Industry-Specific Guidance

SECR Reporting for Banks & Financial Services

Financial services firms typically have office-based emissions profiles with the addition of data centre loads for trading and transaction processing. The sector faces high scrutiny on climate disclosures beyond SECR, including TCFD-aligned reporting.

SIC Codes
646566
Must File If

2 of 3: 250+ employees / £36m+ turnover / £18m+ balance sheet

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SECR Requirements for Financial Services

Banks, insurance companies, and financial services firms meeting 2 of 3 qualifying criteria. Streamlined Energy and Carbon Reporting (SECR) requires qualifying companies to disclose their UK energy use, greenhouse gas emissions, and energy efficiency measures in their annual accounts.

Understanding your specific obligations as a financial services business is crucial for compliance. This guide covers the emission sources, intensity ratios, and efficiency measures most relevant to your sector.

Quick Check: Use our free compliance checker to see if your company meets the SECR thresholds based on your employee count, turnover, and balance sheet.

Scope 1 Emissions in Financial Services

Scope 1 emissions are direct emissions from sources your company owns or controls. For financial services companies, these typically include:

  • Natural gas for office heating
  • Refrigerant leaks
  • Company vehicle fleet (minimal)
  • Emergency generators

These emissions are calculated by multiplying your fuel consumption by the UK Government conversion factors. You'll need to collect data from utility bills, fuel cards, and maintenance records.

→ How to calculate Scope 1 emissions

Scope 2 Emissions in Financial Services

Scope 2 emissions come from purchased electricity, heat, steam, and cooling. SECR requires you to use the location-based method (UK grid average), though you may also disclose market-based figures if you purchase green energy.

  • Electricity for offices and branches
  • Data centres and trading floor infrastructure
  • ATMs and customer-facing technology
  • Global headquarters energy

Collect electricity consumption data from your bills or smart meters. For most financial services operations, electricity represents a significant portion of total emissions.

→ How to calculate Scope 2 emissions

Intensity Ratios for Financial Services

SECR requires at least one intensity ratio—a metric that normalises your emissions against business activity. This helps stakeholders understand whether emission changes reflect business growth or efficiency improvements.

For financial services companies, common intensity ratios include:

tonnesCO2e per employee
kgCO2e per £m revenue
kgCO2e per m² of premises
kgCO2e per transaction

Choose a ratio that best reflects your business model. For example, if you're a high-volume, low-margin operation, "per tonne of product" might be more meaningful than "per £m revenue."

→ How to choose the right intensity ratio

Energy Efficiency Actions

SECR requires a narrative describing energy efficiency measures taken during the reporting period. Simply stating "no measures taken" is non-compliant if opportunities existed.

Typical efficiency measures for financial services include:

01

Smart building management systems

02

Data centre efficiency improvements

03

Digital-first operations reducing branches

04

LED and occupancy-based lighting

05

Renewable energy procurement

Tip: Quantify your savings where possible. "Installed LED lighting, reducing consumption by 50,000 kWh and saving £7,000 annually" is stronger than "upgraded to LED lighting."
→ How to write your energy efficiency narrative

Common Financial Services SECR Challenges

  • Large office portfolios across multiple cities
  • High-profile nature creates reputational pressure
  • Data centre requirements for trading systems
  • Global coordination for UK-specific reporting

These challenges are common across the financial services sector. Addressing them early in your reporting process will save time and improve accuracy. Consider engaging specialists if your operations are particularly complex.

Other Regulations to Consider

Financial Services companies may also need to comply with additional energy and carbon regulations:

ESOS
TCFD (climate disclosure)

Understanding how these frameworks interact helps streamline compliance and avoid duplication of effort.

Ready to File Your SECR Report?

While SECR Compliance Hub provides free guidance, generating your actual SECR report requires precise calculations and formatting. ComplyCarbon creates audit-ready reports in minutes, not weeks.

Financial Services-specific templates
Automatic intensity ratios
UK Government compliant
Generate Your SECR Report at ComplyCarbon →

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