Federal Acquisition Regulation: Disclosure of Greenhouse Gas Emissions and Climate-Related Financial Risk, 68312-68334 [2022-24569]
Download as PDF
68312
Federal Register / Vol. 87, No. 218 / Monday, November 14, 2022 / Proposed Rules
check https://www.regulations.gov,
approximately two to three days after
submission to verify posting.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For
clarification of content, contact Ms.
Jennifer Hawes, Procurement Analyst, at
202–255–9194 or by email at
jennifer.hawes@gsa.gov. For information
pertaining to status, publication
schedules, or alternate instructions for
submitting comments if https://
www.regulations.gov cannot be used,
contact the Regulatory Secretariat
Division at 202–501–4755 or
GSARegSec@gsa.gov. Please cite FAR
Case 2021–015.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE
GENERAL SERVICES
ADMINISTRATION
NATIONAL AERONAUTICS AND
SPACE ADMINISTRATION
48 CFR Parts 1, 4, 9, 23 and 52
[FAR Case 2021–015, Docket No. FAR–
2021–0015, Sequence No. 1]
RIN 9000–AO32
Federal Acquisition Regulation:
Disclosure of Greenhouse Gas
Emissions and Climate-Related
Financial Risk
AGENCY:
I. Background
DoD, GSA, and NASA are
proposing to amend the Federal
Acquisition Regulation (FAR) to
implement a requirement to ensure
certain Federal contractors disclose
their greenhouse gas emissions and
climate-related financial risk and set
science-based targets to reduce their
greenhouse gas emissions.
DATES: Interested parties should submit
written comments to the Regulatory
Secretariat Division at the address
shown below on or before January 13,
2023 to be considered in the formation
of the final rule.
ADDRESSES: Submit comments in
response to FAR Case 2021–015 to the
Federal eRulemaking portal at https://
www.regulations.gov by searching for
‘‘FAR Case 2021–015’’. Select the link
‘‘Comment Now’’ that corresponds with
‘‘FAR Case 2021–015’’. Follow the
instructions provided on the ‘‘Comment
Now’’ screen. Please include your name,
company name (if any), and ‘‘FAR Case
2021–015’’ on your attached document.
If your comment cannot be submitted
using https://www.regulations.gov, call
or email the points of contact in the FOR
FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT section of
this document for alternate instructions.
Instructions: Please submit comments
only and cite ‘‘FAR Case 2021–015’’ in
all correspondence related to this case.
Comments received generally will be
posted without change to https://
www.regulations.gov, including any
personal and/or business confidential
information provided. Public comments
may be submitted as an individual, as
an organization, or anonymously (see
frequently asked questions at https://
www.regulations.gov/faq). To confirm
receipt of your comment(s), please
DoD, GSA, and NASA are proposing
to revise the FAR to implement section
5(b)(i) of Executive Order (E.O.) 14030,
Climate-Related Financial Risk, to
require major Federal suppliers to
publicly disclose greenhouse gas (GHG)
emissions and climate-related financial
risk and to set science-based reduction
targets. As stated in the Fourth National
Climate Assessment (https://
nca2018.globalchange.gov/) and the
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate
Change (IPCC) Sixth Assessment Report
(https://www.ipcc.ch/report/ar6/wg2/),
the intensifying impacts of climate
change present physical risks, such as
increased extreme weather risk leading
to supply chain disruptions, and
increasing risks to infrastructure,
investments, and businesses. The global,
rapid shift away from carbon-intensive
energy sources and industrial processes
towards decarbonized, climate-resilient
economies will help to mitigate these
risks while also enhancing U.S.
competitiveness and economic growth,
promoting environmental justice, and
creating well-paying job opportunities
for American workers. Yet, these risks
and opportunities can remain hidden.
The foundation to properly analyze
and mitigate climate risks is public and
standardized disclosure, which will
enable the Federal Government to
conduct prudent fiscal management of
all major Federal suppliers. To that end,
section 5(b)(i) of the E.O. directs the
Federal Acquisition Regulatory Council
(FAR Council), in coordination with the
Council on Environmental Quality
(CEQ) and the heads of relevant
agencies, to consider an amendment to
the FAR to ensure that major Federal
suppliers disclose their GHG emissions
and climate-related financial risk and
set science-based targets to reduce their
GHG emissions. The purpose of this
proposed rule is to amend the FAR to
establish a policy to ensure major
Department of Defense (DoD),
General Services Administration (GSA),
and National Aeronautics and Space
Administration (NASA).
ACTION: Proposed rule.
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with PROPOSALS2
SUMMARY:
VerDate Sep<11>2014
17:59 Nov 10, 2022
Jkt 259001
PO 00000
Frm 00002
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
Federal suppliers make the required
disclosures and set targets to reduce
their GHG emissions.
On December 8, 2021, the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB) issued
memorandum M–22–06 pursuant to
section 510(a) of E.O. 14057, Catalyzing
Clean Energy Industries and Jobs
Through Federal Sustainability. Section
II.1. of the OMB memo states that the
FAR Council should leverage existing
third-party standards and systems,
including the Task Force on Climaterelated Financial Disclosures (TCFD)
Recommendations, the CDP (formerly
Carbon Disclosure Project) reporting
system, and Science Based Targets
Initiative (SBTi) criteria, or equivalents,
in the development of regulatory
amendments to promote contractor
attention regarding reduced carbon
emissions and Federal sustainability.
On March 21, 2022, in response to the
growth in investor demand for and
company disclosure of information
about climate change risks, impacts, and
opportunities, the Securities and
Exchange Commission (SEC) published
on its website at https://www.sec.gov/
rules/proposed.shtml a proposed rule to
facilitate the disclosure of consistent,
comparable, and reliable information on
climate-related financial risk. The
proposed rule, entitled ‘‘The
Enhancement and Standardization of
Climate-Related Disclosures for
Investors,’’ was subsequently published
in the Federal Register on April 11,
2022 (see 87 FR 21334). The SEC is
proposing to require SEC registrants,
including publicly listed/traded
companies, to disclose in their
registration statements and annual
reports their climate-related financial
risk and related metrics, including GHG
emissions metrics. Parts of the SEC
proposed rule leverage existing
standards, such as the GHG Protocol
Corporate Accounting and Reporting
Standard and the recommendations of
the TCFD, the same standards that are
leveraged in this proposed rule (see
section II.A. of this preamble). While the
SEC proposed rule did not include a
requirement for SEC registrants to set
science-based targets, it did propose that
SEC registrants disclose targets if they
have adopted one. While there are some
similarities between the content of the
disclosures in the SEC and FAR
proposed rules, this proposed FAR rule
specifically requires the Federal
contractors with significant Federal
contracts to provide their disclosures
using the CDP Climate Change
Questionnaire to maximize the
consistency, comparability, and
accessibility of disclosure data for use in
managing Federal procurements and
E:\FR\FM\14NOP2.SGM
14NOP2
Federal Register / Vol. 87, No. 218 / Monday, November 14, 2022 / Proposed Rules
supply chains. In addition, per this
proposed FAR rule, major contractors
will also be required to set sciencebased targets to reduce their GHG
emissions.
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with PROPOSALS2
II. Discussion and Analysis
To implement the new disclosure and
target requirements of E.O. 14030, DoD,
GSA, and NASA are proposing to create
a new FAR subpart at 23.XX, entitled
‘‘Public Disclosure of Climate
Information,’’ to expand the climaterelated representations in the
solicitation provisions at FAR 52.223–
22, Public Disclosure of Climate
Information—Representation, and
52.212–3, Offeror Representations and
Certifications—Commercial Products
and Commercial Services, and to
establish a new standard of
responsibility for certain contractors in
FAR subpart 9.1. The following is a
discussion and analysis of the proposed
FAR amendments:
A. Significant and Major Contractors
Section 5(b)(i) of E.O. 14030 directs
the FAR Council to consider an
amendment to the FAR to ensure major
Federal suppliers disclose their GHG
emissions and climate-related financial
risk and set science-based targets to
reduce their GHG emissions. This rule
proposes to separate ‘‘major Federal
suppliers’’ into two categories:
significant contractors and major
contractors. Per this proposed rule, both
significant contractors and major
contractors would be subject to annual
Scope 1 and Scope 2 GHG emissions
disclosure requirements (discussed in
section II.B.1. of this preamble), while
only major contractors would be subject
to the annual climate disclosure, which
includes disclosure of Scope 3 GHG
emissions, and science-based target
requirements (discussed in section
II.B.2. and II.B.3. of this preamble).
For the purposes of this rule, an
offeror is considered a ‘‘significant
contractor’’ if the offeror received $7.5
million or more, but not exceeding $50
million, in Federal contract obligations
(as defined in OMB Circular A–11) in
the prior Federal fiscal year as indicated
in the System for Award Management
(SAM) at https://www.sam.gov. An
offeror is considered a ‘‘major
contractor’’ if the offeror received more
than $50 million in Federal contract
obligations (as defined in OMB Circular
A–11) in the prior Federal fiscal year as
indicated in SAM. According to award
data available in the Federal
Procurement Data System (FPDS), there
were approximately 4,413 entities that
received between $7.5 million and $50
million in Federal contract obligations
VerDate Sep<11>2014
17:59 Nov 10, 2022
Jkt 259001
in FY 2021, of which 2,835 (64 percent)
are estimated to be small businesses.
There were approximately 1,353 entities
that received more than $50 million in
Federal contract obligations in FY 2021,
of which 389 (29 percent) are estimated
to be small businesses.
This distinction between major
contractors and significant contractors is
important to ensure this rule
collectively applies the requirements to
entities receiving the most annual
Federal contract obligations, to obtain
the most responsibility for the
management of GHG emissions and
climate risks impacting the Federal
Government’s supply chains. The major
contractor requirements would address
64 percent of Federal Government
spend and approximately 69 percent of
supply chain GHG impacts, of which 31
percent of major contractors already
report disclosing their GHG emissions
through SAM. Significant contractors
receive fewer contract obligations, with
only 10 percent disclosing their GHG
emissions through SAM. Therefore, the
reporting burden is significantly
lessened for these companies by only
reporting Scope 1 and 2 emissions.
Collectively, this rule will cover 86
percent of annual spend and about 86
percent of supply chain GHG impacts. It
will also provide a better understanding
of the Federal supply chain impacts,
including Scope 3 emissions reported
by major contractors.
B. Policy.
As provided in paragraph (a) of the
new section at FAR 23.XX03, a
contracting officer is required to treat a
significant or major contractor as
nonresponsible, unless it has (itself or
through its immediate owner or highestlevel owner) inventoried its annual GHG
emissions, and the significant or major
contractor has disclosed its total annual
emissions in SAM. Per paragraph (b) of
FAR section 23.XX03, a major
contractor shall also be treated as
nonresponsible, unless it has (itself or
through its immediate owner or highestlevel owner) made available on a
publicly accessible website an annual
climate disclosure that was completed
using the CDP Climate Change
Questionnaire in its current or previous
fiscal year and set targets to reduce its
emissions.
The following is a discussion of the
specific compliance requirements,
which are subject to the exceptions and
starting dates described in sections II.C.
and II.E. of this preamble. A discussion
of the various standards specified for
compliance is provided in section II.D.
of this preamble.
PO 00000
Frm 00003
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
68313
1. GHG Inventory
A significant or major contractor
(itself or through its immediate owner or
highest-level owner) is required to have
completed within its current or previous
fiscal year a GHG inventory of its annual
Scope 1 and Scope 2 emissions. The
significant or major contractor must also
disclose in SAM at https://www.sam.gov
the total annual Scope 1 and Scope 2
emissions identified through its most
recent GHG inventory. Per OMB Memo
M–22–06 (and as currently defined at
FAR 23.001), greenhouse gases include
carbon dioxide, methane, nitrous oxide,
hydrofluorocarbons, perfluorocarbons,
nitrogen trifluoride, and sulfur
hexafluoride. Scope 1 emissions include
GHG emissions from sources that are
owned or controlled by the reporting
company. Scope 2 emissions include
GHG emissions associated with the
generation of electricity, heating and
cooling, or steam, when these are
purchased or acquired for the reporting
company’s own consumption but occur
at sources owned or controlled by
another entity. In conducting a GHG
inventory, the significant or major
contractor (or their immediate or
highest-level owner) must follow the
GHG Protocol Corporate Accounting
and Reporting Standard (see section
II.D.1. of this preamble) to develop a
quantified list of the Scope 1 and Scope
2 GHG emissions. Companies may
calculate emissions using the
calculation tool of their choice, as long
as it is in alignment with the GHG
Protocol Corporate Accounting and
Reporting Standard. The Environmental
Protection Agency (EPA) offers one such
tool: a simplified GHG emissions
calculator (see https://www.epa.gov/
climateleadership/simplified-ghgemissions-calculator). The inventory
must represent emissions during a
continuous period of 12 months, ending
not more than 12 months before the
inventory is completed.
Major contractors are also required to
conduct a GHG inventory of their
relevant Scope 3 emissions, as
discussed in the next section of this
preamble. The requirement to inventory
Scope 3 emissions is not applicable to
significant contractors.
2. Annual Climate Disclosure
A major contractor (itself or through
its immediate owner or highest-level
owner) is required to complete an
annual climate disclosure within its
current or previous fiscal year. The
annual climate disclosure is a set of
disclosures by an entity that aligns with
recommendations of the TCFD (see
section II.D.2. of this preamble). The
E:\FR\FM\14NOP2.SGM
14NOP2
68314
Federal Register / Vol. 87, No. 218 / Monday, November 14, 2022 / Proposed Rules
disclosure includes a GHG inventory of
not only the Scope 1 and Scope 2
emissions, but also relevant Scope 3
emissions, which are emissions that are
a consequence of the operations of the
reporting entity but occur at sources
other than those owned or controlled by
the entity. The annual climate
disclosure also describes the entity’s
climate risk assessment process and any
risks identified. For the purposes of this
rule, a major contractor submits its
annual climate disclosure by completing
those portions of the CDP Climate
Change Questionnaire that align with
the TCFD as identified by CDP (https://
www.cdp.net/en/guidance/how-cdp-isaligned-to-the-tcfd) (see section II.D.3. of
this preamble) within its current or
previous fiscal year. The annual climate
disclosure must be made available on a
publicly accessible website, which
could be the company’s own website or
the CDP website.
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with PROPOSALS2
3. Science-Based Targets
The major contractor (itself or through
its immediate owner or highest-level
owner) is also required to develop
science-based targets and have the
targets validated by SBTi (see section
II.D.4. of this preamble). A sciencebased target is a target for reducing GHG
emissions that is in line with reductions
that the latest climate science deems
necessary to meet the goals of the Paris
Agreement to limit global warming to
well below 2 °C above pre-industrial
levels and pursue efforts to limit
warming to 1.5 °C (see SBTi frequently
asked questions at https://sciencebased
targets.org/faqs#what-are-sciencebased-targets). For information on the
latest climate science see 2018
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate
Change (IPCC) Special Report on 1.5 °C
at https://www.ipcc.ch/sr15/. These
targets must be validated by SBTi
within the previous five calendar years
and must also be made available on a
publicly accessible website. Validated
targets published by SBTi on the SBTi
website satisfy this requirement.
4. Means of Compliance
The proposed rule allows for a
significant or major contractor to be
considered in compliance with the new
policy at 23.XX03 if the action was
completed by the significant or major
contractor itself or through its
immediate or highest-level owner,
except that the significant or major
contractor itself must report the results
of the GHG inventory in SAM (see
23.XX03(a)(2)).
The definitions of ‘‘immediate owner’’
and ‘‘highest-level owner’’ currently
included in the provisions at FAR
VerDate Sep<11>2014
17:59 Nov 10, 2022
Jkt 259001
52.204–17, Ownership or Control of
Offeror, and the commercial provision
at FAR 52.212–3 are adopted for this
rule. Specifically, an ‘‘immediate
owner’’ is an entity, other than the
offeror, that has direct control of the
offeror. Indicators of control include,
but are not limited to, one or more of
the following: ownership or interlocking
management, identity of interests among
family members, shared facilities and
equipment, and the common use of
employees. ‘‘Highest-level owner’’
means the entity that owns or controls
an immediate owner of the offeror, or
that owns or controls one or more
entities that control an immediate
owner of the offeror. No entity owns or
exercises control of the highest-level
owner.
C. Exceptions
A new FAR section at 23.XX04
outlines certain exceptions. Per FAR
23.XX04(a), a significant or major
contractor is not required to inventory
its Scope 1 or Scope 2 emissions and a
major contractor is not required to
complete an annual climate disclosure
or set science-based targets, as described
in section II.B. of this preamble, if it is—
• An Alaska Native Corporation, a
Community Development Corporation,
an Indian tribe, a Native Hawaiian
Organization, or a Tribally owned
concern, as those terms are defined at 13
CFR 124.3;
• A higher education institution
(defined as institutions of higher
education in the OMB Uniform
Guidance at 2 CFR part 200, subpart A,
and 20 U.S.C. 1001);
• A nonprofit research entity;
• A state or local government; or
• An entity deriving 80 percent or
more of its annual revenue from Federal
management and operating (M&O)
contracts that are subject to agency
annual site sustainability reporting
requirements.
The exception provided for Federallyrecognized tribes or tribal or Native
corporations is in accordance with
related Federal procurement policies
and current commercial norms for
sustainability reporting. The exception
for institutions of higher education or
nonprofit research entities is provided
because a large majority of such
institutions that are significant or major
contractors either already set GHG
reduction targets and make
sustainability disclosures but are likely
doing so (in accordance with current
commercial norms for sustainability
reporting) with standards and systems
other than those specified in this rule,
or are pass-through entities with
minimal Scope 1 and 2 emissions and
PO 00000
Frm 00004
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
little capacity to manage Scope 3
emissions and climate risks.
An M&O contract is an agreement
under which the Government contracts
for the operation, maintenance, or
support of a Government-owned or
Government-controlled research,
development, special production, or
testing establishment wholly or
principally devoted to one or more
major programs of the contracting
Federal agency (see FAR subpart 17.6).
A market scan indicates that a majority
of current M&O contract holders derive
all, or substantially all, of their revenue
from Federal site M&O contracts. For
these contractors, it was determined that
since all or substantially all their
facilities and GHG emissions are already
subject to comprehensive Federal
sustainability performance and
reporting requirements under their M&O
contracts, related laws, and executive
orders, it would be duplicative and
unnecessary to require them to also
report using the separate standards and
systems required by this rule. The
market scan indicated that a minority of
current M&O contract holders are larger
entities deriving less than 80 percent of
their revenue from Federal site M&O
contracts, indicating that they likely
operate substantial facilities and emit
substantial GHG emissions, which are
not covered by other Federal
sustainability performance and
reporting requirements. For these
entities, requiring them to report using
the separate standards and systems
required by this rule will allow the
Government and the public to
understand the scope of climate risks
and impacts attributable to these
entities’ substantial non-M&O activities
and encourage the entities to reduce
those risks and impacts.
FAR section 23.XX04(b) provides
additional exceptions for certain major
contractors. If a major contractor is
considered a small business for the
North American Industry Classification
System (NAICS) code it has identified in
its SAM registration as its primary
NAICS code, or if it is a nonprofit
organization, then it is not required to
complete an annual climate disclosure
or to set science-based targets. However,
the major contractor is still required to
complete a GHG inventory of its Scope
1 and Scope 2 emissions and must
report these total annual emissions in
SAM.
The public is invited to provide
public comments on the
appropriateness of the exceptions
included in this proposed rule,
including potential alternatives to be
considered in the formation of the final
rule.
E:\FR\FM\14NOP2.SGM
14NOP2
Federal Register / Vol. 87, No. 218 / Monday, November 14, 2022 / Proposed Rules
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with PROPOSALS2
D. Standards
Section II.1. of OMB memorandum
M–22–06 directs the FAR Council to
leverage existing third-party standards
and systems in the development of
regulatory amendments to promote
contractor attention on reduced GHG
emissions and Federal sustainability. In
alignment with the National Technology
Transfer and Advancement Act of 1995
and OMB Circular A–119, which directs
Federal agencies to use nongovernmental private sector standards to
meet policy and procurement objectives,
as described in section II.B. of this
preamble, this rule engages contractors
through widely-accepted protocols and
platforms that they are already using to
publicly disclose annual climate data to
a variety of other interested parties. The
rule requires contractors to use the
following four standards: the GHG
Protocol Corporate Accounting and
Reporting Standards and Guidance, the
2017 Recommendations of the TCFD,
the CDP Climate Change Questionnaire,
and the SBTi criteria. The public is
invited to provide public comments on
the use of these standards in this
proposed rule, including potential
alternatives to be considered in the
formation of the final rule. The
following is a summary of the standards
proposed for disclosures by significant
and major contractors.
1. GHG Protocol Corporate Accounting
and Reporting Standards and Guidance
The GHG Protocol Corporate
Accounting and Reporting Standard,
2004 revised edition (see https://
ghgprotocol.org/sites/default/files//ghgprotocol-revised.pdf) is the most widely
used accounting tool to track corporate
GHG emissions. It describes how to
complete a comprehensive GHG
inventory across Scope 1, Scope 2, and
relevant categories of Scope 3
emissions. This standard is
supplemented by Required Greenhouse
Gases in Inventories: Accounting and
Reporting Amendment, 2013 (see
https://www.ghgprotocol.org/sites/
default/files/ghgp/NF3-Amendment_
052213.pdf). Further implementing
instructions for quantifying emissions
can be referenced in GHG Protocol
Scope 2 Guidance, 2015 (see https://
ghgprotocol.org/sites/default/files/
standards/Scope%202%20Guidance_
Final_Sept26.pdf) and GHG Protocol
Corporate Value Chain (Scope 3)
Accounting and Reporting Standard
Guidance, 2011 (see https://
ghgprotocol.org/sites/default/files/
standards/Value-Chain-AccountingReporing-Standard_041613_2.pdf).
