.

The 'Relative' view provides insight into each product's environmental impact compared to your company's overall product footprint.

This table shows which product categories contribute the most and which individual products have the highest impact.

You can download this data by clicking the download button at the top right of the table.

Carbon footprint

What is this dashboard about?

This dashboard provides a detailed analysis of the carbon impact of individual products across each life cycle stage of your products.

Product footprint metric

This is your total product footprint for a selected timeframe, expressed in tonnes of CO2e, also known as greenhouse gas emissions. This number represents the impact of your business activities on global warming.

Top contributing products

This table shows the most impactful products contributing to your total product carbon footprint.

You can see which product categories contribute the most and which individual products have the highest impact.

Product impact per life cycle phase

This pie chart shows the total product carbon footprint distributed across all life cycle phases.

Company impact over time

This graph displays your total product carbon footprint over time.

Impact per product and category

For each product, the total carbon footprint is displayed, highlighting the total impact across different life cycle phases and impact categories.

The 'Absolute' view option offers insight into each product's carbon impact, expressed in tonnes of CO2e.

The 'Relative' view provides insight into each product's carbon impact compared to your company's overall product footprint.

This table shows which product categories contribute the most and which individual products have the highest impact.

You can download this data by clicking the download button at the top right of the table.

FAQ

What are Scope 1, 2 and 3 emissions?

Carbon emissions are categorised into three scopes:

  • Scope 1 covers direct emissions from owned or controlled sources

  • Scope 2 includes indirect emissions from purchased energy generation, and

  • Scope 3 encompasses all other indirect emissions in the company’s value chain.

For product companies, the majority (typically over 85%) of emissions fall under Scope 3.

What is an impact category?

An impact category represents an environmental factor influenced by your company’s activities, such as climate change or pollution. We group these factors into six key impact categories.

Can you explain each impact category?

Impact Category

Explanation

Climate change

Measures the greenhouse gases emitted by your company’s activities and their contribution to global warming.

Ecosystem quality

Assesses the impact of industrial activities on biodiversity, habitat integrity and the overall health of ecosystems.

Material resources

Evaluates the consumption and depletion of natural resources, including minerals and fossil fuels, throughout a product’s life cycle.

Pollution

Analyses the release of contaminants into the environment, affecting the quality of air, water and soil.

Toxicity

Examines the release of harmful substances into the environment and their potential effects on human health and ecosystems.

Water use

Measures freshwater consumption and its effects on water availability and aquatic ecosystems.

You can find more information about Root’s environmental footprint calculation, including the impact activity, indicators and the environmental price per unit, in this document.

What happens after I upload data - is the dashboard immediately usable?

Yes, the dashboard is always up to date. We’ve recently removed the “Request Impact” button, so you’ll instantly see the most current data based on your uploaded information.

What is the difference between inbound and outbound transport?

​​Inbound transport refers to logistic routes generated from your purchase order data, and outbound transport refers to logistic routes generated from your sales order data.

Did this answer your question?