General information on the GHG
VerDate Sep<11>2014
17:59 Nov 10, 2022
Jkt 259001
Protocol Corporate Standard and related
guidance is available at https://
ghgprotocol.org/corporate-standard.
2. Task Force on Climate-Related
Financial Disclosures
In 2017, the TCFD launched
recommendations to improve and
increase reporting of climate-related
financial information. The TCFD
recommendations cover Governance,
Strategy, Risk Management, and Metrics
and Targets. Climate-related risks are
considered across two major categories:
(1) risks related to the transition to a
lower-carbon economy, and (2) risks
related to the physical impacts of
climate change. Governments around
the world are asking companies to
provide consistent and decision-useful
information to market participants in
line with TCFD recommendations (see
https://assets.bbhub.io/company/sites/
60/2021/10/FINAL-2017-TCFDReport.pdf). In 2021, the TCFD updated
its implementation guidance for the
2017 Recommendations by issuing an
annex titled ‘‘Annex: Implementing the
Recommendations of the Task Force on
Climate-related Financial Disclosures.’’
The updates reflect the evolution of
disclosure practices, approaches, and
user needs (see https://assets.bbhub.io/
company/sites/60/2021/07/2021-TCFDImplementing_Guidance.pdf).
3. CDP Climate Change Questionnaire
CDP (formerly the Carbon Disclosure
Project) is an international non-profit
organization that runs a global
environmental disclosure system. CDP’s
annual Climate Change Questionnaire
enables companies to report GHG
emissions and climate change risk
through a standard process and make
their environmental impact transparent
to interested parties. Companies
disclose once annually by submitting a
response to the CDP Climate Change
Questionnaire through CDP’s online
response system (ORS). Companies are
able to utilize the GHG Protocol
Corporate Accounting and Reporting
Standard when completing their GHG
inventory to disclose through CDP.
CDP’s disclosure platform provides the
mechanism for reporting climate-related
financial risks in line with the TCFD
recommendations as well as reporting
annual progress towards science-based
targets.
CDP operates an annual disclosure
cycle that enables companies to disclose
emissions and climate risk information
at the request of investors, corporate and
government customers, the general
public, and other interested parties.
Each year CDP issues the proposed
updates to the questionnaire, which are
PO 00000
Frm 00005
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
68315
opened for public consultation in the
fall (approximately September) and the
finalized questionnaire and guidance
are available early in the new year
(approximately January). The Online
Response System (ORS) opens once
annually (approximately April), and
responses must be submitted by a
summer deadline (approximately July).
Updated calendars are published by
CDP annually: https://www.cdp.net/en/
companies-discloser/How-to-discloseas-a-company.
CDP’s Climate Change Questionnaire
prompts users for some disclosures and
datapoints that are beyond the scope of
this FAR rule, which is to obtain annual
climate disclosures from major
contractors (see II.B.2. of this preamble).
These additional datapoints may be of
interest to investors, external nonFederal Government customers, or the
general public who also rely on CDP
disclosures to evaluate corporate
climate performance. This proposed
FAR rule clarifies at 23.XX03(b)(1) and
in 52.223–22 and 52.212–3(t) that the
offeror (itself or through its immediate
owner or highest-level owner) is only
required to complete those portions of
the CDP Climate Change Questionnaire
that align with the TCFD
recommendations as identified by CDP
(https://www.cdp.net/en/guidance/howcdp-is-aligned-to-the-tcfd). This allows
companies to determine what responses
in the CDP questionnaire are
appropriate or necessary to complete in
order to provide a TCFD-aligned annual
climate disclosure. Questions beyond
those that are necessary to provide an
annual climate disclosure for Federal
use, as defined by this rule, are
considered optional for the purposes of
this rule. Neither the CDP climate
scores, nor answers to questions beyond
those necessary to provide a complete
annual climate disclosure, will be used
to evaluate compliance with this FAR
rule. The Government seeks public
comment regarding what, if any,
additional specificity is needed beyond
‘‘those portions of the CDP Climate
Change Questionnaire that align with
the TCFD recommendations as
identified by CDP (https://www.cdp.net/
en/guidance/how-cdp-is-aligned-to-thetcfd)’’.
4. Science-Based Targets Initiative
SBTi is a partnership between CDP,
the United Nations Global Compact
(UNGC), the World Resources Institute
(WRI), and the World Wide Fund for
Nature (WWF, also known as the World
Wildlife Fund). Science-based targets
provide a clearly-defined pathway for
companies to reduce GHG emissions in
line with reductions that the latest
E:\FR\FM\14NOP2.SGM
14NOP2
68316
Federal Register / Vol. 87, No. 218 / Monday, November 14, 2022 / Proposed Rules
climate science deems necessary to meet
the goals of the Paris Agreement—
limiting global warming to well below
2 °C above pre-industrial levels and
pursuing efforts to limit warming to
1.5 °C. Companies can commit to set a
science-based target and then, within
two years, must develop a science-based
target and have it validated through the
SBTi target validation process.
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with PROPOSALS2
E. Starting Dates
This proposed rule acknowledges that
significant and major contractors will
need time to come into compliance with
the new policy by including delayed
starting dates. A significant or major
contractor that cannot represent on or
after these starting dates that it has
complied with the new policy will be
presumed to be a nonresponsible
prospective contractor for Federal
procurements (see section II.G. of this
preamble).
Starting one year after publication of
a final rule, a significant or major
contractor (itself or through its
immediate owner or highest-level
owner) must have completed a GHG
inventory and the significant or major
contractor must have disclosed the total
annual Scope 1 and Scope 2 emissions
from its most recent inventory in SAM.
This one-year period provides the time
needed for significant or major
contractors to become familiar with the
GHG Protocol Corporate Accounting
and Reporting Standard, to survey the
GHG emissions, and for significant or
major contractors to report in SAM the
total metric tons of carbon dioxide
equivalent (MT CO2e) of Scope 1 and
Scope 2 emissions.
The compliance requirements for
major contractors will start two years
after publication of a final rule. This
delayed starting date provides a major
contractor (or its immediate owner or
highest-level owner) additional time to
complete a GHG inventory that covers
relevant Scope 3 emissions; conduct a
climate risk assessment and identify
risks; complete the CDP Climate Change
Questionnaire; and commit to, develop,
and obtain SBTi validation of a sciencebased target.
F. Annual Representation
Amendments are proposed to the
annual representations in the
solicitation provision at FAR 52.223–22,
Public Disclosure of Climate
Information—Representation, and the
corresponding representation in
paragraph (t) of the provision at FAR
52.212–3 for acquisitions for
commercial products or commercial
services, to collect information on
whether an offeror is in compliance
VerDate Sep<11>2014
17:59 Nov 10, 2022
Jkt 259001
with the new policy. This provision
continues to be prescribed for use only
when offerors are required to be
registered in SAM, though the
prescription has been moved to FAR
section 23.XX07 of the new subpart. All
offerors that register in SAM will be
required to represent on an annual basis
whether they are a significant contractor
or a major contractor (see section II.A.
of this preamble). If an offeror
represents that it is a significant or
major contractor, then the offeror will be
required to represent whether it—
• Is subject to an exception (see
section II.C. of this preamble);
• Has completed, within its current or
previous fiscal year, a GHG inventory of
the annual Scope 1 and Scope 2
emissions (evidenced by a report in
SAM of the total annual Scope 1 and
Scope 2 emissions identified in its most
recent inventory);
• Makes available on a publicly
accessible website an annual climate
disclosure that was completed using the
CDP Climate Change Questionnaire
within its current or previous fiscal
year; and
• Makes available on a publicly
accessible website a science-based target
that has been validated by SBTi.
The new representations are intended
to assist the contracting officer in
determining whether the policy at
23.XX03 applies to an offeror and, if so,
whether the offeror is in compliance.
The new FAR section 23.XX05,
Procedures, provides instructions for
the contracting officer who is reviewing
the representations in paragraph (d) of
the provision at FAR 52.223–22 (or the
equivalent representations in the
commercial provision at FAR 52.212–
3(t)). This section includes tables to
illustrate the specific responses from
offerors that are required to indicate that
the offeror is in compliance. If an
offeror’s representations indicate that
the offeror is a significant or major
contractor and it is not in compliance
with the policy at FAR 23.XX03 (or if
the contracting officer has reason to
question the representations), then the
contracting officer is directed to follow
the procedures at FAR 9.104–3(e) for
determining whether the offeror is
responsible (see section II.G. of this
preamble).
G. Responsibility Determinations
Per FAR section 23.XX05(c), the
contracting officer is directed to follow
the procedures at FAR section 9.104–
3(e) for determining responsibility when
an offeror represents that it is not in
compliance with the policy at 23.XX03
when it should be, or if there is reason
to question the offeror’s representation.
PO 00000
Frm 00006
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
Per the new procedures at FAR 9.104–
3(e), the contracting officer shall
presume the prospective contractor is
nonresponsible pursuant to 9.104–1,
unless the contracting officer
determines that—
• Noncompliance resulted from
circumstances properly beyond the
prospective contractor’s control;
• The prospective contractor has
provided sufficient documentation that
demonstrates substantial efforts to
comply; and
• The prospective contractor has
made a public commitment to comply
as soon as possible on a publicly
accessible website (within one year).
In making this determination the
contracting officer is directed to request
information from the prospective
contractor to determine what efforts it
has made to comply with each
requirement at FAR 22.XX03 and the
basis for the failure to comply.
FAR 9.104–3(e)(3) also clarifies that a
significant or major contractor who
meets one of the exceptions at FAR
23.XX04 (see section II.C. of this
preamble) and acquisitions that are
subject to an exemption or waiver
pursuant to FAR 23.XX06 (see section
II.H. of this preamble) are not subject to
the new responsibility standard and
procedures.
H. Exemptions and Waivers
The new section at 23.XX06 provides
for certain exemptions from and waivers
to the new procedures for determining
responsibility at 23.XX05 and the new
responsibility standards at FAR 9.104–
3(e) for determining whether a
significant or major contractor is
responsible (discussed in section II.G. of
this preamble). For example, the new
procedures do not apply to acquisitions
listed at FAR 4.1102(a) where the offeror
is exempt from the requirement to be
registered in SAM at the time an offer
is submitted, since enforcement of the
policy at FAR 23.XX03 is accomplished
via review of a significant or major
contractor’s representations in SAM as
described in FAR section 23.XX05.
The procedures at FAR section
23.XX05 may be waived by the senior
procurement executive for facilities,
business units, or other defined units for
national security purposes, or for
emergencies, national security, or other
mission essential purposes. The senior
procurement executive may also
provide a waiver for a period not to
exceed one calendar year to enable an
entity an additional year to come into
compliance. An agency must make such
waivers available on its agency website.
E:\FR\FM\14NOP2.SGM
14NOP2
Federal Register / Vol. 87, No. 218 / Monday, November 14, 2022 / Proposed Rules
I. Definitions
Definitions of the following terms are
provided in FAR section 23.XX02 and
in paragraph (a) of the solicitation
provisions at FAR 52.223–22 and
52.212–3: ‘‘annual climate disclosure,’’
‘‘GHG inventory,’’ ‘‘major contractor,’’
‘‘publicly accessible website,’’ ‘‘sciencebased target,’’ ‘‘Scope 1 emissions,’’
‘‘Scope 2 emissions,’’ ‘‘Scope 3
emissions,’’ and ‘‘significant
contractor.’’ The definitions of
‘‘immediate owner’’ and ‘‘highest-level
owner’’ that are currently included in
the provision at FAR 52.212–3(a) are
added to FAR section 23.XX02 and the
solicitation provision at FAR 52.223–22.
The current definition of ‘‘greenhouse
gases’’ remains at FAR section 23.001
with minor spelling corrections.
J. Conforming Changes
Given that the policy on climate
disclosures is moved to a new subpart
at FAR 23.XX, conforming changes are
proposed at FAR subpart 23.8 to remove
the coverage of disclosure of GHG
emissions and reduction goals. As a
result, 23.802(c) and (d) and 23.804(b)
are removed and the remaining
paragraphs at FAR sections 23.800 and
23.804 are renumbered accordingly. A
cross-reference to the new subpart is
added at 23.800(b). Conforming updates
to the cross-references to FAR 23.804
are also proposed in FAR 52.213–4, and
the prescription references at FAR
52.223–11, 52.223–12, 52.223–20, and
52.223–21. In addition, the title of the
provision at FAR 52.223–22 is updated
in the provision at FAR 52.204–8,
Annual Representations and
Certifications, and in the list of
provisions at FAR 4.1202(a).
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with PROPOSALS2
K. Public Input
The public is specifically invited to
provide public comments on the
following:
• The appropriateness of the
exceptions identified in section II.C. of
this preamble, including potential
alternatives to be considered in the
formation of the final rule.
• The use of the standards identified
in section II.D. of this preamble,
including potential alternatives to be
considered in the formation of the final
rule.
• With regards to the CDP Climate
Change Questionnaire discussed in
section II.D.3. of this preamble, whether
any specificity beyond ‘‘those portions
of the CDP Climate Change
Questionnaire that align with the TCFD
as identified by CDP (https://
www.cdp.net/en/guidance/how-cdp-isaligned-to-the-tcfd)’’ is necessary.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
17:59 Nov 10, 2022
Jkt 259001
III. Applicability to Contracts at or
Below the Simplified Acquisition
Threshold (SAT), for Commercial
Products (Including Commercially
Available Off-the-Shelf (COTS) Items),
and for Commercial Services
This rule proposes to amend the
annual representation in the solicitation
provision at FAR 52.223–22, Public
Disclosure of Climate Information—
Representation, and the corresponding
representation in paragraph (t) of the
solicitation provision at FAR 52.212–3,
Offeror Representations and
Certifications—Commercial Products
and Commercial Services. The provision
at FAR 52.223–22 will continue to be
prescribed for use in solicitations that
also include the provision at FAR
52.204–7, System for Award
Management. This prescription ensures
that all offerors who are required to
register in SAM and who received $7.5
million or more in Federal contract
obligations in the prior Federal fiscal
year, including those who compete
exclusively for contracts for commercial
products or commercial services or
those valued at or below the SAT,
provide a response to the revised
representations.
The new procedures at FAR 22.XX05
and new standards at FAR 9.104 for
determining the responsibility of a
prospective contractor, if it is a
significant or major contractor, will
apply to acquisitions of commercial
products (including COTS items) or
commercial services, and to acquisitions
valued at or below the SAT. Failure to
apply the new procedures and standards
for responsibility determinations to
these types of acquisitions would not
accomplish the intended policy
objective of the Executive Order. These
procedures ensure the Government is
able to enforce the disclosure
requirements for significant and major
contractors.
IV. Expected Impact of the Rule
This rule proposes to create a new
standard of responsibility. Specifically,
a prospective contractor that is a
significant or major contractor will be
presumed to be nonresponsible unless—
• Starting one year after publication
of a final rule, the significant or major
contractor (itself or through its
immediate owner or highest-level
owner) has completed a GHG inventory
of its annual Scope 1 and Scope 2 GHG
emissions, and the significant or major
contractor has reported the total annual
Scope 1 and Scope 2 emissions from its
most recent inventory in SAM at https://
www.sam.gov; and
PO 00000
Frm 00007
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
68317
• Starting two years after publication
of a final rule, a major contractor (itself
or through its immediate owner or
highest-level owner) has submitted an
annual climate disclosure within its
current or previous fiscal year by
completing those portions of the CDP
Climate Change Questionnaire that align
with the TCFD recommendations as
identified by CDP (https://www.cdp.net/
en/guidance/how-cdp-is-aligned-to-thetcfd) and has developed a science-based
target and had the target validated by
SBTi within the previous five calendar
years.
When making a responsibility
determination, a contracting officer will
rely on the representation of a
prospective contractor in the revised
solicitation provision at FAR 52.223–22
(or the equivalent representations in the
commercial provision at FAR 52.212–
3(t)) regarding whether the prospective
contractor is a significant or major
contractor and, if so, whether it is in
compliance with the new disclosure and
target requirements, as applicable. If a
prospective contractor’s representation
indicates that it is a significant or major
contractor, is not subject to an
exception, and is not in compliance,
then the contracting officer will request
additional information from the
prospective contractor regarding the
efforts it has made to comply before
making a responsibility determination,
unless an exemption or waiver applies.
A. General Compliance Requirements
1. Representations in SAM
All offerors that register in SAM will
be required to represent in paragraph
(d)(1) of the provision at FAR 52.223–
22 (or the equivalent representations in
the commercial provision at FAR
52.212–3(t)(3)(i)) whether the offeror
meets the definition of a significant or
major contractor. An offeror is
considered a ‘‘significant contractor’’ if
the offeror received $7.5 million or
more, but not exceeding $50 million, in
Federal contract obligations in the prior
Federal fiscal year. An offeror is
considered a ‘‘major contractor’’ if the
offeror received more than $50 million
in Federal contract obligations in the
prior Federal fiscal year. Only offerors
that represent that they are a significant
or major contractor will be required to
complete the remaining representations
in paragraphs (d)(2) through (d)(5) of the
provision at FAR 52.223–22 (or the
equivalent representations in the
commercial provision at FAR 52.212–
3(t)(3)(ii) through (v)).
An offeror will represent in paragraph
(d)(2) of the provision whether the
offeror meets an exception to the new
E:\FR\FM\14NOP2.SGM
14NOP2
68318
Federal Register / Vol. 87, No. 218 / Monday, November 14, 2022 / Proposed Rules
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with PROPOSALS2
policy per the new section at FAR
23.XX04. The contracting officer uses
the offeror representations in this
paragraph to determine if an offeror who
represents in paragraph (d)(1) of the
provision that it is a significant or major
contractor is subject to the new
disclosure and compliance
requirements.
The representation in paragraph (d)(3)
of the provision gathers information
about whether a significant or major
contractor (itself or through its
immediate owner or highest-level
owner) has completed within its current
or previous fiscal year a GHG inventory
of its annual Scope 1 and Scope 2
emissions. Offerors will be required to
report in this representation the total
Scope 1 and Scope 2 emissions
identified in its most recent GHG
inventory.
The representations in paragraph
(d)(4) and (d)(5) of the provision gather
information regarding whether a major
contractor (itself or through its
immediate owner or highest-level
owner) makes available on a publicly
accessible website:
• An annual climate disclosure that
was completed using the CDP Climate
Change Questionnaire within its current
or previous fiscal year; and
• A science-based target that has been
validated by SBTi within the previous
five calendar years.
An offeror that is a major contractor
is also required to report in paragraph
(e) of the provision at FAR 52.223–22
(or in paragraph (t)(4) of the commercial
provision at FAR 52.212–3) the
website(s) where the annual climate
disclosure and validated science-based
target are made publicly available.
While the compliance requirements
referenced in the last two
representations at paragraphs (d)(4) and
(d)(5) are only applicable to major
contractors, both significant and major
contractors will be required to complete
these representations. This allows the
Government to monitor whether
significant contractors are taking steps
to provide enhanced climate disclosures
and to reduce their GHG emissions.
2. GHG Inventory
Starting one year after publication of
a final rule, a significant and major
contractor (or their immediate owner or
highest-level owner) must follow the
GHG Protocol Corporate Accounting
and Reporting Standard (see section
II.D.1. of this preamble) to complete a
GHG inventory of the Scope 1 and
Scope 2 emissions. Starting two years
after publication of a final rule, major
contractors will also inventory relevant
Scope 3 emissions. Companies
VerDate Sep<11>2014
17:59 Nov 10, 2022
Jkt 259001
completing a GHG inventory for the first
time will often begin by reviewing
accounting standards and methods,
determining organizational and
operational boundaries, and choosing a
reporting and base year. They will
collect data aligned to that year from
across the business (including but not
limited to fuel purchases, such as
gasoline and heating oil, and electricity
bills) and utilize a GHG calculator to
determine the associated GHG
emissions emitted across Scope 1, Scope
2, and (if applicable) relevant Scope 3
emissions expressed in MT CO2e.
Companies will likely develop a GHG
Inventory Management Plan to
formalize data collection procedures, in
order to ensure consistency on an
annual basis.
3. Annual Climate Disclosure
Starting two years after publication of
a final rule, a major contractor (or its
immediate or highest-level owner) must
provide an annual climate disclosure
that aligns with the 2017
recommendations of the TCFD and the
2021 TCFD update (see sections II.B.2
and II.D.2. of this preamble). Companies
following the TCFD recommendations
will assess two types of climate risks: (1)
transition risks associated with the
transition to a lower-carbon global
economy, the most common of which
relate to policy and legal actions,
technology changes, market responses,
and reputational considerations; and (2)
physical risks emanating from climate
change, which can be event-driven
(acute) such as increased severity of
extreme weather events (e.g., cyclones,
droughts, floods, and fires) as well as
longer-term shifts (chronic) in
precipitation and temperature and
increased variability in weather patterns
(e.g., sea level rise).
The major contractor (or its
immediate or highest-level owner) must
provide its annual climate disclosures
by completing those portions of the CDP
Climate Change Questionnaire that align
with the TCFD as identified by CDP
(https://www.cdp.net/en/guidance/howcdp-is-aligned-to-the-tcfd). Companies
receive an invitation to disclose once
annually through CDP on behalf of all
investors, corporate customers, and/or
Government customers requesting their
response. Companies who have not
received an invitation can indicate their
intention to disclose as a ‘‘self-selected
company (SSC)’’ by contacting
respond@cdp.net. Companies complete
and submit their response to the CDP
Climate Change Questionnaire through
CDP’s online response system (ORS).
The CDP Climate Change Questionnaire
can be saved in draft form in the ORS,
PO 00000
Frm 00008
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
exported for internal completion and
review, and then submitted through the
ORS prior to the relevant deadline. CDP
provides detailed guidance to support
companies in understanding and
completing the questionnaire (see
https://www.cdp.net/en/guidance/
guidance-for-companies).
4. Science-Based Targets
Starting two years after publication of
a final rule, a major contractor will also
be required to develop (itself or through
its immediate or highest-level owner) a
science-based target and have the target
validated by SBTi. Companies can
commit to set a science-based target by
submitting a letter to SBTi and will be
recognized as ‘‘committed’’ on the SBTi
website. Once committed, a company
has 24 months to submit their targets to
SBTi for validation. Companies
independently develop their sciencebased target in line with science-based
criteria (including sector-specific
guidance, where relevant), which are
available on the SBTi website (https://
sciencebasedtargets.org/). Companies
then submit the science-based target to
SBTi for validation. Validated targets
are published one month after
validation, unless otherwise instructed.
Targets not receiving validation are
provided with detailed feedback from
expert reviewers and an opportunity to
resubmit. Following validation,
companies should disclose emissions
annually and monitor progress on
reaching the target.
B. Benefit
The Federal Government is the
world’s single largest purchaser of goods
and services, spending over $650 billion
in contracts in fiscal year 2020 alone.
Public procurement can shift markets,
drive innovation, and be a catalyst for
adoption of new norms and global
standards. Requiring significant and
major contractors to publicly disclose
their GHG emissions and requiring
major contractors to publicly disclose
their climate-related financial risk and
set science-based reduction targets will
give visibility to major annual sources of
GHG emissions and climate risks
throughout the Federal supply chain
and could, in turn, provide insights into
the entire U.S. economy. While
disclosure alone does not reduce
emissions and climate risk, the
expectation of increased public
transparency and accountability may
prompt suppliers to take action
following a ‘‘what gets measured gets
managed’’ mantra, and thus increase the
resilience of the Federal supply chain.
Several discrete categories of benefits
are expected from this regulation to
E:\FR\FM\14NOP2.SGM
14NOP2
Federal Register / Vol. 87, No. 218 / Monday, November 14, 2022 / Proposed Rules
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with PROPOSALS2
include: identifying areas for increased
efficiency and reduced risks;
understanding and reduction of supply
chain vulnerabilities; aligning targets to
address climate change; improved
transparency, accountability, and ability
of Federal agencies to collaborate with
contractors; and increased efficiency of
disclosure via standardization.
1. Identifying Areas for Increased
Efficiency and Reduced Risks
Companies who are required to
publicly disclose their GHG emissions
and climate risks may be prompted to
thoroughly investigate their operations
and supply chains, which may, in turn,
reveal opportunities to realize
efficiencies and manage risks. Any
efficiency improvements would, in turn,
flow into the company’s performance on
Federal contracts. The activity data that
is examined (e.g., fuel and electricity
bills) to conduct a GHG inventory can
reveal areas where efficiencies may be
realized. After conducting a GHG
inventory, many companies may choose
to address sources of emissions. For
example, the Federal Government’s
assessment of its GHG footprint has
revealed the most significant areas of
GHG emissions and climate risks across
the Federal Government’s own
operations and supply chains, which
prompted the Federal Sustainability
Plan to establish ambitious programs to
address them: zero emissions vehicles,
carbon pollution free electricity, net
zero buildings, and net zero
procurement. Companies take widely
varied approaches to managing
operational efficiencies relevant to their
GHG emissions, ranging from no action
to opportunistic system upgrades to
purchasing offsets to address emissions
outside of a company’s boundaries. By
requiring the development,
maintenance, and public disclosure of
contractor GHG inventories and
reduction targets, this rule may prompt
contractors to undertake a
comprehensive analysis of their energy
and fuel use, electricity procurement,
and other emissions sources (e.g.,
refrigerants, agricultural and industrial
activities), which may prompt action to
invest in GHG management
opportunities across their facilities,
operations, and supply chains with
multi-year paybacks. Well-managed
contractors may choose to voluntarily
manage GHGs and cost savings, but
these expanded expectations will set a
level playing field for a wider range of
contractors to get started.
Those contractors who choose to
address GHG emissions may experience
benefits in cost savings, as shown by the
Government’s own experience as well as
VerDate Sep<11>2014
17:59 Nov 10, 2022
Jkt 259001
68319
that of contractors who have voluntarily
disclosed emissions. The Federal
Government has tracked and publicly
disclosed its Scope 1 and 2 emissions
annually since 2008, while
implementing targets for energy and
water efficiency and emissions
reduction. The Government’s practice of
setting and meeting these targets has led
to a reduction of 32.2 percent in Federal
agency emissions from standard
operations since 2008, reduction in total
annual energy use (including all facility
and mobile sources) from approximately
1,143,000 Billion British thermal units
(BBtu) in 2008 to 849,000 BBtu in 2020
(25 percent reduction), and a reduction
of total annual energy costs from $29.4
billion in 2008 to $17.1 billion in 2020
(reduction of $12.3 billion annually, or
41.8 percent, in inflation-adjusted
dollars). Similarly, in 2021, companies
(including, but not limited to, Federal
contractors) disclosing emissions and
climate risk through the CDP disclosure
system independently reported
emissions and cost savings from
emissions reduction activities
implemented in the given reporting
year; in aggregate, these benefits
collectively amounted to 1.8 billion
metric tons (MT) CO2e in emissions
reductions with over $29 billion in
associated cost savings for those
suppliers. Public disclosure of this
information in a standardized format
creates a global database that can be
utilized for tracking year-over-year
progress, sharing ideas among
companies with similar emissions
profiles, and enabling benchmarking of
performance.
This understanding will increase the
effectiveness of the Federal supply
chain by enabling agencies to develop
and improve their own plans to
safeguard their assets and missions,
ensuring uninterrupted provision of
critical services to the U.S. public.
Currently, the Federal Government and
general public have significantly
reduced visibility into the preparedness
of major contractors upon whom the
Government relies on for products and
services (some of which are critical). For
example, per a U.S. Government
Accountability Office report (GAO–16–
32, Federal Supply Chains:
Opportunities to Improve the
Management of Climate-Related Risks),
in October 2012, Superstorm Sandy
caused widespread damage to logistics
and transportation networks throughout
the Northeast, leading to major fuel
shortages for agencies to overcome
while providing critical Federal
services, such as disaster relief and mail
delivery, and causing an estimated $70
billion in direct damages and lost
economic output.
Mitigating the effects of climate
change by reducing emissions can
provide important economic, ecological,
and social benefits by significantly
reducing major risks to the U.S.
economy. According to the U.S. Fourth
National Climate Assessment (see Key
Message 2, Chapter 29) published by the
U.S. Global Change Research Program in
2018, a Congressionally mandated, joint
report of thirteen U.S. agencies with
research programs and expertise on
changes in the global environment and
their implications for society:
2. Understanding and Reduction of
Supply Chain Vulnerabilities
In accordance with E.O. 14030, this
proposed rule would require major
contractors who have a significant share
of Government business to identify their
climate-related financial risks, including
physical and transition risks. These
risks could impact the contractor’s
business operations in the short,
medium, and long-term. The required
disclosures will prompt entities to
investigate and understand these risks,
develop plans to mitigate them, and
communicate the risks and mitigation
plans to the public and Federal
agencies. These disclosures will enable
the Government to understand how and
when the risks faced by major
contractors (some of which are missioncritical) and their supply chains,
including but not limited to increased
likelihood of disruptive climate and
weather events and material and energy
cost fluctuations, may impact the
agencies’ own missions and activities.
In the absence of more significant global
mitigation efforts, climate change is projected
to impose substantial damages on the U.S.
economy, human health, and the
environment. Under scenarios with high
emissions and limited or no adaptation,
annual losses in some sectors are estimated
to grow to hundreds of billions of dollars by
the end of the century. It is very likely that
some physical and ecological impacts will be
irreversible for thousands of years, while
others will be permanent.
PO 00000
Frm 00009
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
3. Aligning Targets To Address Climate
Change
The Federal Government has
committed to reducing its Scope 1, 2,
and 3 GHG emissions, including those
associated with Federal procurement
activities, to achieve a net zero economy
by 2050. As the single largest purchaser
in the world, Federal procurement
represents both a substantial
contribution to climate change
emissions and a significant opportunity
to reduce them. GSA has estimated that
emissions from contractors performing
Federal contracts are significantly
E:\FR\FM\14NOP2.SGM
14NOP2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with PROPOSALS2
68320
Federal Register / Vol. 87, No. 218 / Monday, November 14, 2022 / Proposed Rules
greater (150 million MT CO2e in Fiscal
Year 2019) than emissions from Federal
buildings and non-tactical fleets (37
million MT CO2e) (see https://
www.gsa.gov/Governmentwideinitiatives/Federal-highperformancegreen-buildings/resource-library/
sustainable-acquisition). The Federal
Government has committed to a 65
percent reduction in its Scope 1 and 2
operational emissions by 2030 (from
2008 levels), demonstrating it is doing
its part via internal operations to
achieve the U.S. Nationally Determined
Contribution of a 50–52 percent
economy-wide reduction in emissions
by 2030. In order to similarly reduce its
much greater Scope 3 emissions, the
Federal Government’s best solution is to
require that its major contractors
quantify their GHG emissions and set
science-based targets to align ambitions
and identify areas for collaboration on
shared goals.
According to the EPA, in addition to
global or national economic benefits,
forward thinking organizations also
recognize internal benefits of setting and
publicly disclosing GHG reduction
targets, including increasing senior
management attention and funding for
investing in GHG reduction projects,
encouraging innovation, improving
employee morale, and helping to
recruiting and retain qualified
employees (see https://www.epa.gov/
climateleadership/target-setting). CDP’s
2021 post-disclosure survey found that
76 percent of responding companies say
climate disclosure helps ‘‘boost their
competitive advantage’’ and 86 percent
say that ‘‘protecting and improving the
reputation of my organization’’ is an
important benefit of disclosure (see
https://www.cdp.net/en/companiesdiscloser).
More than 3,600 companies globally,
representing over one third of the global
economy’s market capitalization, have
voluntarily committed to setting
science-based targets for reducing
emissions (see https://sciencebased
targets.org/). A 2018 survey of 185
company executives from SBTicommitted businesses found that 79
percent of companies experienced a
brand reputation boost, 63 percent saw
an increase in innovation, 55 percent
reported that preparing for a low-carbon
transition led to a newly earned
competitive advantage (see https://
sciencebasedtargets.org/blog/sixbusiness-benefits-of-setting-sciencebased-targets). Companies with targets
validated by SBTi are reducing
emissions at an accelerating pace,
collectively achieving 12 percent Scope
1 and 2 emissions reduction in 2020 and
a total emissions decrease of 29 percent
VerDate Sep<11>2014
17:59 Nov 10, 2022
Jkt 259001
between 2015 and 2020. According to
SBTi’s science-based target setting
methodologies, an annual emissions
reduction of at least 4.2 percent is
required to align organizations with the
Paris Agreement goal of 1.5°C maximum
global temperature rise (see https://
sciencebasedtargets.org/reports/sbtiprogress-report-2021). Requiring that
major contractors set, disclose, and
maintain validation of such ambitious
climate targets can thus be an effective
tool for addressing the Federal
Government’s Scope 3 emissions and
associated risks of climate change to the
national economy, while providing
economic and other benefits to the
contractors themselves.
4. Improved Transparency,
Accountability, and Ability To
Collaborate With Suppliers
Without knowledge of existing ‘‘hot
spots’’ (emissions-intensive sectors and
activities) and cost-effective emissions
reduction opportunities, it may be
difficult for Federal agencies and
contractors to understand where to start
in seeking to reduce emissions, how to
prioritize emissions reduction programs
and activities, and how much to invest
in each. Public disclosure provides
transparency into the historical costs
and impacts of organizational strategies
and activities, the current management
strategies of peer and partner
organizations, and their future-focused
targets. Disclosure of climate risks and
management strategies enables
benchmarking and collaborative
opportunities (1) between Federal
contractors and (2) between contractors
and the Government, thereby increasing
economy of efforts. Public disclosures
thus benefit collective accountability for
the shared challenge of addressing
climate change throughout the global
economy and enable transparent
tracking of progress over time.
Furthermore, for companies with
significant Scope 3 emissions, supply
chain engagement can be an opportunity
for further efficiency, collaboration and
innovation. In 2021, of the 13,000
companies reporting through CDP, 71
percent of companies reported their
Scope 1 and 2 emissions, while only 20
percent reported emissions associated
with products and goods they purchase
(Scope 3). However, Scope 3 emissions
for a company are, on average, over 11
times higher than operational emissions.
Companies can calculate Scope 3
emissions using a hybrid approach of
disclosed and modeled data that
improves over time as data quality and
supplier engagement improve. Only 38
percent of companies who disclose
through CDP currently report that they
PO 00000
Frm 00010
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
engage their own suppliers on
sustainability, however those who do
engage suppliers realize significant cost
and emissions savings; companies
engaging their suppliers through CDP
resulted in a reduction of 231 million
tons of CO2e in 2021. Supplier
engagement represents an opportunity
for many companies to drive additional
benefits for the Federal government and
national economy by encouraging
contractors to work with their suppliers,
contractors, and other entities in their
supply chains to identify cost-effective
ways to reduce emissions. Through this
rule, the Federal Government will
communicate to its prospective
contractors and their supply chains that
transparent disclosure and management
of supply chain GHG emissions and
climate risk can be a matter of social
license to operate and contractual access
to important customers, thus
multiplying the potential for reducing
energy costs and associated emissions.
5. Increased Efficiency of Disclosure via
Standardization
In addition to the above benefits, this
rule will lead to increased efficiency in
the processes and industries by which
major contractors disclose climate
related financial risks. By aligning with
global standards such as the TCFD
recommendations and SBTi targetsetting methodologies, as well as the
leading centralized data platform CDP
(which implements and is aligned with
TCFD), this rule will reinforce existing
industry trends toward standardization
around these systems, which are already
used by large numbers of U.S.
companies because they are required in
order to meet the demands of other
entities, such as non-Federal customers
and investors. The standards and
systems required by this rule will thus
allow affected companies to develop
disclosures that efficiently meet
multiple requirements for Federal
procurement (this rule), access to capital
markets (investors’ needs), and other
existing market requirements (such as
ratings and rankings systems). Much of
this standardization to date has
occurred outside of the Federal
Government, led by NGOs, investors,
companies and ratings and rankings
platforms as well as cities, states, and
other national governments. As
discussed in section I. of this preamble,
the SEC recently proposed a regulation
that if adopted would require similar
annual disclosures of climate related
financial risk for SEC registrants,
including publicly listed/traded
companies, many of whom are also
Federal contractors. To the extent that
there may be alignment between the
E:\FR\FM\14NOP2.SGM
14NOP2
Federal Register / Vol. 87, No. 218 / Monday, November 14, 2022 / Proposed Rules
SEC’s proposed rule and this rule if both
are adopted, companies making these
disclosures and users of the information
(e.g., the Federal Government, investors,
and other entities) will benefit from
greater standardization of climaterelated disclosures.
C. Estimated Public Costs
The total estimated public costs
associated with this FAR rule in
millions over a ten-year period
(calculated at a 3-percent and 7-percent
discount rate) are as follows:
3% Discount
rate
Estimated costs
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with PROPOSALS2
Present Value ..........................................................................................................................................................
Annualized ...............................................................................................................................................................
The following is a summary from the
Regulatory Impact Analysis (RIA) of the
estimated costs impact for each general
compliance requirement on significant
and major contractors (see section II.A.
of this preamble). The full RIA is
available at https://www.regulations.gov
(search for ‘‘FAR Case 2021–015’’ click
‘‘Open Docket,’’ and view ‘‘Supporting
Documents’’). The RIA includes a
detailed discussion of the assumptions
and methodologies used to estimate the
cost of this regulatory action, including
the specific impact and costs for small
businesses. On March 15, 2021, the
SEC’s Acting Chair Allison Herren Lee
posted a request for information (RFI)
on costs associated with preparation of
annual climate disclosures for
consideration in the development of
their proposed rule (see discussion in
section I of this preamble). Several
respondents to the RFI provided specific
cost data for companies that currently
provide annual climate disclosures that
align with the TCFD or other voluntary
disclosure frameworks. Additionally,
consulting firms submitted information
on prices charged for associated climate
consultant services. The cost
information considered by the SEC in
their proposing release was used to
estimate the potential costs of this
proposed FAR rule. This includes
information provided in response to the
RFI and information from the impact
assessment produced by the United
Kingdom (UK) Department for Business,
Energy & Industrial Strategy, as part of
its Green Finance Strategy, for a UK rule
that requires certain TCFD-aligned
disclosures from suppliers (see https://
assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/
Government/uploads/system/uploads/
attachment_data/file/1055931/tcfdfinal-stage-ia.pdf).
1. Regulatory Familiarization
Regulatory familiarization includes
the amount of time and effort it takes a
company to become familiar with the
requirements of the proposed rule and
the references standards. A page count
of the rule, the various standards, the
CDP Climate Change Questionnaire, and
VerDate Sep<11>2014
17:59 Nov 10, 2022
Jkt 259001
the SBTi Guidance is used to calculate
the cost for regulatory familiarization.
We assume individuals who review the
documents will spend 6 minutes per
page. Significant contractors (regardless
of business size) and major contractors
that are small businesses will be
required to become familiar with the
requirements of this rule and the GHG
Protocol Corporate Standard (except
Scope 3 guidance). The total page count
is 360 pages, which take 36 hours per
person to review (360 pages * 0.1 hours/
page). Major contractors that are other
than small business will be required to
become familiar with the rule and all
GHG Protocol, TCFD, CDP, and SBTi
guidance referenced in this rule. The
total page count is 967 pages, which
take 97 hours per person to review (967
pages * 0.1 hours/page rounded to the
nearest whole number). The per entity
and total costs are summarized as
follows:
• For a significant contractor that is
other than a small business, it is
estimated that 1 manager at a rate of $94
per hour, 1 management analyst at a rate
of $77 per hour, and 2 business
specialists at a rate of $61 per hour will
review the relevant documents, a total
cost of $10,548 per contractor. The total
estimated cost for regulatory
familiarization in the first year of
implementation is $16,644,744 (1,578
contractors * $10,548/contractor).
• For a significant contractor that is a
small business, it is estimated that 1
manager and 1 management analyst will
review the relevant documents, a total
cost of $6,156 per contractor. The total
estimated cost is $17,452,260 (2,835
contractors * $6,156/contractor).
• For a major contractor that is other
than a small business, it is estimated
that 1 manager, 2 management analysts,
and 4 business specialists will review
the relevant documents, a total cost of
$47,724. The total estimated cost is
$46,005,936 (964 contractors * $47,724/
contractor).
• For a major contractor that is a
small business, it is estimated that 1
manager and 1 business specialist will
review the relevant documents, a total
PO 00000
Frm 00011
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
68321
7% Discount
rate
$3,935
461
$3,262
464
cost of $8,928 per contractor. The total
estimated cost is $17,452,260 (389
contractors * $8,928/contractor).
2. Annual Representations
All 491,690 entities that are registered
in SAM as interested in pursuing
Government contracts, of which 364,290
entities are considered small for their
primary NAICS code, will be required to
complete the first representation in
SAM for the provision at FAR 52.223–
22(d)(1) and/or the commercial
provision at FAR 52.212–3(t)(3)(i)
regarding whether they meet the
definition of a significant or major
contractor. It is estimated that, on
average for each registration, it will take
a business specialist six minutes at an
hourly rate of $61 to determine whether
they meet the definition of a significant
or major contractor. The total estimated
annual cost is $2,999,309 (491,690
registrants * 0.1 hours/registrant * $61/
hour), of which $2,222,169 is attributed
to 364,290 small businesses. The
estimated cost to complete the
representation is the same in subsequent
years.
The 5,766 significant and major
contractors expected to be impacted by
this rule will be required to complete
the remaining representations regarding
whether the offeror meets an exemption
and whether the offeror (itself or
through its immediate owner or highestlevel owner) has completed the GHG
inventory of scope 1 and 2 emissions,
made an annual climate disclosure via
CDP, and set science-based targets. It is
estimated that, on average for each
registrant, it will take a business
specialist one hour to complete the
remaining representations. The total
estimated annual cost is $351,726 (5,766
registrants * 1 hour/registrant * $61/
hour), of which $196,664 is attributed to
3,224 small businesses. The estimated
cost to complete the representations is
the same in subsequent years.
3. GHG Inventory of Scope 1 and 2
Emissions
The following is a summary of the
costs for significant contractors
E:\FR\FM\14NOP2.SGM
14NOP2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with PROPOSALS2
68322
Federal Register / Vol. 87, No. 218 / Monday, November 14, 2022 / Proposed Rules
(regardless of size) and major
contractors (small businesses only) to
complete inventories of their Scope 1
and Scope 2 emissions. It is expected
that a contractor will use a mix of
internal personnel and external
consultants to complete the annual
greenhouse gas inventory. Internal
personnel costs include the cost for
contractor employees to gather, compile,
and review GHG emissions data. A
contractor may use external consultants
to assist with, and advise on, GHG
inventories. It is also assumed that
contractors will see a 25 percent
reduction in burden after the first year
of implementation.
For a significant contractor that is
other than a small business, it is
estimated that it takes two business
specialists 40 hours each at an hourly
rate of $61 to gather information, one
management analyst 20 hours at an
hourly rate of $77 to process and
compile the information, and one senior
manager 2 hours at an hourly rate of $94
to review the compiled information. It is
estimated that a significant contractor
that is other than a small business will
require approximately 409 external
consultant hours at an hourly rate of
$104. The total estimated cost per entity
is $63,868 in the initial year of
implementation and $47,983 annually
thereafter.
For significant and major contractors
that are small businesses, it is estimated
that it will take half as much time to
conduct a GHG inventory, or 20 hours
for one business specialist, 10 hours for
one management analyst, and 1 hour for
one senior manager. These contractors
are also estimated to require
approximately 153 external consultant
hours. The total estimated cost per
entity is $24,724 in the initial year of
implementation and $18,640 annually
thereafter.
Therefore, for the 1,578 other than
small business significant contractors,
the total estimated cost to conduct
Scope 1 and 2 GHG inventories is
$100,783,704 (1,578 contractors *
$63,868/contractor) in the initial year of
implementation and $75,717,174 (1,578
contractors * $47,983/contractor)
annually thereafter. For the 2,835
significant contractors and 389 major
contractors that are small businesses,
the total estimated cost is $79,710,176
(3,224 contractors * $24,724/contractor)
in the initial year of implementation
and $60,095,360 (3,244 contractors *
$18,640/contractor) annually thereafter.
4. Annual Climate Disclosure and
Science-Based Targets
The estimate of internal and external
costs for major contractors that are other
than small businesses to prepare an
annual climate disclosure, submit the
disclosure via the CDP Climate Change
Questionnaire, set a science-based
target, and have the target validated by
SBTi, is based on cost information
shared by respondents in response to
the RFI. The RIA available at https://
www.regulations.gov (search for ‘‘FAR
Case 2021–015’’ click ‘‘Open Docket,’’
and view ‘‘Supporting Documents’’)
includes a summary of the respondent
information and assumptions made to
estimate these costs. As stated in the
SEC proposed rule, the respondents to
the RFI provided information on general
costs for climate disclosures. Some
respondent estimates included costs for
activities not covered by this rule,
which is similar to the FAR rule. Other
respondents provided an aggregate cost
estimate making it difficult to determine
how representative the costs are. Actual
costs for individual contractors
impacted by this rule may vary
significantly depending on the
contractor’s size, industry, business
model, corporate structure, level of
experience with climate disclosures, etc.
Approximately 671 of the 964 major
contractors that are other than small
businesses currently represent that they
do not publicly disclose information
about their emissions or reduction goals.
As such, it is assumed that these
contractors have no experience with
climate disclosures or targets. It is
estimated that these contractors will
have internal personnel costs of
approximately $257,103 and external
consultant costs of approximately
$201,600, a total of $458,703 per
contractor in the first year of
implementation. The estimated annual
cost after the first year is $412,825, a 10
percent reduction. These contractors
will also be required to pay a $9,500 fee
for SBTi to validate their science-based
target every five years, an annualized
cost of $1,900 per year. Therefore, the
total estimated cost for these major
contractors is $309,064,613 (671 *
$460,603/contractor) in the initial year
of implementation, and $278,280,475
(671 * $414,725/contractor) annually
thereafter.
Of the 964 major contractors that are
other than small business,
approximately 293 represent that they
do publicly disclose information about
their emissions. An analysis of the
websites reported by these major
contractors indicates that there are 122
distinct disclosures associated with
these 293 contractors. In other words, of
the 293 contractors, approximately 42
percent appear to be disclosing data
attributed to (or compiled by) their
immediate or highest-level owner,
whereas the other 58 percent are
performing the calculations and
compiling the climate disclosures
directly. Given that these major
contractors (or their owners) already
have policies and procedures in place to
inventory and publicly disclose their
emissions (and in many cases to also set
and disclose reduction goals), the
burden associated with complying with
this FAR rule is estimated to be 50
percent of the cost of starting with no
prior disclosure experience. Therefore,
it is estimated that the internal
personnel and external consultant costs
associated with these disclosures is
approximately $229,390 in the first year
of implementation and $206,451
annually thereafter. The $9,500 SBTi fee
for validation of the science-based target
also applies. Therefore, the total
estimated costs attributed to this rule for
the major contractors that currently
disclose either themselves or through an
immediate or highest-level owner is
$28,217,380 (122 disclosing entities *
$231,290/entity) in the initial year of
implementation and $25,418,822 (122
disclosing entities * $208,351/entity)
annually thereafter.
5. Summary of Public Costs
The total estimated cost of
compliance with this proposed rule is
$604,702,840 in the initial year of
implementation and $442,826,866
annually thereafter.
D. Estimated Government Costs
The total estimated Government costs
associated with this FAR rule in
millions over a ten-year period
(calculated at a 3-percent and 7-percent
discount rate) are as follows:
3% Discount
rate
Estimated costs
Present Value ..........................................................................................................................................................
Annualized ...............................................................................................................................................................
VerDate Sep<11>2014
17:59 Nov 10, 2022
Jkt 259001
PO 00000
Frm 00012
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
E:\FR\FM\14NOP2.SGM
14NOP2
$10
1
7% Discount
rate
$8
1
Federal Register / Vol. 87, No. 218 / Monday, November 14, 2022 / Proposed Rules
This is a summary of the costs
associated with this proposed rule.
Additional information on this cost
estimate in the RIA available at https://
www.regulations.gov (search for ‘‘FAR
Case 2021–015’’ click ‘‘Open Docket,’’
and view ‘‘Supporting Documents’’).
1. Updates to SAM
The Government will be required to
update the representations associated
with FAR 52.223–22 and 52.212–3 in
SAM. The adjustment to the
representation is considered a medium
level of effort that will cost
approximately $260,000 to complete.
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with PROPOSALS2
2. Workforce Development
Government contracting officers will
need to become familiar with the new
policy at FAR 23.XX, the new standard
of responsibility at FAR 9.104, and the
representations in the provisions at FAR
52.223–22 and 52.212–3. The
procedures at FAR 23.XX05 provides
tables to help contracting officers
evaluate offeror representations.
Similarly, FAR 9.104–3(e) includes
information on the type of information
a contracting officer should request from
an offeror that represents that it is in
compliance with the new policy and the
minimum requirements that must be
met in order to determine a contractor
responsible. No specialized training is
required for Government contracting
officers. The requirement to remain
current on policies for Government
procurement, such as changes to the
FAR, is considered a part of the normal
duties of contracting personnel. As
such, this analysis does not quantify the
time and effort for contracting officers to
become familiar with the rule. In
addition, there are Federal resources
allocated to assisting small businesses
in procurement, particularly in the
Small Business Administration. It is
acknowledged that this there is time and
effort for these Federal workforces to
become familiar with the rule or the
tools available and to assist contractors
with compliance, though those potential
burden hours and costs are not
quantified.
3. Responsibility Determinations
Starting one year after publication of
a final rule, Government contracting
officers will begin validating
prospective contractor representations
for FAR 52.223–22(d) and 52.212–3(t)(3)
to ensure that significant and major
contractors have completed the GHG
inventory of Scope 1 and 2 emissions.
Starting two years after publication of a
final rule, contracting officers will also
validate that major contractors have
completed annual climate disclosures
VerDate Sep<11>2014
17:59 Nov 10, 2022
Jkt 259001
and set a science-based targets. For each
award, the contracting officer will log
into https://www.sam.gov, search
‘‘Entity Information’’ for the prospective
contractor, select the prospective
contractor’s registration, click on ‘‘Reps
and Certs,’’ and (depending on the type
of acquisition) click on FAR 52.212–3 or
52.223–22 to view the offeror’s
representations. If the prospective
contractor represents that it is a
significant or major contractor, then it
must complete all of the remaining
representations in the solicitation
provision. The contracting officer may
use the tables at FAR 23.XX05,
Procedures, to assist in determining
whether the prospective contractor is
subject to an exception and, if not,
whether the prospective contractor
complies with the policy. Per FAR
23.XX05(c), a contracting officer may
rely on these representations when
making a responsibility determination,
unless the contracting officer has reason
to question the representation. If a
representation indicates
noncompliance, then the contracting
officer will request additional
information from the prospective
contractor to assist in making a
responsibility determination.
It is not possible to quantify how
often contracting officers will need to
request additional information from
prospective contractors. Most offerors
registering in SAM will represent that
they are not a significant or major
contractor. It is expected that the
majority of significant and major
contractors will represent that they are
in compliance with the new policy.
While it will take longer for a
contracting officer to review the
representations for a significant or major
contractor, it is estimated that it will
take the contracting officer three
minutes to review most representations.
According to FPDS data for FY 2021,
there were approximately 276,467
awards valued over the micro-purchase
threshold, where contracting officers
would be required to make a
responsibility determination prior to
awarding a contract. We assume that the
majority of responsibility
determinations are made by a GS–12/
step 5 contracting officer at a loaded rate
of $66 per hour. Therefore, the total
estimated cost is $912,341 (276,467
awards * 0.05 hours/award * $66/hour).
4. Policy Development
Contract policy offices for
Government departments and agencies
will need to develop procedures for
requesting senior procurement
executive (SPE) approval of waivers in
accordance with FAR 23.XX06(b).
PO 00000
Frm 00013
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
68323
Specifically, the SPE approve a waiver
for specific facilities, business units, or
other defined units for national security
purposes or for emergencies, national
security, or other mission essential
purposes. In addition, the SPE may
approve a waiver to enable a significant
or major contractor to come into
compliance with the policy at 23.XX03
for a period not to exceed 1 calendar
year. Such waivers must be made
publicly available on the agency’s
website. Developing policies and
procedures to support the contracting
activities of a department or agency are
considered a part of the normal course
of doing business for contract policy
offices. As such, this analysis does not
quantify the time and effort for
contracting officers to become familiar
with the rule.
5. Analysis of Annual Climate
Disclosures
The Government will also use the
disclosures made pursuant to this FAR
rule to inform development of policies
and programs to reduce climate risks
and GHG emissions associated with
Federal procurement activities, and to
incentivize and enable technologies
critical to achieving a national economy
and industrial sector that are resilient to
the physical and transition risks of
climate change and net zero emissions
by 2050. As stated in OMB
Memo M–22–06, to assist the Federal
Government in assessing the results of
efforts to reduce supply chain
emissions, and as requested by CEQ and
OMB, GSA will provide periodic
recommendations on further actions to
reduce supply chain emissions, based
on information and data collected
through supplier disclosures pursuant
to this FAR rule and other publicly
available information. The estimated
annual cost for the Government to
obtain a report of the data disclosed to
CDP is $47,000. GSA further estimates
that the annual cost to analyze the data
provided is approximately $200,000.
6. Summary of Government Costs
The total estimate cost to the
Government in the initial year of
implementation is $1,419,341. This
includes the costs to update SAM, for
reviewing offeror representations, and
analyzing annual climate disclosure
information. In subsequent years, the
estimate cost to the Government is
$1,159,341, which includes only the
cost for reviewing offeror
representations and analyzing annual
climate disclosure information.
E:\FR\FM\14NOP2.SGM
14NOP2
68324
Federal Register / Vol. 87, No. 218 / Monday, November 14, 2022 / Proposed Rules
E. Total Estimated Costs
millions over a ten-year period
(calculated at a 3-percent and 7-percent
discount rate) are as follows:
The total estimated overall costs
associated with this FAR rule in
3% Discount
rate
Estimated costs
Present Value ..........................................................................................................................................................
Annualized ...............................................................................................................................................................
$3,945
462
7% Discount
rate *
$3,270
466
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with PROPOSALS2
* Total of Government and public costs is higher due to rounding.
F. Alternatives Considered
The Government considered other
mechanisms for enforcement of the
compliance requirements. One
alternative was to use a contract clause
to require submission of the GHG
inventory, annual climate disclosure,
and validated science-based target as a
deliverable under Government
contracts. However, given the intent to
require disclosure at the entity-level,
disclosure on a contract-by-contract
basis is not appropriate.
The Government also considered
making noncompliance a go/no-go
decision for award. In this alternative, a
significant or major contractor would be
ineligible for award of Government
contracts unless the significant or major
contractor represents that it complies
with the new policy. The Government
ultimately determined that treatment of
contractor compliance as a matter of
responsibility, not only establishes the
Government’s position that responsible
contractors take action to address and
reduce climate-related financial risk, but
also allows contracting officers some
flexibility to determine what actions a
noncompliant contractor has taken to
comply.
The Government also considered the
following thresholds when establishing
a definition of ‘‘major Federal supplier,’’
the term used in E.O. 14030: $7.5
million, $50 million, and $250 million.
The Government also considered
whether the threshold should be based
on the total Government contract award
value, or the total Government contract
funds obligated. Currently, many larger
Federal suppliers provide some
disclosure, but few set science-based
targets. Even fewer smaller suppliers
disclose GHG emissions and climaterelated risk, and science-based targets
are very rare. Ultimately, the
Government settled on dual thresholds
to ensure smaller Federal suppliers (i.e.,
‘‘significant contractors’’ with $7.5
million to $50 million in obligations in
the prior FY) take steps to understand
their GHG emissions and the larger
Federal suppliers (i.e., ‘‘major
contractors’’ with more than $50 million
in obligations in the prior FY) take steps
VerDate Sep<11>2014
17:59 Nov 10, 2022
Jkt 259001
to disclose climate-related financial
risks and to reduce their GHG
emissions.
V. Executive Orders 12866 and 13563
Executive Orders (E.O.s) 12866 and
13563 direct agencies to assess all costs
and benefits of available regulatory
alternatives and, if regulation is
necessary, to select regulatory
approaches that maximize net benefits
(including potential economic,
environmental, public health and safety
effects, distributive impacts, and
equity). E.O. 13563 emphasizes the
importance of quantifying both costs
and benefits, of reducing costs, of
harmonizing rules, and of promoting
flexibility. This is anticipated to be an
economically significant regulatory
action and, therefore, was subject to
review under section 6(b) of E.O. 12866,
Regulatory Planning and Review, dated
September 30, 1993.
VI. Congressional Review Act
As required by the Congressional
Review Act (5 U.S.C. 801–808) before an
interim or final rule takes effect, DoD,
GSA, and NASA will send the rule and
the ‘‘Submission of Federal Rules Under
the Congressional Review Act’’ form to
each House of the Congress and to the
Comptroller General of the United
States. A major rule cannot take effect
until 60 days after it is published in the
Federal Register. This proposed rule is
anticipated to be a major rule under 5
U.S.C. 804.
VII. Regulatory Flexibility Act
DoD, GSA, and NASA expect this rule
may have a significant economic impact
on a substantial number of small entities
within the meaning of the Regulatory
Flexibility Act, 5 U.S.C. 601–612. An
Initial Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
(IRFA) has been performed and is
summarized as follows:
DoD, GSA, and NASA are proposing to
amend the FAR to implement section 5(b)(i)
of E.O. 14030, Climate-Related Financial
Risk. Section 5(b)(i) of the E.O. directs the
Federal Acquisition Regulatory Council to
ensure that major Federal suppliers publicly
disclose their greenhouse gases and climate-
PO 00000
Frm 00014
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
related financial risk and set science-based
targets.
The objective of this rule is to implement
the E.O. by creating a new FAR subpart at
23.XX, which establishes the requirement for
a major Federal supplier to publicly disclose
certain climate information. For the purposes
of this rule, a major Federal supplier is
categorized as either a significant contractor
or a major contractor. A significant contractor
is an offeror who received $7.5 million or
more, but not exceeding $50 million, in
Federal contract obligations in the prior
Federal fiscal year. A major contractor is an
offeror who received more than $50 million
in Federal contract obligations in the prior
Federal fiscal year. The legal basis for this
rule is 40 U.S.C. 121(c); 10 U.S.C. chapter
137; and 51 U.S.C. 20113.
Per the new policy proposed at 23.XX03,
a contracting officer will presume that an
offeror who is a significant or major
contractor is nonresponsible unless—
• Starting one year after publication of a
final rule, the significant or major contractor
(itself or through its immediate owner or
highest-level owner) has completed a GHG
inventory of the annual Scope 1 and Scope
2 GHG emissions within its current or
previous fiscal year, and the significant or
major contractor has reported the total
annual Scope 1 and Scope 2 emissions from
its most recent inventory in SAM at https://
www.sam.gov; and
• Starting two years after publication of a
final rule, the major contractor (itself or
through its immediate owner or highest-level
owner) has submitted an annual climate
disclosure within its current or previous
fiscal year by completing those portions of
the CDP Climate Change Questionnaire that
align with the TCFD and has developed a
science-based target and had the reduction
target validated by SBTi within the previous
five calendar years.
This proposed rule provides exceptions at
FAR 23.XX04(a). A significant or major
contractor is not required to complete a GHG
inventory of Scope 1 and Scope 2 emissions,
if it is one of the following: an Alaska Native
Corporation, a Community Development
Corporation, an Indian tribe, a Native
Hawaiian Organization, or a Tribally owned
concern, as those terms are defined at 13 CFR
124.3; a higher education institution (defined
as institutions of higher education in the
OMB Uniform Guidance at 2 CFR part 200,
subpart A, and 20 U.S.C. 1001); a nonprofit
research entity; or, an entity deriving 80
percent or more of its annual revenue from
Federal M&O contracts that are subject to
agency annual site sustainability reporting
requirements. Per 23.XX04(b), a major
E:\FR\FM\14NOP2.SGM
14NOP2
68325
Federal Register / Vol. 87, No. 218 / Monday, November 14, 2022 / Proposed Rules
contractor who is registered in SAM as a
small business for its primary NAICS code or
is a nonprofit organization, is exempt from
the requirement to complete an annual
climate disclosure and to set a science-based
target.
This proposed rule will revise the annual
representations in the provisions at FAR
52.223–22 and 52.212–3 to collect
information a contracting officer will need to
determine whether an offeror is a significant
or major contractor is in compliance with the
new policy. The contracting officer will
follow the proposed procedures at FAR
23.XX05 and FAR 9.104–3(e) when making
the responsibility determination.
According to SAM, as of January 2022,
491,690 entities are registered in SAM, of
which approximately 364,290 (74 percent)
were registered as small for their primary
NAICS code. According to award data
available in FPDS for FY 2021, there were
approximately 4,413 entities that meet the
definition of a significant contractors and are
not subject to an exception, of which 2,835
(64 percent) are estimated to be small
businesses. There were approximately 1,353
entities that meet the definition of a major
contractor, of which 389 (29 percent) are
estimated to be small businesses.
SAM registrants will be required to
complete annual representations and
certifications in SAM will be required to
complete the first representation in FAR
52.223–22(d)(1) (or the equivalent
representation in the commercial provision
in FAR 52.212–3(t)(3)(i)) regarding whether
the registrant meets the definitions of a
significant or major contractor. A registrant
that represents that it is a significant or major
contractor, will be required to complete the
remaining representations in FAR 52.223–
22(d)(2) through (5) (or equivalent
representations in FAR 52.212–3(t)(3)(ii)
through (v)) regarding whether they have
conducted a GHG inventory, made an annual
climate disclosure, and a set science-based
target. Starting one year after publication of
a final rule, significant or major contractors
will be required to have conducted (itself or
through its immediate or highest-level
owner) within its current or previous FY a
GHG inventory of its annual Scope 1 and 2
emissions and reported in SAM the results of
its most recent inventory.
A significant or major contractor that
represents that it has not conducted a GHG
inventory of its annual Scope 1 and Scope 2
emissions or has not provided the results of
the most recent inventory in SAM, will be
presumed to be a nonresponsible prospective
contractor. In such cases the contracting
officer will follow the proposed procedures
at FAR 9.104–3(e) and seek information from
the significant contractor on the efforts it has
made to comply before making a
responsibility determination. Per the existing
procedures at FAR 9.104–3(d)(1), upon
making a determination of nonresponsibility
with regard to a small business concern, the
contracting officer shall refer the matter to
the Small Business Administration, which
will decide whether to issue a Certificate of
Competency (see FAR subpart 19.6).
A RIA has been prepared for this proposed
FAR rule, which includes a detailed
discussion and explanation about the
assumptions and methodology used to
estimate the cost of this regulatory action,
including the specific impact and costs for
small businesses. Costs for small businesses
expected to be impacted by this rule include
the cost of regulatory familiarization,
completing the annual SAM representations,
and conducting the Scope 1 and 2 GHG
inventory each year. The total estimated cost
to small businesses is $103,054,261 (17
percent of the total estimated public costs) in
the initial year of implementation and
$62,514,193 (14 percent of the total estimated
public cost) in subsequent years. The
following is a summary of the estimated cost
of per entity for small business significant
and major contractors:
ESTIMATED COST OF COMPLIANCE PER ENTITY
Entity type
Significant contractor
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with PROPOSALS2
Compliance requirement
Initial year
Major contractor
Subsequent
years
Initial year
Subsequent
years
Familiarization ..................................................................................................
First SAM Rep .................................................................................................
Other SAM Reps .............................................................................................
GHG Inventory .................................................................................................
$6,156
6
61
24,724
N/A
$6
61
18,640
$8,928
6
61
24,724
N/A
$6
61
18,640
Total Cost .................................................................................................
30,947
18,707
33,719
18,707
A summary of the RIA is provided in
section IV. of this preamble. The full RIA is
available at https://www.regulations.gov
(search for ‘‘FAR Case 2021–015’’ click
‘‘Open Docket,’’ and view ‘‘Supporting
Documents’’).
The SEC is proposing to require climaterelated financial risk disclosures from SEC
registrants, including publicly listed/traded
companies (see 87 FR 21334, April 11, 2022).
Both the SEC proposed rule and the FAR
proposed rule leverage the GHG Protocol
Corporate Accounting and Reporting
Standard; therefore, the rules are considered
to be in alignment. Per the exceptions at FAR
23.XX04(b), the requirement to provide an
annual climate disclosure and set a sciencebased target is not applicable to a company
that is registered in SAM as a small business
for its primary NAICS code.
The burden imposed on small entities is
the minimum necessary to implement the
requirements of section 5(b)(i) of E.O. 14030.
To minimize the burden on Federal
contractors, this rule leverages standards that
are widely used by companies to inventory
their GHG emissions and analyze their
climate risks. Efforts were also taken to align
VerDate Sep<11>2014
17:59 Nov 10, 2022
Jkt 259001
with the approach of the SEC proposed rule,
which further minimizes burden for small
businesses. As a result of this rule, a small
business that received $7.5 million in Federal
contract obligations in the prior Federal fiscal
year is considered a significant contractor
and will be required to complete the GHG
inventory of Scope 1 and Scope 2 emissions.
However, those entities that received more
than $50 million in Federal contract
obligations in the prior Federal fiscal year (a
major contractor) and are registered in SAM
as a small business for their primary NAICS
code are exempt from the requirement to
complete an annual climate disclosure and
set a science-based target. Several
alternatives were considered but not
accepted as they would not accomplish the
intended policy objective of the E.O. The
alternatives considered include:
• Exemption for small business. One
alternative considered was an exemption for
small businesses who are significant
contractors from the requirement to
inventory and publicly disclose their Scope
1 and 2 emissions. It was determined that the
limited Scope 1 and 2 reporting will be
beneficial for these small businesses and the
PO 00000
Frm 00015
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
Government. By inventorying their Scope 1
and 2 emissions, small businesses—
including those that are not ‘‘carbon
intensive’’ can find opportunities to
minimize climate risks both in their
operations and their own supply chains. This
rule will also prepare these small businesses
to respond to requests for similar data from
customers besides the Federal Government. It
is also beneficial for the Government to
collect this data from these small businesses
to have a more complete understanding of
the impact of GHG emissions on the Federal
supply chain and to calculate its own
emissions and set its own reduction targets.
• Delayed or rolling compliance dates.
Another alternative considered was a delay
in the effective date of the Scope 1 and 2
reporting requirements for small business
significant contractors. Consideration was
given to a two-year delay, or a rolling
effective date based on Federal contract
obligations in the prior fiscal year.
Ultimately, it was determined that given the
widely adopted and simple exercise of
quantifying Scope 1 and 2 emissions, and the
E.O. target of a net-zero emissions economy
by no later than 2050, it may be confusing
E:\FR\FM\14NOP2.SGM
14NOP2
68326
Federal Register / Vol. 87, No. 218 / Monday, November 14, 2022 / Proposed Rules
to have separate tiers and timelines for
significant contractor reporting while failing
to advance the E.O.’s stated goals.
Furthermore, since GHG emissions inventory
occurs once a year retroactively based on the
previous year’s data, no additional actions or
changes to business practice would need to
be taken to prepare for this reporting, and
thus there would be no minimized burden
from a delay.
• Use other sources of data. Other sources
of data on Scope 1 and 2 emissions were also
considered, such as current CDP data,
corporate websites, and/or corporate reports.
Third party ‘‘modeled emissions’’ using
industry averages were also considered.
However, it was determined that this
alternative would not advance the stated
target of the E.O. for a variety of reasons: the
lack of standardization, reduced accuracy of
models to capture the actual business
practices unique to producing goods and
services for the Federal Government, and the
lack of GHG emissions reporting by many
small businesses. Furthermore, the burden to
comply with this proposed rule for small
businesses who currently inventory their
GHG emissions will be extremely low, only
requiring two numbers the entity has already
generated (or are easily calculated using free
Excel tools) to be entered into SAM.
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with PROPOSALS2
The Regulatory Secretariat Division
has submitted a copy of the IRFA to the
Chief Counsel for Advocacy of the Small
Business Administration. A copy of the
IRFA may be obtained from the
Regulatory Secretariat Division. DoD,
GSA, and NASA invite comments from
small business concerns and other
interested parties on the expected
impact of this rule on small entities.
DoD, GSA, and NASA will also
consider comments from small entities
concerning the existing regulations in
subparts affected by the rule in
accordance with 5 U.S.C. 610. Interested
parties must submit such comments
separately and should cite 5 U.S.C. 610
(FAR Case 2021–015), in
correspondence.
VIII. Paperwork Reduction Act
The Paperwork Reduction Act (44
U.S.C. 3501–3521) applies because the
proposed rule contains information
collection requirements. Accordingly,
the Regulatory Secretariat Division has
submitted to OMB a request for
approval of a revision to ‘‘OMB Control
Number 9000–0107, Federal Acquisition
Regulation Part 23 Requirements’’
concerning the information collection
requirements in the provision at FAR
52.223–22 or its equivalent at FAR
52.212–3(t).
A. Public Reporting Burden
Public reporting burden for the
following collections of information
include the time for reviewing
instructions, searching existing data
sources, gathering and maintaining the
VerDate Sep<11>2014
17:59 Nov 10, 2022
Jkt 259001
data needed, and completing and
reviewing the collection of information
in the provision at FAR 52.223–22 or its
equivalent at 52.212–3(t). The
contracting officer uses this information
to determine whether a prospective
contractor is a significant or major
contractor and, if so, if the prospective
contractor is responsible (see FAR
9.104–3(e)). A prospective contractor
that is a significant or major contractor
is presumed to be nonresponsible if it
represents that it is not in compliance
with the GHG inventory, annual climate
disclosure, and science-based target
setting requirements, as applicable. In
such situations the contracting officer
will ask for additional information from
the prospective contractor to determine
what efforts have been made to comply.
The Government will also use the
disclosures made pursuant to this FAR
rule to inform development of policies
and programs to reduce climate risks
and GHG emissions associated with
Federal procurement activities, and to
incentivize and enable technologies
critical to achieving a national economy
and industrial sector that are resilient to
the physical and transition risks of
climate change and net zero emissions
by 2050. As stated in OMB
Memorandum M–22–06, to assist the
Federal Government in assessing the
results of efforts to reduce supply chain
emissions, and as requested by CEQ and
OMB, GSA will provide periodic
recommendations on further actions to
reduce supply chain emissions, based
on information and data collected
through supplier disclosures pursuant
to this FAR rule and other publicly
available information.
1. First Representation
The representations in the provision
at FAR 52.223–22 (and the commercial
equivalent at FAR 52.212–3(t)) are being
revised to require an offeror, when
initially registering or when updating a
registration in SAM at https://
www.sam.gov, to represent whether it is
a significant or major contractor. A
significant contractor is an offeror who
received $7.5 million or more in Federal
contract obligations in the prior Federal
fiscal year. A major contractor is an
offeror who received $50 million or
more in Federal contract obligations in
the prior Federal fiscal year. Public
reporting burden for this collection of
information is estimated to average 0.1
hours per response. The annual
reporting burden is estimated as
follows:
Respondents: 491,690.
Total Annual Responses: 491,690.
Total Burden Hours: 49,169.
PO 00000
Frm 00016
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
2. Remaining Representations
If the offeror represents that it is a
significant or major contractor, then the
offeror is required to complete
additional representations in the
provision regarding whether it meets an
exception and whether it has (itself or
through its immediate owner or highestlevel owner) completed a GHG
inventory of Scope 1 and 2 emissions,
provided an annual climate disclosure,
and set a science-based target. If an
offeror represents that it publicly
discloses an annual climate disclosure
or science-based target, it also must
report the websites where disclosures
and targets are made publicly available.
Public reporting burden for this
collection of information is estimated to
average one hour per response. The
annual reporting burden is estimated as
follows:
Respondents: 5,766.
Total Annual Responses: 5,766.
Total Burden Hours: 5,766.
3. GHG Inventory of Scope 1 and 2
Emissions
Unless an exception at 23.XX04(a)
applies, a significant or major contractor
must (itself or through its immediate
owner or highest-level owner) conduct a
GHG inventory of the annual Scope 1
and Scope 2 emissions. The significant
or major contractor itself must report the
results of the most recent GHG
inventory in SAM. Public reporting
burden for the GHG inventory of Scope
1 and 2 emissions is estimated to
average approximately 255 hours per
response. The annual reporting burden
is estimated as follows:
Respondents: 4,802.
Total Annual Responses: 4,802.
Total Burden Hours: 1,222,983.
4. Annual Climate Disclosure and
Science-Based Targets
Unless an exception at 23.XX04(b)
applies, a major contractor must submit
an annual climate disclosure and set
science-based targets. To make the
annual climate disclosure, the major
contractor must (itself or through its
immediate owner or highest-level
owner) conduct a GHG inventory of
relevant Scope 3 emissions (in addition
to the Scope 1 and 2 inventory), conduct
a climate risk assessment, develop
disclosures aligned with the
Recommendations of the Task Force on
Climate Related Financial Risk, and
complete relevant portions of the CDP
(formerly Carbon Disclosure Project)
Climate Change Questionnaire within
its previous or current fiscal year. The
major contractor must (itself or through
its immediate owner or highest-level
E:\FR\FM\14NOP2.SGM
14NOP2
Federal Register / Vol. 87, No. 218 / Monday, November 14, 2022 / Proposed Rules
owner) also set science-based targets to
reduce its emissions and have the
science-based targets validated by SBTi
within the previous five calendar years.
A major contractor will likely support
its preparation of the disclosure and
setting targets. Public reporting burden
for the annual climate disclosure is
estimated to average approximately
1,946 hours per response. The annual
reporting burden is estimated as
follows:
Respondents: 793.
Total Annual Responses: 793.
Total Burden Hours: 3,265,025.
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with PROPOSALS2
B. Request for Comments Regarding
Paperwork Burden
17:59 Nov 10, 2022
Jkt 259001
William F. Clark,
Director, Office of Government-wide
Acquisition Policy, Office of Acquisition
Policy, Office of Government-wide Policy.
Therefore, DoD, GSA, and NASA
propose amending 48 CFR parts 1, 4, 9,
23, and 52 as set forth below:
■ 1. The authority citation for 48 CFR
parts 1, 4, 9, 23, and 52 continues to
read as follows:
Authority: 40 U.S.C. 121(c); 10 U.S.C.
chapter 137; and 51 U.S.C. 20113.
PART 1—FEDERAL ACQUISITION
REGULATIONS SYSTEM
Submit comments on this collection
of information no later than January 13,
2023 through https://
www.regulations.gov and follow the
instructions on the site. All items
submitted must cite OMB Control No.
9000–0107, Federal Acquisition
Regulation Part 23 Requirements.
Comments received generally will be
posted without change to https://
www.regulations.gov, including any
personal and/or business confidential
information provided. To confirm
receipt of your comment(s), please
check https://www.regulations.gov,
approximately two to three days after
submission to verify posting. If there are
difficulties submitting comments,
contact the GSA Regulatory Secretariat
Division at 202–501–4755 or
GSARegSec@gsa.gov.
Public comments are particularly
invited on:
• The necessity of this collection of
information for the proper performance
of the functions of Federal Government
acquisitions, including whether the
information will have practical utility;
• The accuracy of the estimate of the
burden of this collection of information;
• Ways to enhance the quality, utility,
and clarity of the information to be
collected; and
• Ways to minimize the burden of the
collection of information on
respondents, including the use of
automated collection techniques or
other forms of information technology.
Requesters may obtain a copy of the
supporting statement from the General
Services Administration, Regulatory
Secretariat Division by calling 202–501–
4755 or emailing GSARegSec@gsa.gov.
Please cite OMB Control Number 9000–
0107, Federal Acquisition Regulation
Part 23 Requirements, in all
correspondence.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
List of Subjects in 48 CFR Parts 1, 4, 9,
23, and 52
Government procurement.
2. In section 1.106, amend the table by
revising the entry for ‘‘52.223–22’’ to
read as follows:
■
1.106 OMB approval under the Paperwork
Reduction Act.
*
*
*
*
*
OMB control
No.
FAR segment
*
*
*
52.223–22 .............................
*
*
*
*
*
9000–0107
*
*
PART 4—ADMINISTRATIVE AND
INFORMATION MATTERS
3. Amend section 4.1202 by revising
paragraph (a)(26) to read as follows:
■
4.1202 Solicitation provision and contract
clause.
(a) * * *
(26) 52.223–22, Public Disclosure of
Climate Information—Representation.
*
*
*
*
*
PART 9—CONTRACTOR
QUALIFICATIONS
4. Amend section 9.104–1 by revising
paragraph (g) to read as follows:
■
9.104–1
General standards.
*
*
*
*
*
(g) Be otherwise qualified and eligible
to receive an award under applicable
laws and regulations (for example, see
the inverted domestic corporation
prohibition at 9.108 and requirements at
9.104–3(e) and subpart 23.XX for certain
contractors to disclose climate
information).
■ 5. Amend section 9.104–3 by adding
paragraph (e) to read as follows:
9.104–3
*
PO 00000
*
Application of standards.
*
Frm 00017
*
Fmt 4701
*
Sfmt 4702
68327
(e) Public disclosure of climate
information. Starting on the dates
specified at 23.XX03(a) and (b), the
following procedures apply:
(1) Except as provided in paragraph
(e)(3) of this section, the contracting
officer shall presume that a prospective
contractor is nonresponsible pursuant to
9.104–1 if the prospective contractor is
a significant or major contractor (see
definitions in 23.XX02) who has not
complied with the policy at 23.XX03
(see procedures at 23.XX05), unless the
contracting officer determines that—
(i) The noncompliance resulted from
circumstances properly beyond the
prospective contractor’s control;
(ii) The prospective contractor has
provided documentation sufficient for
purposes of award that demonstrates
substantial efforts taken to comply, e.g.,
the prospective contractor has
performed one or more of the actions
described in 23.XX03; and
(iii) The prospective contractor has
made a public commitment to comply
as soon as possible (within 1 calendar
year) on a publicly accessible website as
defined at 23.XX02.
(2) When making the determination,
the contracting officer shall—
(i) Request information from the
prospective contractor to determine
what efforts it has made to comply and
the basis for its failure to comply; and
(ii) Consider the information provided
by the prospective contractor relevant to
each requirement at 23.XX03 and
determine responsibility based on the
prospective contractor’s efforts to
comply with each requirement.
(3) Upon making a determination of
nonresponsibility with regard to a small
business concern, the contracting officer
shall refer the matter to the Small
Business Administration in accordance
with paragraph (d)(1) of this section.
(4) A significant or major contractor is
not subject to the standard in paragraph
(e)(1) of this section if—
(i) It is an entity described in
23.XX04(a);
(ii) For a major contactor, it is an
entity described in 23.XX04(b); or
(iii) An exemption or waiver
described in 23.XX06 applies.
PART 23—ENVIRONMENT, ENERGY
AND WATER EFFICIENCY,
RENEWABLE ENERGY
TECHNOLOGIES, OCCUPATIONAL
SAFETY, AND DRUG–FREE
WORKPLACE
6. Amend section 23.001 by removing
the definition ‘‘Greenhouse gases’’ and
adding a definition for ‘‘Greenhouse
gas’’ in its place to read as follows:
■
E:\FR\FM\14NOP2.SGM
14NOP2
68328
23.001
Federal Register / Vol. 87, No. 218 / Monday, November 14, 2022 / Proposed Rules
Definitions.
*
*
*
*
*
Greenhouse gas means carbon
dioxide, methane, nitrous oxide,
hydrofluorocarbons, perfluorocarbons,
nitrogen trifluoride, or sulfur
hexafluoride.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 7. Revise section 23.800 to read as
follows:
23.800
Scope of subpart.
(a) This subpart sets forth policies and
procedures for the acquisition of items
that—
(1) Contain, use, or are manufactured
with ozone-depleting substances; or
(2) Contain or use high global
warming potential hydrofluorocarbons.
(b) For coverage of public disclosure
of climate information, including
greenhouse gas emissions, see subpart
23.XX.
23.802
[Amended]
8. Amend section 23.802 by—
a. In paragraph (a), removing the
words ‘‘release or’’ and adding ‘‘release,
or’’ in its place, and adding the word
‘‘and’’ to the end of the paragraph after
the semicolon;
■ b. In paragraph (b)(2), removing the
semicolon and adding a period in its
place; and
■ c. Removing paragraphs (c) and (d).
■ 9. Revise section 23.804 to read as
follows:
■
■
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with PROPOSALS2
23.804
Contract clauses.
Except for contracts for supplies that
will be delivered outside the United
States and its outlying areas, or
contracts for services that will be
performed outside the United States and
its outlying areas, insert the following
clauses:
(a) 52.223–11, Ozone-Depleting
Substances and High Global Warming
Potential Hydrofluorocarbons, in
solicitations and contracts for—
(1) Refrigeration equipment (in
product or service code (PSC) 4110);
(2) Air conditioning equipment (PSC
4120);
(3) Clean agent fire suppression
systems/equipment (e.g., installed room
flooding systems, portable fire
extinguishers, aircraft/tactical vehicle
fire/explosion suppression systems) (in
PSC 4210);
(4) Bulk refrigerants and fire
suppressants (in PSC 6830);
(5) Solvents, dusters, freezing
compounds, mold release agents, and
any other miscellaneous chemical
specialty that may contain ozonedepleting substances or high global
warming potential hydrofluorocarbons
(in PSC 6850);
VerDate Sep<11>2014
17:59 Nov 10, 2022
Jkt 259001
(6) Corrosion prevention compounds,
foam sealants, aerosol mold release
agents, and any other preservative or
sealing compound that may contain
ozone-depleting substances or high
global warming potential
hydrofluorocarbons (in PSC 8030);
(7) Fluorocarbon lubricants (primarily
aerosols) (in PSC 9150); and
(8) Any other manufactured end
products that may contain or be
manufactured with ozone-depleting
substances.
(b) 52.223–12, Maintenance, Service,
Repair, or Disposal of Refrigeration
Equipment and Air Conditioners, in
solicitations and contracts that include
the maintenance, service, repair, or
disposal of–
(1) Refrigeration equipment, such as
refrigerators, chillers, or freezers; or
(2) Air conditioners, including air
conditioning systems in motor vehicles.
(c) 52.223–20, Aerosols, in
solicitations and contracts—
(1) For products that may contain
high global warming potential
hydrofluorocarbons as a propellant, or
as a solvent; or
(2) That involve maintenance or
repair of electronic or mechanical
devices.
(d) 52.223–21, Foams, in solicitations
and contracts for—
(1) Products that may contain high
global warming potential
hydrofluorocarbons or refrigerant blends
containing hydrofluorocarbons as a
foam blowing agent, such as building
foam insulation or appliance foam
insulation; or
(2) Construction of buildings or
facilities.
■ 10. Add subpart 23.XX to read as
follows:
Subpart 23.XX—Public Disclosure of
Climate Information
Sec.
23.XX00
23.XX01
23.XX02
23.XX03
23.XX04
23.XX05
23.XX06
23.XX07
Scope.
Authorities.
Definitions.
Policy.
Exceptions.
Procedures.
Exemptions and waivers.
Solicitation provision.
Subpart 23.XX—Public Disclosure of
Climate Information
23.XX00
Scope.
This subpart implements
requirements for certain Federal
contractors to publicly disclose their
greenhouse gas emissions and climaterelated financial risk and to set sciencebased targets to reduce their greenhouse
gas emissions.
PO 00000
Frm 00018
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
23.XX01
Authorities.
(a) Section 1 of Executive Order 13990
of January 20, 2021, Protecting Public
Health and the Environment and
Restoring Science to Tackle the Climate
Crisis.
(b) Section 206 of Executive Order
14008 of January 27, 2021, Tackling the
Climate Crisis at Home and Abroad.
(c) Section 5(b)(i) of Executive Order
14030 of May 20, 2021, Climate-Related
Financial Risk.
(d) Section 302 of Executive Order
14057 of December 8, 2021, Catalyzing
Clean Energy Industries and Jobs
Through Federal Sustainability, and
section II.1. of the accompanying Office
of Management and Budget
Memorandum M–22–06.
23.XX02
Definitions.
As used in this subpart—
Annual climate disclosure means an
entity’s set of disclosures that—
(1) Aligns with—
(i) The 2017 Recommendations of the
Task Force on Climate-Related Financial
Disclosures (TCFD) (see https://
assets.bbhub.io/company/sites/60/2021/
10/FINAL-2017-TCFD-Report.pdf),
which cover governance, strategy, risk
management, and metrics and targets
(see figure 4 of the 2017
recommendations for an outline of
disclosures); and
(ii) The 2021 TCFD Annex:
Implementing the Recommendations of
the Task Force on Climate-related
Financial Disclosures, which includes
updates to reflect the evolution of
disclosure practices, approaches, and
user needs (see https://assets.bbhub.io/
company/sites/60/2021/07/2021-TCFDImplementing_Guidance.pdf); and
(2) Includes—
(i) A greenhouse gas inventory of its
Scope 1, Scope 2, and relevant Scope 3
emissions; and
(ii) Descriptions of the entity’s climate
risk assessment process and any risks
identified.
Greenhouse gas inventory means a
quantified list of an entity’s annual
greenhouse gas emissions that—
(1) Represents emissions during a
continuous period of 12 months, ending
not more than 12 months before the
inventory is completed; and
(2) Is conducted in accordance with
the Greenhouse Gas Protocol Corporate
Accounting and Reporting Standard,
which includes the following, as
applicable:
(i) Greenhouse Gas Protocol Corporate
Standard, 2004 revised edition (see
https://ghgprotocol.org/sites/default/
files/standards/ghg-protocolrevised.pdf).
(ii) Required Greenhouse Gases in
Inventories: Accounting and Reporting
E:\FR\FM\14NOP2.SGM
14NOP2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with PROPOSALS2
Federal Register / Vol. 87, No. 218 / Monday, November 14, 2022 / Proposed Rules
Amendment, 2013 (see https://
www.ghgprotocol.org/sites/default/files/
ghgp/NF3-Amendment_052213.pdf).
(iii) GHG Protocol Scope 2 Guidance,
2015 (see https://ghgprotocol.org/sites/
default/files/standards/
Scope%202%20Guidance_Final_
Sept26.pdf).
(iv) GHG Protocol Corporate Value
Chain (Scope 3) Accounting and
Reporting Standard Guidance, 2011 (see
https://ghgprotocol.org/sites/default/
files/standards/Corporate-Value-ChainAccounting-Reporing-Standard_
041613_2.pdf).
Highest-level owner means the entity
that owns or controls an immediate
owner of the offeror, or that owns or
controls one or more entities that
control an immediate owner of the
offeror. No entity owns or exercises
control of the highest-level owner.
Immediate owner means an entity,
other than the offeror, that has direct
control of the offeror. Indicators of
control include, but are not limited to,
one or more of the following: ownership
or interlocking management, identity of
interests among family members, shared
facilities and equipment, and the
common use of employees.
Major contractor means an offeror
who received more than $50 million in
total Federal contract obligations (as
defined in OMB Circular A–11) in the
prior Federal fiscal year as indicated in
the System for Award Management at
https://www.sam.gov.
Publicly accessible website means a
website that the general public can
discover using commonly used search
engines and read without cost. It
includes a website of the offeror or a
website managed by a recognized thirdparty greenhouse gas emissions
reporting program.
Science-based target means a target
for reducing greenhouse gas emissions
that is in line with reductions that the
latest climate science deems necessary
to meet the goals of the Paris Agreement
to limit global warming to well below
2°C above pre-industrial levels and
pursue efforts to limit warming to 1.5°C
(see SBTi frequently asked questions at
https://sciencebasedtargets.org/
faqs#what-are-science-based-targets).
For information on the latest climate
science see 2018 Intergovernmental
Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) Special
Report on 1.5°C at https://www.ipcc.ch/
sr15/.
Scope 1 emissions means direct
greenhouse gas emissions from sources
that are owned or controlled by the
reporting entity.
Scope 2 emissions means indirect
greenhouse gas emissions associated
with the generation of electricity,
VerDate Sep<11>2014
17:59 Nov 10, 2022
Jkt 259001
heating and cooling, or steam, when
these are purchased or acquired for the
reporting entity’s own consumption but
occur at sources owned or controlled by
another entity.
Scope 3 emissions means greenhouse
gas emissions, other than those that are
Scope 2 emissions, that are a
consequence of the operations of the
reporting entity but occur at sources
other than those owned or controlled by
the entity.
Significant contractor means an
offeror who received $7.5 million or
more, but not exceeding $50 million, in
total Federal contract obligations (as
defined in OMB Circular A–11) in the
prior Federal fiscal year as indicated in
the System for Award Management at
https://www.sam.gov.
23.XX03
Policy.
The Government’s policy is that the
contracting officer shall treat a
prospective contractor that is a
significant or major contractor as
nonresponsible under 9.104–3(e), except
as provided in sections 23.XX04 and
23.XX06, unless the following
requirements are met:
(a) Significant and major contractors.
Starting on [date 1 year after publication
of a final rule], the significant or major
contractor (see 23.XX02) has—
(1) Completed (itself or through its
immediate owner or highest-level
owner) within its current or previous
fiscal year a greenhouse gas inventory of
its annual Scope 1 and Scope 2
emissions; and
(2) Reported in the System for Award
Management (SAM) (https://
www.sam.gov) the total annual Scope 1
and Scope 2 emissions identified
through its most recent greenhouse gas
inventory.
(b) Major contractors. Starting on
[date 2 years after publication of final
rule], the major contractor has (itself or
through its immediate owner or highestlevel owner)—
(1) Submitted an annual climate
disclosure, as defined in 23.XX02, by
completing those portions of the CDP
Climate Change Questionnaire that align
with the TCFD recommendations as
identified by CDP (https://www.cdp.net/
en/guidance/how-cdp-is-aligned-to-thetcfd) within its current or previous fiscal
year and made the annual climate
disclosure available on a publicly
accessible website; and
(2) Developed a science-based target,
as defined in 23.XX02; had the sciencebased target validated by the ScienceBased Targets Initiative (see https://
sciencebasedtargets.org/) within the
previous 5 calendar years; and made the
PO 00000
Frm 00019
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
68329
validated science-based target available
on a publicly accessible website.
23.XX04
Exceptions.
(a) The requirements in section
23.XX03(a) and (b) do not apply to a
significant or major contractor who is—
(1) An Alaska Native Corporation, a
Community Development Corporation,
an Indian tribe, a Native Hawaiian
Organization, or a Tribally owned
concern, as those terms are defined at 13
CFR 124.3;
(2) A higher education institution
(defined as institutions of higher
education in the OMB Uniform
Guidance at 2 CFR part 200, subpart A,
and 20 U.S.C. 1001);
(3) A nonprofit research entity;
(4) A state or local government; or
(5) An entity deriving 80 percent or
more of its annual revenue from
management and operating contracts
(see subpart 17.6) that are subject to
agency annual site sustainability
reporting requirements.
(b) The requirements in paragraph (b)
of section 23.XX03 do not apply to a
major contractor who is—
(1) Considered a small business for
the North American Industry
Classification System (NAICS) code
identified in its SAM registration as its
primary NAICS code; or
(2) A nonprofit organization.
23.XX05
Procedures.
(a) Starting on [date 1 year after
publication of a final rule], unless an
exemption or waiver applies in
accordance with section 23.XX06, the
contracting officer shall review an
offeror’s representations in paragraph
(d) of the provision at 52.223–22 or its
equivalent at 52.212–3(t)(3) (see
paragraph (b) of this section) when
determining whether the offeror is a
responsible prospective contractor (see
section 9.104–3).
(1) Other than a significant or major
contractor. If an offeror represents in
52.223–22(d)(1) that it ‘‘is not’’ a
significant contractor and ‘‘is not’’ a
major contractor, then the offeror is not
subject to the policy at 23.XX03 and no
other representations are required.
(2) Significant contractor. If an offeror
represents that it ‘‘is’’ a significant
contractor (see 52.223–22(d)(1)(i)) and
‘‘is not’’ an excepted entity (see 52.223–
22(d)(2)(i)), the following responses
indicate that the offeror is in
compliance with the policy at
23.XX03(a):
E:\FR\FM\14NOP2.SGM
14NOP2
68330
Federal Register / Vol. 87, No. 218 / Monday, November 14, 2022 / Proposed Rules
SIGNIFICANT CONTRACTORS
Representations in 52.223–22(d) or equivalent at 52.212–3(t)(3)
Offeror responses
(i) Paragraph (d)(3)(i) or (t)(3)(iii)(A). Greenhouse gas inventory. ....................................................................
(ii) Paragraph (d)(3)(ii) or (t)(3)(iii)(B). Greenhouse gas inventory. ...................................................................
Response must be ‘‘has’’.
Scope 1 and Scope 2 totals must
be provided.
Response may be ‘‘does’’ or ‘‘does
not’’.
Response may be ‘‘does’’ or ‘‘does
not’’.
(iii) Paragraph (d)(4) or (t)(3)(iv). Annual climate disclosure. ............................................................................
(iv) Paragraph (d)(5) or (t)(3)(v). Science-based targets. ..................................................................................
(3) Major contractor. Starting on [date
2 years after publication of a final rule],
if an offeror represents that it ‘‘is’’ a
major contractor (see 52.223–
22(d)(1)(ii)) and ‘‘is not’’ an excepted
entity (see 52.223–22(d)(2)(i)), the
following responses indicate that the
offeror is in compliance with the policy
at 23.XX03(b):
MAJOR CONTRACTORS
Offeror responses
Representations in 52.223–22(d) or equivalent at 52.212–3(t)(3)
Small business or nonprofit organization
Other than small business or nonprofit organization
(i) Paragraph (d)(2)(ii) or (t)(3)(ii)(B). Excepted entities. ........................
If Offeror checked ‘‘is’’ for (A) or
(B), then:
Response must be ‘‘has’’.
Scope 1 and Scope 2 totals must
be provided.
Response may be ‘‘does’’ or
‘‘does not’’.
Response may be ‘‘does’’ or
‘‘does not’’.
If Offeror checked ‘‘is not’’ for (A)
and (B), then:
Response must be ‘‘has’’.
Scope 1 and Scope 2 totals must
be provided.
Response must be ‘‘does’’.
(ii) Paragraph (d)(3)(i) or (t)(3)(iii)(A). Greenhouse gas inventory. .........
(iii) Paragraph (d)(3)(ii) or (t)(3)(iii)(B). Greenhouse gas inventory. .......
(iv) Paragraph (d)(4) or (t)(3)(iv). Annual climate disclosure. .................
(v) Para (d)(5) or (t)(3)(v). Science-based targets. .................................
(b) For an acquisition of commercial
products or commercial services, the
contracting officer shall look for
equivalent representations from a
significant or major contractor in the
solicitation provision at 52.212–3(t)(3).
(c) The contracting officer may rely on
the offeror’s representations in the
provisions at 52.223–22(d) or 52.212–
3(t)(3) that it is not a significant or major
contractor, that it is subject to an
exception, or that it is in compliance
with the policy at 23.XX03. If the
significant or major contractor’s
representations indicate that the offeror
is not in compliance with the policy at
23.XX03, or if the contracting officer
questions the representations, then the
contracting officer shall follow the
procedures at 9.104–3(e) for
determining responsibility.
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with PROPOSALS2
23.XX06
Exemptions and waivers.
(a) Exemptions. The procedures at
23.XX05 do not apply to acquisitions
listed at 4.1102(a) where the offeror or
quoter is exempt from the requirement
to be registered in System for Award
Management at the time an offer or
quotation is submitted.
(b) Waivers. The senior procurement
executive may provide the following
types of waivers:
(1) Waiver of procedures. The senior
procurement executive may waive the
procedures at 23.XX05 and the
VerDate Sep<11>2014
19:50 Nov 10, 2022
Jkt 259001
requirement to consider whether a
significant or major contractor is in
compliance with the policy at 23.XX03
when determining responsibility for—
(i) Facilities, business units, or other
defined units for national security
purposes; or
(ii) Emergencies, national security, or
other mission essential purposes; and
(2) Entity waiver. The senior
procurement executive may provide a
waiver to enable a significant or major
contractor to come into compliance with
the policy at 23.XX03. The period for
such waivers shall not exceed 1
calendar year. Agencies shall make such
waivers publicly available on the
agency’s website.
23.XX07
Solicitation provision.
The contracting officer shall insert the
provision at 52.223–22, Public
Disclosure of Climate Information—
Representation, in solicitations only
when 52.204–7, System for Award
Management, is included in the
solicitation (see 52.204–8, Annual
Representations and Certifications).
PART 52—SOLICITATION PROVISIONS
AND CONTRACT CLAUSES
11. Amend section 52.204–08 by
revising the date of the provision and
paragraph (c)(1)(xix) to read as follows:
■
PO 00000
Frm 00020
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
Response must be ‘‘does’’.
52.204–8 Annual Representations and
Certifications.
*
*
*
*
*
ANNUAL REPRESENTATIONS AND
CERTIFICATIONS (DATE)
*
*
*
*
*
(c)(1) * * *
(xix) 52.223–22, Public Disclosure of
Climate Information—Representation.
This provision applies to solicitations
that include the clause at 52.204–7.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 12. Amend section 52.212–3 by—
■ a. Revising the date of the provision;
■ b. In paragraph (a):
■ i. Adding in alphabetical order
definitions for ‘‘Annual climate
disclosure’’, ‘‘Greenhouse gas’’, and
‘‘Greenhouse gas inventory’’;
■ ii. In the definition of ‘‘Highest-level
owner’’ removing from the second
sentence the words ‘‘highest level’’ and
adding ‘‘highest-level’’ in its place;
■ iii. Adding in alphabetical order
definitions for ‘‘Major contractor’’,
‘‘Publicly accessible website’’, ‘‘Sciencebased target’’, ‘‘Scope 1 emissions’’,
‘‘Scope 2 emissions’’, ‘‘Scope 3
emissions’’, and ‘‘Significant
contractor’’; and
■ c. Revising paragraph (t).
The revisions and additions read as
follows:
E:\FR\FM\14NOP2.SGM
14NOP2
Federal Register / Vol. 87, No. 218 / Monday, November 14, 2022 / Proposed Rules
52.212–3 Offeror Representations and
Certifications—Commercial Products and
Commercial Services.
*
*
*
*
*
OFFEROR REPRESENTATIONS AND
CERTIFICATIONS-COMMERCIAL PRODUCTS
AND COMMERCIAL SERVICES (DATE)
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with PROPOSALS2
*
*
*
*
*
(a) Definitions. As used in this
provision—
Annual climate disclosure means an
entity’s set of disclosures that—
(1) Aligns with—
(i) The 2017 Recommendations of the
Task Force on Climate-Related Financial
Disclosures (TCFD) (see https://
assets.bbhub.io/company/sites/60/2021/
10/FINAL-2017-TCFD-Report.pdf),
which covers governance, strategy, risk
management, and metrics and targets
(see figure 4 of the 2017
recommendations for an outline of
disclosures); and
(ii) The 2021 TCFD Annex:
Implementing the Recommendations of
the Task Force on Climate-related
Financial Disclosures, which includes
updates to reflect the evolution of
disclosure practices, approaches, and
user needs (see https://assets.bbhub.io/
company/sites/60/2021/07/2021-TCFDImplementing_Guidance.pdf); and
(2) Includes—
(i) A greenhouse gas inventory of its
Scope 1, Scope 2, and relevant Scope 3
emissions; and
(ii) Descriptions of the entity’s climate
risk assessment process and any risks
identified.
*
*
*
*
*
Greenhouse gas means carbon
dioxide, methane, nitrous oxide,
hydrofluorocarbons, perfluorocarbons,
nitrogen trifluoride, or sulfur
hexafluoride.
Greenhouse gas inventory means a
quantified list of an entity’s annual
greenhouse gas emissions that—
(1) Represents emissions during a
continuous period of 12 months, ending
not more than 12 months before the
inventory is completed; and
(2) Is conducted in accordance with
the Greenhouse Gas Protocol Corporate
Accounting and Reporting Standard,
which includes the following, as
applicable:
(i) Greenhouse Gas Protocol Corporate
Standard, 2004 revised edition (see
https://ghgprotocol.org/sites/default/
files/standards/ghg-protocolrevised.pdf).
(ii) Required Greenhouse Gases in
Inventories: Accounting and Reporting
Amendment, 2013 (see https://
www.ghgprotocol.org/sites/default/files/
ghgp/NF3-Amendment_052213.pdf).
(iii) GHG Protocol Scope 2 Guidance,
2015 (see https://ghgprotocol.org/sites/
VerDate Sep<11>2014
17:59 Nov 10, 2022
Jkt 259001
default/files/standards/
Scope%202%20Guidance_Final_
Sept26.pdf).
(iv) GHG Protocol Corporate Value
Chain (Scope 3) Accounting and
Reporting Standard Guidance, 2011 (see
https://ghgprotocol.org/sites/default/
files/standards/Corporate-Value-ChainAccounting-Reporing-Standard_
041613_2.pdf).
*
*
*
*
*
Major contractor means an offeror
who received more than $50 million in
total Federal contract obligations (as
defined in OMB Circular A–11) in the
prior Federal fiscal year as indicated in
the System for Award Management at
https://www.sam.gov.
*
*
*
*
*
Publicly accessible website means a
website that the general public can
discover using commonly used search
engines and read without cost. It
includes a website of the offeror or a
website managed by a recognized thirdparty greenhouse gas emissions
reporting program.
*
*
*
*
*
Science-based target means a target
for reducing greenhouse gas emissions
that is in line with reductions that the
latest climate science deems necessary
to meet the goals of the Paris Agreement
to limit global warming to well below
2°C above pre-industrial levels and
pursue efforts to limit warming to 1.5°C
(see SBTi frequently asked questions at
https://sciencebasedtargets.org/
faqs#what-are-science-based-targets).
For information on the latest climate
science see 2018 Intergovernmental
Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) Special
Report on 1.5°C at https://www.ipcc.ch/
sr15/.
Scope 1 emissions means direct
greenhouse gas emissions from sources
that are owned or controlled by the
reporting entity.
Scope 2 emissions means indirect
greenhouse gas emissions associated
with the generation of electricity,
heating and cooling, or steam, when
these are purchased or acquired for the
reporting entity’s own consumption but
occur at sources owned or controlled by
another entity.
Scope 3 emissions means greenhouse
gas emissions, other than those that are
Scope 2 emissions, that are a
consequence of the operations of the
reporting entity but occur at sources
other than those owned or controlled by
the entity.
*
*
*
*
*
Significant contractor means an
offeror who received $7.5 million or
more, but not exceeding $50 million, in
total Federal contract obligations (as
PO 00000
Frm 00021
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
68331
defined in OMB Circular A–11) in the
prior Federal fiscal year as indicated in
the System for Award Management at
https://www.sam.gov.
*
*
*
*
*
(t) Public Disclosure of Climate
Information (Executive Order 14030).
Applies in all solicitations that require
offerors to register in SAM
(12.301(d)(1)).
(1) Responsibility. Except as provided
in paragraph (t)(2) of this provision, an
offeror that is a significant or major
contractor will be treated as
nonresponsible pursuant to FAR section
9.104–3(e) unless the following
requirements are met:
(i) Significant or major contractor.
Starting on [date 1 year after publication
of a final rule], if the offeror is a
significant or major contractor, then the
offeror shall have—
(A) Completed (itself or through its
immediate owner or highest-level
owner) within its current or previous
fiscal year a greenhouse gas inventory of
its annual Scope 1 and Scope 2
emissions; and
(B) Reported in SAM (https://
www.sam.gov) the total annual Scope 1
and Scope 2 emissions identified
through its most recent greenhouse gas
inventory.
(ii) Major contractor. Starting on [date
2 years after publication of a final rule],
if the offeror is a major contractor, then
the offeror (itself or through its
immediate owner or highest-level
owner) shall have completed the
following:
(A) Annual climate disclosure.
Submitted its annual climate disclosure,
as defined in paragraph (a) of this
provision, by completing those portions
of the CDP Climate Change
Questionnaire that align with the TCFD
recommendations as identified by CDP
(https://www.cdp.net/en/guidance/howcdp-is-aligned-to-the-tcfd) within its
current or previous fiscal year and made
the annual climate disclosure available
on a publicly accessible website. The
time periods for submitting the CDP
Climate Change Questionnaire are
identified at https://www.cdp.net/en/
guidance/guidance-for-companies.
(B) Science-based target. Developed a
science-based target, as defined in
paragraph (a) of this provision; had the
science-based target validated by the
Science-Based Targets Initiative (see
https://sciencebasedtargets.org/) within
the previous 5 calendar years; and made
the validated science-based target
available on a publicly accessible
website. The validation process and
time period are identified at https://
sciencebasedtargets.org/set-a-target.
E:\FR\FM\14NOP2.SGM
14NOP2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with PROPOSALS2
68332
Federal Register / Vol. 87, No. 218 / Monday, November 14, 2022 / Proposed Rules
(2) Exceptions. (i) The requirements
in paragraphs (t)(1)(i) and (t)(1)(ii) of
this provision do not apply to a
significant or major contractor who is—
(A) An Alaska Native Corporation, a
Community Development Corporation,
an Indian tribe, a Native Hawaiian
Organization, or a Tribally owned
concern, as those terms are defined at 13
CFR 124.3;
(B) A higher education institution
(defined as institutions of higher
education in the OMB Uniform
Guidance at 2 CFR part 200, subpart A,
and 20 U.S.C. 1001);
(C) A nonprofit research entity;
(D) A state or local government; or
(E) An entity deriving 80 percent or
more of its annual revenue from
management and operating contracts
(see FAR subpart 17.6) that are subject
to agency annual site sustainability
reporting requirements.
(ii) The requirements in paragraph
(t)(1)(ii) of this provision do not apply
to a major contractor who is—
(A) Considered a small business for
the North American Industry
Classification System (NAICS) code
identified in its SAM registration as its
primary NAICS code; or
(B) A nonprofit organization.
(3) Representations. The Offeror shall
complete the representation at
paragraph (t)(3)(i) of this provision. If
the Offeror represents in paragraph
(t)(3)(i) that it ‘‘is’’ a significant
contractor or major contractor, then the
Offeror shall complete the
representations in paragraphs (t)(3)(ii)
through (v).
(i) Significant or major contractor.
The Offeror represents the following:
(A) It [ ] is, [ ] is not a significant
contractor (see definition in paragraph
(a) of this provision).
(B) It [ ] is, [ ] is not a major contractor
(see definition in paragraph (a) of this
provision).
(ii) Excepted entities. The Offeror
represents the following:
(A) It [ ] is, [ ] is not an excepted entity
described in paragraph (t)(2)(i) of this
provision.
(B) For the purposes of applying the
exception to the requirement of
paragraph (t)(1)(ii) of this provision—
(1) It [ ] is, [ ] is not considered a small
business for the NAICS code identified
in its SAM registration as its primary
NAICS code; and
(2) It [ ] is, [ ] is not a nonprofit
organization.
(iii) Greenhouse gas inventory.
[Inventory is required for a significant or
major contractor, except as provided in
paragraph (t)(2)(i) of this provision.] The
Offeror represents that—
(A) It [ ] has, [ ] has not (itself or
through its immediate owner or highest-
VerDate Sep<11>2014
17:59 Nov 10, 2022
Jkt 259001
level owner) completed within its
current or previous fiscal year a
greenhouse gas inventory of its annual
Scope 1 and Scope 2 emissions; and
(B) Its most recent greenhouse gas
inventory indicates the following total
annual greenhouse gas emissions in
metric tons of carbon dioxide equivalent
(MT CO2e):
Scope 1 emissions: _
[Offeror to enter total MT CO2e].
Scope 2 emissions: _
[Offeror to enter total MT CO2e].
(iv) Annual climate disclosure.
[Disclosure is required for a major
contractor, except as provided in
paragraphs (t)(2)(i) and (t)(2)(ii) of this
provision.] The Offeror represents that it
[ ] does, [ ] does not (itself or through
its immediate owner or highest-level
owner) make available on a publicly
accessible website an annual climate
disclosure that was completed using the
CDP Climate Change Questionnaire in
its current or previous fiscal year.
(v) Science-based targets. [Target is
required for a major contractor, except
as provided in paragraphs (t)(2)(i) and
(ii) of this provision.] The Offeror
represents that it [ ] does, [ ] does not
(itself or through its immediate owner or
highest-level owner) make available on
a publicly accessible website a sciencebased target that has been validated by
the Science-Based Targets Initiative
within the previous 5 calendar years.
(4) Website(s). If the Offeror checked
‘‘does’’ in paragraph (t)(3)(iv) or (v) of
this provision, then the Offeror shall
provide the publicly accessible
website(s) where the required
disclosures and targets are reported: _.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 13. Amended section 52.213–4 by
■ a. Revising the date of the clause; and
■ b. In paragraph (b)(1)(xii), removing
the phrase ‘‘at FAR 23.804(a)(1)’’ and
adding ‘‘in FAR 23.804(a)’’ in its place.
The revision reads as follows:
52.213–4 Terms and Conditions—
Simplified Acquisitions (Other Than
Commercial Products and Commercial
Services).
*
*
*
*
*
Terms and Conditions—Simplified
Acquisitions (Other Than Commercial
Products and Commercial Services)
(DATE)
*
*
*
*
*
■ 14. Amend section 52.223–11 by
revising the introductory text to read as
follows:
52.223–11 Ozone-Depleting Substances
and High Global Warming Potential
Hydrofluorocarbons.
As prescribed in 23.804(a), insert the
following clause:
*
*
*
*
*
PO 00000
Frm 00022
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
15. Amend section 52.223–12 by
revising the introductory text to read as
follows:
■
52.223–12 Maintenance, Service, Repair,
or Disposal of Refrigeration Equipment and
Air Conditioners.
As prescribed in 23.804(b), insert the
following clause:
*
*
*
*
*
■ 16. Amend section 52.223–20 by
revising the introductory text to read as
follows:
52.223–20
Aerosols.
As prescribed in 23.804(c), insert the
following clause:
*
*
*
*
*
■ 17. Amend section 52.223–21 by
revising the introductory text to read as
follows:
52.223–21
Foams.
As prescribed in 23.804(d), insert the
following clause:
*
*
*
*
*
■ 18. Revise section 52.223–22 to read
as follows:
52.223–22 Public Disclosure of Climate
Information—Representation.
As prescribed in 23.XX07, insert the
following provision:
Public Disclosure of Climate
Information—Representation (DATE)
(a) Definitions. As used in this
provision—
Annual climate disclosure means an
entity’s set of disclosures that—
(1) Aligns with—
(i) The 2017 Recommendations of the
Task Force on Climate-Related Financial
Disclosures (TCFD) (see https://
assets.bbhub.io/company/sites/60/2021/
10/FINAL-2017-TCFD-Report.pdf),
which covers governance, strategy, risk
management, and metrics and targets
(see figure 4 of the 2017
recommendations for an outline of
disclosures); and
(ii) The 2021 TCFD Annex:
Implementing the Recommendations of
the Task Force on Climate-related
Financial Disclosures, which includes
updates to reflect the evolution of
disclosure practices, approaches, and
user needs (see https://assets.bbhub.io/
company/sites/60/2021/07/2021-TCFDImplementing_Guidance.pdf); and
(2) Includes—
(i) A greenhouse gas inventory of its
Scope 1, Scope 2, and relevant Scope 3
emissions; and
(ii) Descriptions of the entity’s climate
risk assessment process and any risks
identified.
Greenhouse gas means carbon
dioxide, methane, nitrous oxide,
hydrofluorocarbons, perfluorocarbons,
E:\FR\FM\14NOP2.SGM
14NOP2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with PROPOSALS2
Federal Register / Vol. 87, No. 218 / Monday, November 14, 2022 / Proposed Rules
nitrogen trifluoride, or sulfur
hexafluoride.
Greenhouse gas inventory means a
quantified list of an entity’s annual
greenhouse gas emissions that—
(1) Represents emissions during a
continuous period of 12 months, ending
not more than 12 months before the
inventory is completed; and
(2) Is conducted in accordance with
the Greenhouse Gas Protocol Corporate
Accounting and Reporting Standard,
which includes the following, as
applicable:
(i) Greenhouse Gas Protocol Corporate
Standard, 2004 revised edition (see
https://ghgprotocol.org/sites/default/
files/standards/ghg-protocolrevised.pdf).
(ii) Required Greenhouse Gases in
Inventories: Accounting and Reporting
Amendment, 2013 (see https://
www.ghgprotocol.org/sites/default/files/
ghgp/NF3-Amendment_052213.pdf).
(iii) GHG Protocol Scope 2 Guidance,
2015 (see https://ghgprotocol.org/sites/
default/files/standards/
Scope%202%20Guidance_Final_
Sept26.pdf).
(iv) GHG Protocol Corporate Value
Chain (Scope 3) Accounting and
Reporting Standard Guidance, 2011
(https://ghgprotocol.org/sites/default/
files/standards/Corporate-Value-ChainAccounting-Reporing-Standard_
041613_2.pdf).
Highest-level owner means the entity
that owns or controls an immediate
owner of the offeror, or that owns or
controls one or more entities that
control an immediate owner of the
offeror. No entity owns or exercises
control of the highest-level owner.
Immediate owner means an entity,
other than the offeror, that has direct
control of the offeror. Indicators of
control include, but are not limited to,
one or more of the following: ownership
or interlocking management, identity of
interests among family members, shared
facilities and equipment, and the
common use of employees.
Major contractor means an offeror
who received more than $50 million in
total Federal contract obligations (as
defined in OMB Circular A–11) in the
prior Federal fiscal year as indicated in
the System for Award Management at
https://www.sam.gov.
Publicly accessible website means a
website that the general public can
discover using commonly used search
engines and read without cost. It
includes a website of the offeror or a
website managed by a recognized thirdparty greenhouse gas emissions
reporting program.
Science-based target means a target
for reducing greenhouse gas emissions
VerDate Sep<11>2014
17:59 Nov 10, 2022
Jkt 259001
that is in line with reductions that the
latest climate science deems necessary
to meet the goals of the Paris Agreement
to limit global warming to well below
2°C above pre-industrial levels and
pursue efforts to limit warming to 1.5°C
(see SBTi frequently asked questions at
https://sciencebasedtargets.org/
faqs#what-are-science-based-targets).
For information on the latest climate
science see 2018 Intergovernmental
Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) Special
Report on 1.5°C at https://www.ipcc.ch/
sr15/.
Scope 1 emissions means direct
greenhouse gas emissions from sources
that are owned or controlled by the
reporting entity.
Scope 2 emissions means indirect
greenhouse gas emissions associated
with the generation of electricity,
heating and cooling, or steam, when
these are purchased or acquired for the
reporting entity’s own consumption but
occur at sources owned or controlled by
another entity.
Scope 3 emissions means greenhouse
gas emissions, other than those that are
Scope 2 emissions, that are a
consequence of the operations of the
reporting entity but occur at sources
other than those owned or controlled by
the entity.
Significant contractor means an
offeror who received $7.5 million or
more, but not exceeding $50 million, in
total Federal contract obligations (as
defined in OMB Circular A–11) in the
prior Federal fiscal year as indicated in
the System for Award Management at
https://www.sam.gov.
(b) Responsibility. Except as provided
in paragraph (c) of this provision, an
offeror that is a significant or major
contractor will be treated as
nonresponsible pursuant to Federal
Acquisition Regulation (FAR) section
9.104–3(e) unless the following
requirements are met:
(1) Significant or major contractor.
Starting on [date 1 year after publication
of a final rule], if the offeror is a
significant or major contractor, then the
offeror shall have—
(i) Completed (itself or through its
immediate owner or highest-level
owner) within its current or previous
fiscal year a greenhouse gas inventory of
its annual Scope 1 and Scope 2
emissions; and
(ii) Reported in the System for Award
Management (SAM) the total annual
Scope 1 and Scope 2 emissions
identified through its most recent
greenhouse gas inventory.
(2) Major contractor. Starting on [date
2 years after publication of a final rule],
if the offeror is a major contractor, then
the offeror (itself or through its
PO 00000
Frm 00023
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
68333
immediate owner or highest-level
owner) shall have completed the
following:
(i) Annual climate disclosure.
Submitted its annual climate disclosure,
as defined in paragraph (a) of this
provision, by completing those portions
of the CDP Climate Change
Questionnaire that align with the TCFD
recommendations as identified by CDP
(https://www.cdp.net/en/guidance/howcdp-is-aligned-to-the-tcfd) within its
current or previous fiscal year and made
the annual climate disclosure available
on a publicly accessible website. The
time periods for submitting the CDP
Climate Change Questionnaire are
identified at https://www.cdp.net/en/
guidance/guidance-for-companies.
(ii) Science-based target. Developed a
science-based target, as defined in
paragraph (a) of this provision; had the
science-based target validated by the
Science-Based Targets Initiative (see
https://sciencebasedtargets.org/) within
the previous 5 calendar years; and made
the validated science-based target
available on a publicly accessible
website. The validation process and
time period are identified at https://
sciencebasedtargets.org/set-a-target.
(c) Exceptions. (1) The requirements
in paragraphs (b)(1) and (b)(2) of this
provision do not apply to a significant
or major contractor who is—
(i) An Alaska Native Corporation, a
Community Development Corporation,
an Indian tribe, a Native Hawaiian
Organization, or a Tribally owned
concern, as those terms are defined at 13
CFR 124.3;
(ii) A higher education institution
(defined as institutions of higher
education in the OMB Uniform
Guidance at 2 CFR part 200, subpart A,
and 20 U.S.C. 1001);
(iii) A nonprofit research entity;
(iv) A State or local government; or
(v) An entity deriving 80 percent or
more of its annual revenue from
management and operating contracts
(see FAR subpart 17.6) that are subject
to agency annual site sustainability
reporting requirements.
(2) The requirements in paragraph
(b)(2) of this provision do not apply to
a major contractor who is—
(i) Considered a small business for the
North American Industry Classification
System (NAICS) code identified in its
SAM registration as its primary NAICS
code; or
(ii) A nonprofit organization.
(d) Representations. [The Offeror shall
complete the representation at
paragraph (d)(1) of this provision. If the
Offeror represents in paragraph (d)(1)
that it ‘‘is’’ a significant contractor or
major contractor, then the Offeror shall
E:\FR\FM\14NOP2.SGM
14NOP2
68334
Federal Register / Vol. 87, No. 218 / Monday, November 14, 2022 / Proposed Rules
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with PROPOSALS2
complete the representations in
paragraphs (d)(2) through (d)(5)].
(1) Significant or major contractor.
The Offeror represents the following:
(i) It [ ] is, [ ] is not a significant
contractor (see definition in paragraph
(a) of this provision).
(ii) It [ ] is, [ ] is not a major contractor
(see definition in paragraph (a) of this
provision).
(2) Excepted entities. The Offeror
represents the following:
(i) It [ ] is, [ ] is not an excepted entity
described in paragraph (c)(1) of this
provision.
(ii) For the purposes of applying the
exception to the requirements of
paragraph (b)(2) of this provision—
(A) It [ ] is, [ ] is not considered a
small business for the NAICS code
identified in its SAM registration as its
primary NAICS code; and
(B) It [ ] is, [ ] is not a nonprofit
organization.
(3) Greenhouse gas inventory.
[Inventory is required for a significant or
VerDate Sep<11>2014
17:59 Nov 10, 2022
Jkt 259001
major contractor, except as provided in
paragraph (c)(1) of this provision.] The
Offeror represents that—
(i) It [ ] has, [ ] has not (itself or
through its immediate owner or highestlevel owner) completed within its
current or previous fiscal year a
greenhouse gas inventory of its annual
Scope 1 and Scope 2 emissions; and
(ii) Its most recent greenhouse gas
inventory indicates the following total
annual greenhouse gas emissions in
metric tons of carbon dioxide equivalent
(MT CO2e):
Scope 1 emissions: _
[Offeror to enter total MT CO2e].
Scope 2 emissions: _
[Offeror to enter total MT CO2e].
(4) Annual climate disclosure.
[Disclosure is required for a major
contractor, except as provided in
paragraphs (c)(1) and (c)(2) of this
provision.] The Offeror represents that it
[ ] does, [ ] does not (itself or through
its immediate owner or highest-level
owner) make available on a publicly
PO 00000
Frm 00024
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 9990
accessible website an annual climate
disclosure that was completed using the
CDP Climate Change Questionnaire
within its current or previous fiscal
year.
(5) Science-based target. [Target is
required for a major contractor, except
as provided in paragraphs (c)(1) and
(c)(2) of this provision]. The Offeror
represents that it [ ] does, [ ] does not
(itself or through its immediate owner or
highest-level owner) make available on
a publicly accessible website a sciencebased target that has been validated by
the Science-Based Targets Initiative
within the previous 5 calendar years.
(e) website(s). If the Offeror checked
‘‘does’’ in paragraphs (d)(4) or (d)(5) of
this provision, then the Offeror shall
provide the publicly accessible
website(s) where the required
disclosures and targets are reported: _.
(End of provision)
[FR Doc. 2022–24569 Filed 11–10–22; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6820–EP–P
E:\FR\FM\14NOP2.SGM
14NOP2
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 87, Number 218 (Monday, November 14, 2022)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 68312-68334]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2022-24569]
[[Page 68311]]
Vol. 87
Monday,
No. 218
November 14, 2022
Part IV
Department of Defense
General Services Administration
National Aeronautics and Space Administration
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
48 CFR Parts 1, 4, 9, et al.
Federal Acquisition Regulation: Disclosure of Greenhouse Gas Emissions
and Climate-Related Financial Risk; Proposed Rule
Federal Register / Vol. 87, No. 218 / Monday, November 14, 2022 /
Proposed Rules
[[Page 68312]]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE
GENERAL SERVICES ADMINISTRATION
NATIONAL AERONAUTICS AND SPACE ADMINISTRATION
48 CFR Parts 1, 4, 9, 23 and 52
[FAR Case 2021-015, Docket No. FAR-2021-0015, Sequence No. 1]
RIN 9000-AO32
Federal Acquisition Regulation: Disclosure of Greenhouse Gas
Emissions and Climate-Related Financial Risk
AGENCY: Department of Defense (DoD), General Services Administration
(GSA), and National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA).
ACTION: Proposed rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: DoD, GSA, and NASA are proposing to amend the Federal
Acquisition Regulation (FAR) to implement a requirement to ensure
certain Federal contractors disclose their greenhouse gas emissions and
climate-related financial risk and set science-based targets to reduce
their greenhouse gas emissions.
DATES: Interested parties should submit written comments to the
Regulatory Secretariat Division at the address shown below on or before
January 13, 2023 to be considered in the formation of the final rule.
ADDRESSES: Submit comments in response to FAR Case 2021-015 to the
Federal eRulemaking portal at https://www.regulations.gov by searching
for ``FAR Case 2021-015''. Select the link ``Comment Now'' that
corresponds with ``FAR Case 2021-015''. Follow the instructions
provided on the ``Comment Now'' screen. Please include your name,
company name (if any), and ``FAR Case 2021-015'' on your attached
document. If your comment cannot be submitted using https://www.regulations.gov, call or email the points of contact in the FOR
FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT section of this document for alternate
instructions.
Instructions: Please submit comments only and cite ``FAR Case 2021-
015'' in all correspondence related to this case. Comments received
generally will be posted without change to https://www.regulations.gov,
including any personal and/or business confidential information
provided. Public comments may be submitted as an individual, as an
organization, or anonymously (see frequently asked questions at https://www.regulations.gov/faq). To confirm receipt of your comment(s),
please check https://www.regulations.gov, approximately two to three
days after submission to verify posting.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For clarification of content, contact
Ms. Jennifer Hawes, Procurement Analyst, at 202-255-9194 or by email at
[email protected]. For information pertaining to status,
publication schedules, or alternate instructions for submitting
comments if https://www.regulations.gov cannot be used, contact the
Regulatory Secretariat Division at 202-501-4755 or [email protected].
Please cite FAR Case 2021-015.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background
DoD, GSA, and NASA are proposing to revise the FAR to implement
section 5(b)(i) of Executive Order (E.O.) 14030, Climate-Related
Financial Risk, to require major Federal suppliers to publicly disclose
greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions and climate-related financial risk and
to set science-based reduction targets. As stated in the Fourth
National Climate Assessment (https://nca2018.globalchange.gov/) and the
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) Sixth Assessment
Report (https://www.ipcc.ch/report/ar6/wg2/), the intensifying impacts
of climate change present physical risks, such as increased extreme
weather risk leading to supply chain disruptions, and increasing risks
to infrastructure, investments, and businesses. The global, rapid shift
away from carbon-intensive energy sources and industrial processes
towards decarbonized, climate-resilient economies will help to mitigate
these risks while also enhancing U.S. competitiveness and economic
growth, promoting environmental justice, and creating well-paying job
opportunities for American workers. Yet, these risks and opportunities
can remain hidden.
The foundation to properly analyze and mitigate climate risks is
public and standardized disclosure, which will enable the Federal
Government to conduct prudent fiscal management of all major Federal
suppliers. To that end, section 5(b)(i) of the E.O. directs the Federal
Acquisition Regulatory Council (FAR Council), in coordination with the
Council on Environmental Quality (CEQ) and the heads of relevant
agencies, to consider an amendment to the FAR to ensure that major
Federal suppliers disclose their GHG emissions and climate-related
financial risk and set science-based targets to reduce their GHG
emissions. The purpose of this proposed rule is to amend the FAR to
establish a policy to ensure major Federal suppliers make the required
disclosures and set targets to reduce their GHG emissions.
On December 8, 2021, the Office of Management and Budget (OMB)
issued memorandum M-22-06 pursuant to section 510(a) of E.O. 14057,
Catalyzing Clean Energy Industries and Jobs Through Federal
Sustainability. Section II.1. of the OMB memo states that the FAR
Council should leverage existing third-party standards and systems,
including the Task Force on Climate-related Financial Disclosures
(TCFD) Recommendations, the CDP (formerly Carbon Disclosure Project)
reporting system, and Science Based Targets Initiative (SBTi) criteria,
or equivalents, in the development of regulatory amendments to promote
contractor attention regarding reduced carbon emissions and Federal
sustainability.
On March 21, 2022, in response to the growth in investor demand for
and company disclosure of information about climate change risks,
impacts, and opportunities, the Securities and Exchange Commission
(SEC) published on its website at https://www.sec.gov/rules/proposed.shtml a proposed rule to facilitate the disclosure of
consistent, comparable, and reliable information on climate-related
financial risk. The proposed rule, entitled ``The Enhancement and
Standardization of Climate-Related Disclosures for Investors,'' was
subsequently published in the Federal Register on April 11, 2022 (see
87 FR 21334). The SEC is proposing to require SEC registrants,
including publicly listed/traded companies, to disclose in their
registration statements and annual reports their climate-related
financial risk and related metrics, including GHG emissions metrics.
Parts of the SEC proposed rule leverage existing standards, such as the
GHG Protocol Corporate Accounting and Reporting Standard and the
recommendations of the TCFD, the same standards that are leveraged in
this proposed rule (see section II.A. of this preamble). While the SEC
proposed rule did not include a requirement for SEC registrants to set
science-based targets, it did propose that SEC registrants disclose
targets if they have adopted one. While there are some similarities
between the content of the disclosures in the SEC and FAR proposed
rules, this proposed FAR rule specifically requires the Federal
contractors with significant Federal contracts to provide their
disclosures using the CDP Climate Change Questionnaire to maximize the
consistency, comparability, and accessibility of disclosure data for
use in managing Federal procurements and
[[Page 68313]]
supply chains. In addition, per this proposed FAR rule, major
contractors will also be required to set science-based targets to
reduce their GHG emissions.
II. Discussion and Analysis
To implement the new disclosure and target requirements of E.O.
14030, DoD, GSA, and NASA are proposing to create a new FAR subpart at
23.XX, entitled ``Public Disclosure of Climate Information,'' to expand
the climate-related representations in the solicitation provisions at
FAR 52.223-22, Public Disclosure of Climate Information--
Representation, and 52.212-3, Offeror Representations and
Certifications--Commercial Products and Commercial Services, and to
establish a new standard of responsibility for certain contractors in
FAR subpart 9.1. The following is a discussion and analysis of the
proposed FAR amendments:
A. Significant and Major Contractors
Section 5(b)(i) of E.O. 14030 directs the FAR Council to consider
an amendment to the FAR to ensure major Federal suppliers disclose
their GHG emissions and climate-related financial risk and set science-
based targets to reduce their GHG emissions. This rule proposes to
separate ``major Federal suppliers'' into two categories: significant
contractors and major contractors. Per this proposed rule, both
significant contractors and major contractors would be subject to
annual Scope 1 and Scope 2 GHG emissions disclosure requirements
(discussed in section II.B.1. of this preamble), while only major
contractors would be subject to the annual climate disclosure, which
includes disclosure of Scope 3 GHG emissions, and science-based target
requirements (discussed in section II.B.2. and II.B.3. of this
preamble).
For the purposes of this rule, an offeror is considered a
``significant contractor'' if the offeror received $7.5 million or
more, but not exceeding $50 million, in Federal contract obligations
(as defined in OMB Circular A-11) in the prior Federal fiscal year as
indicated in the System for Award Management (SAM) at https://www.sam.gov. An offeror is considered a ``major contractor'' if the
offeror received more than $50 million in Federal contract obligations
(as defined in OMB Circular A-11) in the prior Federal fiscal year as
indicated in SAM. According to award data available in the Federal
Procurement Data System (FPDS), there were approximately 4,413 entities
that received between $7.5 million and $50 million in Federal contract
obligations in FY 2021, of which 2,835 (64 percent) are estimated to be
small businesses. There were approximately 1,353 entities that received
more than $50 million in Federal contract obligations in FY 2021, of
which 389 (29 percent) are estimated to be small businesses.
This distinction between major contractors and significant
contractors is important to ensure this rule collectively applies the
requirements to entities receiving the most annual Federal contract
obligations, to obtain the most responsibility for the management of
GHG emissions and climate risks impacting the Federal Government's
supply chains. The major contractor requirements would address 64
percent of Federal Government spend and approximately 69 percent of
supply chain GHG impacts, of which 31 percent of major contractors
already report disclosing their GHG emissions through SAM. Significant
contractors receive fewer contract obligations, with only 10 percent
disclosing their GHG emissions through SAM. Therefore, the reporting
burden is significantly lessened for these companies by only reporting
Scope 1 and 2 emissions. Collectively, this rule will cover 86 percent
of annual spend and about 86 percent of supply chain GHG impacts. It
will also provide a better understanding of the Federal supply chain
impacts, including Scope 3 emissions reported by major contractors.
B. Policy.
As provided in paragraph (a) of the new section at FAR 23.XX03, a
contracting officer is required to treat a significant or major
contractor as nonresponsible, unless it has (itself or through its
immediate owner or highest-level owner) inventoried its annual GHG
emissions, and the significant or major contractor has disclosed its
total annual emissions in SAM. Per paragraph (b) of FAR section
23.XX03, a major contractor shall also be treated as nonresponsible,
unless it has (itself or through its immediate owner or highest-level
owner) made available on a publicly accessible website an annual
climate disclosure that was completed using the CDP Climate Change
Questionnaire in its current or previous fiscal year and set targets to
reduce its emissions.
The following is a discussion of the specific compliance
requirements, which are subject to the exceptions and starting dates
described in sections II.C. and II.E. of this preamble. A discussion of
the various standards specified for compliance is provided in section
II.D. of this preamble.
1. GHG Inventory
A significant or major contractor (itself or through its immediate
owner or highest-level owner) is required to have completed within its
current or previous fiscal year a GHG inventory of its annual Scope 1
and Scope 2 emissions. The significant or major contractor must also
disclose in SAM at https://www.sam.gov the total annual Scope 1 and
Scope 2 emissions identified through its most recent GHG inventory. Per
OMB Memo M-22-06 (and as currently defined at FAR 23.001), greenhouse
gases include carbon dioxide, methane, nitrous oxide,
hydrofluorocarbons, perfluorocarbons, nitrogen trifluoride, and sulfur
hexafluoride. Scope 1 emissions include GHG emissions from sources that
are owned or controlled by the reporting company. Scope 2 emissions
include GHG emissions associated with the generation of electricity,
heating and cooling, or steam, when these are purchased or acquired for
the reporting company's own consumption but occur at sources owned or
controlled by another entity. In conducting a GHG inventory, the
significant or major contractor (or their immediate or highest-level
owner) must follow the GHG Protocol Corporate Accounting and Reporting
Standard (see section II.D.1. of this preamble) to develop a quantified
list of the Scope 1 and Scope 2 GHG emissions. Companies may calculate
emissions using the calculation tool of their choice, as long as it is
in alignment with the GHG Protocol Corporate Accounting and Reporting
Standard. The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) offers one such
tool: a simplified GHG emissions calculator (see https://www.epa.gov/climateleadership/simplified-ghg-emissions-calculator). The inventory
must represent emissions during a continuous period of 12 months,
ending not more than 12 months before the inventory is completed.
Major contractors are also required to conduct a GHG inventory of
their relevant Scope 3 emissions, as discussed in the next section of
this preamble. The requirement to inventory Scope 3 emissions is not
applicable to significant contractors.
2. Annual Climate Disclosure
A major contractor (itself or through its immediate owner or
highest-level owner) is required to complete an annual climate
disclosure within its current or previous fiscal year. The annual
climate disclosure is a set of disclosures by an entity that aligns
with recommendations of the TCFD (see section II.D.2. of this
preamble). The
[[Page 68314]]
disclosure includes a GHG inventory of not only the Scope 1 and Scope 2
emissions, but also relevant Scope 3 emissions, which are emissions
that are a consequence of the operations of the reporting entity but
occur at sources other than those owned or controlled by the entity.
The annual climate disclosure also describes the entity's climate risk
assessment process and any risks identified. For the purposes of this
rule, a major contractor submits its annual climate disclosure by
completing those portions of the CDP Climate Change Questionnaire that
align with the TCFD as identified by CDP (https://www.cdp.net/en/guidance/how-cdp-is-aligned-to-the-tcfd) (see section II.D.3. of this
preamble) within its current or previous fiscal year. The annual
climate disclosure must be made available on a publicly accessible
website, which could be the company's own website or the CDP website.
3. Science-Based Targets
The major contractor (itself or through its immediate owner or
highest-level owner) is also required to develop science-based targets
and have the targets validated by SBTi (see section II.D.4. of this
preamble). A science-based target is a target for reducing GHG
emissions that is in line with reductions that the latest climate
science deems necessary to meet the goals of the Paris Agreement to
limit global warming to well below 2 [deg]C above pre-industrial levels
and pursue efforts to limit warming to 1.5 [deg]C (see SBTi frequently
asked questions at https://sciencebasedtargets.org/faqs#what-are-science-based-targets). For information on the latest climate science
see 2018 Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) Special
Report on 1.5 [deg]C at https://www.ipcc.ch/sr15/. These targets must
be validated by SBTi within the previous five calendar years and must
also be made available on a publicly accessible website. Validated
targets published by SBTi on the SBTi website satisfy this requirement.
4. Means of Compliance
The proposed rule allows for a significant or major contractor to
be considered in compliance with the new policy at 23.XX03 if the
action was completed by the significant or major contractor itself or
through its immediate or highest-level owner, except that the
significant or major contractor itself must report the results of the
GHG inventory in SAM (see 23.XX03(a)(2)).
The definitions of ``immediate owner'' and ``highest-level owner''
currently included in the provisions at FAR 52.204-17, Ownership or
Control of Offeror, and the commercial provision at FAR 52.212-3 are
adopted for this rule. Specifically, an ``immediate owner'' is an
entity, other than the offeror, that has direct control of the offeror.
Indicators of control include, but are not limited to, one or more of
the following: ownership or interlocking management, identity of
interests among family members, shared facilities and equipment, and
the common use of employees. ``Highest-level owner'' means the entity
that owns or controls an immediate owner of the offeror, or that owns
or controls one or more entities that control an immediate owner of the
offeror. No entity owns or exercises control of the highest-level
owner.
C. Exceptions
A new FAR section at 23.XX04 outlines certain exceptions. Per FAR
23.XX04(a), a significant or major contractor is not required to
inventory its Scope 1 or Scope 2 emissions and a major contractor is
not required to complete an annual climate disclosure or set science-
based targets, as described in section II.B. of this preamble, if it
is--
An Alaska Native Corporation, a Community Development
Corporation, an Indian tribe, a Native Hawaiian Organization, or a
Tribally owned concern, as those terms are defined at 13 CFR 124.3;
A higher education institution (defined as institutions of
higher education in the OMB Uniform Guidance at 2 CFR part 200, subpart
A, and 20 U.S.C. 1001);
A nonprofit research entity;
A state or local government; or
An entity deriving 80 percent or more of its annual
revenue from Federal management and operating (M&O) contracts that are
subject to agency annual site sustainability reporting requirements.
The exception provided for Federally-recognized tribes or tribal or
Native corporations is in accordance with related Federal procurement
policies and current commercial norms for sustainability reporting. The
exception for institutions of higher education or nonprofit research
entities is provided because a large majority of such institutions that
are significant or major contractors either already set GHG reduction
targets and make sustainability disclosures but are likely doing so (in
accordance with current commercial norms for sustainability reporting)
with standards and systems other than those specified in this rule, or
are pass-through entities with minimal Scope 1 and 2 emissions and
little capacity to manage Scope 3 emissions and climate risks.
An M&O contract is an agreement under which the Government
contracts for the operation, maintenance, or support of a Government-
owned or Government-controlled research, development, special
production, or testing establishment wholly or principally devoted to
one or more major programs of the contracting Federal agency (see FAR
subpart 17.6). A market scan indicates that a majority of current M&O
contract holders derive all, or substantially all, of their revenue
from Federal site M&O contracts. For these contractors, it was
determined that since all or substantially all their facilities and GHG
emissions are already subject to comprehensive Federal sustainability
performance and reporting requirements under their M&O contracts,
related laws, and executive orders, it would be duplicative and
unnecessary to require them to also report using the separate standards
and systems required by this rule. The market scan indicated that a
minority of current M&O contract holders are larger entities deriving
less than 80 percent of their revenue from Federal site M&O contracts,
indicating that they likely operate substantial facilities and emit
substantial GHG emissions, which are not covered by other Federal
sustainability performance and reporting requirements. For these
entities, requiring them to report using the separate standards and
systems required by this rule will allow the Government and the public
to understand the scope of climate risks and impacts attributable to
these entities' substantial non-M&O activities and encourage the
entities to reduce those risks and impacts.
FAR section 23.XX04(b) provides additional exceptions for certain
major contractors. If a major contractor is considered a small business
for the North American Industry Classification System (NAICS) code it
has identified in its SAM registration as its primary NAICS code, or if
it is a nonprofit organization, then it is not required to complete an
annual climate disclosure or to set science-based targets. However, the
major contractor is still required to complete a GHG inventory of its
Scope 1 and Scope 2 emissions and must report these total annual
emissions in SAM.
The public is invited to provide public comments on the
appropriateness of the exceptions included in this proposed rule,
including potential alternatives to be considered in the formation of
the final rule.
[[Page 68315]]
D. Standards
Section II.1. of OMB memorandum M-22-06 directs the FAR Council to
leverage existing third-party standards and systems in the development
of regulatory amendments to promote contractor attention on reduced GHG
emissions and Federal sustainability. In alignment with the National
Technology Transfer and Advancement Act of 1995 and OMB Circular A-119,
which directs Federal agencies to use non-governmental private sector
standards to meet policy and procurement objectives, as described in
section II.B. of this preamble, this rule engages contractors through
widely-accepted protocols and platforms that they are already using to
publicly disclose annual climate data to a variety of other interested
parties. The rule requires contractors to use the following four
standards: the GHG Protocol Corporate Accounting and Reporting
Standards and Guidance, the 2017 Recommendations of the TCFD, the CDP
Climate Change Questionnaire, and the SBTi criteria. The public is
invited to provide public comments on the use of these standards in
this proposed rule, including potential alternatives to be considered
in the formation of the final rule. The following is a summary of the
standards proposed for disclosures by significant and major
contractors.
1. GHG Protocol Corporate Accounting and Reporting Standards and
Guidance
The GHG Protocol Corporate Accounting and Reporting Standard, 2004
revised edition (see https://ghgprotocol.org/sites/default/files//ghg-protocol-revised.pdf) is the most widely used accounting tool to track
corporate GHG emissions. It describes how to complete a comprehensive
GHG inventory across Scope 1, Scope 2, and relevant categories of Scope
3 emissions. This standard is supplemented by Required Greenhouse Gases
in Inventories: Accounting and Reporting Amendment, 2013 (see https://www.ghgprotocol.org/sites/default/files/ghgp/NF3-Amendment_052213.pdf).
Further implementing instructions for quantifying emissions can be
referenced in GHG Protocol Scope 2 Guidance, 2015 (see https://ghgprotocol.org/sites/default/files/standards/Scope%202%20Guidance_Final_Sept26.pdf) and GHG Protocol Corporate Value
Chain (Scope 3) Accounting and Reporting Standard Guidance, 2011 (see
https://ghgprotocol.org/sites/default/files/standards/Value-Chain-Accounting-Reporing-Standard_041613_2.pdf). General information on the
GHG Protocol Corporate Standard and related guidance is available at
https://ghgprotocol.org/corporate-standard.
2. Task Force on Climate-Related Financial Disclosures
In 2017, the TCFD launched recommendations to improve and increase
reporting of climate-related financial information. The TCFD
recommendations cover Governance, Strategy, Risk Management, and
Metrics and Targets. Climate-related risks are considered across two
major categories: (1) risks related to the transition to a lower-carbon
economy, and (2) risks related to the physical impacts of climate
change. Governments around the world are asking companies to provide
consistent and decision-useful information to market participants in
line with TCFD recommendations (see https://assets.bbhub.io/company/sites/60/2021/10/FINAL-2017-TCFD-Report.pdf). In 2021, the TCFD updated
its implementation guidance for the 2017 Recommendations by issuing an
annex titled ``Annex: Implementing the Recommendations of the Task
Force on Climate-related Financial Disclosures.'' The updates reflect
the evolution of disclosure practices, approaches, and user needs (see
https://assets.bbhub.io/company/sites/60/2021/07/2021-TCFD-Implementing_Guidance.pdf).
3. CDP Climate Change Questionnaire
CDP (formerly the Carbon Disclosure Project) is an international
non-profit organization that runs a global environmental disclosure
system. CDP's annual Climate Change Questionnaire enables companies to
report GHG emissions and climate change risk through a standard process
and make their environmental impact transparent to interested parties.
Companies disclose once annually by submitting a response to the CDP
Climate Change Questionnaire through CDP's online response system
(ORS). Companies are able to utilize the GHG Protocol Corporate
Accounting and Reporting Standard when completing their GHG inventory
to disclose through CDP. CDP's disclosure platform provides the
mechanism for reporting climate-related financial risks in line with
the TCFD recommendations as well as reporting annual progress towards
science-based targets.
CDP operates an annual disclosure cycle that enables companies to
disclose emissions and climate risk information at the request of
investors, corporate and government customers, the general public, and
other interested parties. Each year CDP issues the proposed updates to
the questionnaire, which are opened for public consultation in the fall
(approximately September) and the finalized questionnaire and guidance
are available early in the new year (approximately January). The Online
Response System (ORS) opens once annually (approximately April), and
responses must be submitted by a summer deadline (approximately July).
Updated calendars are published by CDP annually: https://www.cdp.net/en/companies-discloser/How-to-disclose-as-a-company.
CDP's Climate Change Questionnaire prompts users for some
disclosures and datapoints that are beyond the scope of this FAR rule,
which is to obtain annual climate disclosures from major contractors
(see II.B.2. of this preamble). These additional datapoints may be of
interest to investors, external non-Federal Government customers, or
the general public who also rely on CDP disclosures to evaluate
corporate climate performance. This proposed FAR rule clarifies at
23.XX03(b)(1) and in 52.223-22 and 52.212-3(t) that the offeror (itself
or through its immediate owner or highest-level owner) is only required
to complete those portions of the CDP Climate Change Questionnaire that
align with the TCFD recommendations as identified by CDP (https://www.cdp.net/en/guidance/how-cdp-is-aligned-to-the-tcfd). This allows
companies to determine what responses in the CDP questionnaire are
appropriate or necessary to complete in order to provide a TCFD-aligned
annual climate disclosure. Questions beyond those that are necessary to
provide an annual climate disclosure for Federal use, as defined by
this rule, are considered optional for the purposes of this rule.
Neither the CDP climate scores, nor answers to questions beyond those
necessary to provide a complete annual climate disclosure, will be used
to evaluate compliance with this FAR rule. The Government seeks public
comment regarding what, if any, additional specificity is needed beyond
``those portions of the CDP Climate Change Questionnaire that align
with the TCFD recommendations as identified by CDP (https://www.cdp.net/en/guidance/how-cdp-is-aligned-to-the-tcfd)''.
4. Science-Based Targets Initiative
SBTi is a partnership between CDP, the United Nations Global
Compact (UNGC), the World Resources Institute (WRI), and the World Wide
Fund for Nature (WWF, also known as the World Wildlife Fund). Science-
based targets provide a clearly-defined pathway for companies to reduce
GHG emissions in line with reductions that the latest
[[Page 68316]]
climate science deems necessary to meet the goals of the Paris
Agreement--limiting global warming to well below 2 [deg]C above pre-
industrial levels and pursuing efforts to limit warming to 1.5 [deg]C.
Companies can commit to set a science-based target and then, within two
years, must develop a science-based target and have it validated
through the SBTi target validation process.
E. Starting Dates
This proposed rule acknowledges that significant and major
contractors will need time to come into compliance with the new policy
by including delayed starting dates. A significant or major contractor
that cannot represent on or after these starting dates that it has
complied with the new policy will be presumed to be a nonresponsible
prospective contractor for Federal procurements (see section II.G. of
this preamble).
Starting one year after publication of a final rule, a significant
or major contractor (itself or through its immediate owner or highest-
level owner) must have completed a GHG inventory and the significant or
major contractor must have disclosed the total annual Scope 1 and Scope
2 emissions from its most recent inventory in SAM. This one-year period
provides the time needed for significant or major contractors to become
familiar with the GHG Protocol Corporate Accounting and Reporting
Standard, to survey the GHG emissions, and for significant or major
contractors to report in SAM the total metric tons of carbon dioxide
equivalent (MT CO2e) of Scope 1 and Scope 2 emissions.
The compliance requirements for major contractors will start two
years after publication of a final rule. This delayed starting date
provides a major contractor (or its immediate owner or highest-level
owner) additional time to complete a GHG inventory that covers relevant
Scope 3 emissions; conduct a climate risk assessment and identify
risks; complete the CDP Climate Change Questionnaire; and commit to,
develop, and obtain SBTi validation of a science-based target.
F. Annual Representation
Amendments are proposed to the annual representations in the
solicitation provision at FAR 52.223-22, Public Disclosure of Climate
Information--Representation, and the corresponding representation in
paragraph (t) of the provision at FAR 52.212-3 for acquisitions for
commercial products or commercial services, to collect information on
whether an offeror is in compliance with the new policy. This provision
continues to be prescribed for use only when offerors are required to
be registered in SAM, though the prescription has been moved to FAR
section 23.XX07 of the new subpart. All offerors that register in SAM
will be required to represent on an annual basis whether they are a
significant contractor or a major contractor (see section II.A. of this
preamble). If an offeror represents that it is a significant or major
contractor, then the offeror will be required to represent whether it--
Is subject to an exception (see section II.C. of this
preamble);
Has completed, within its current or previous fiscal year,
a GHG inventory of the annual Scope 1 and Scope 2 emissions (evidenced
by a report in SAM of the total annual Scope 1 and Scope 2 emissions
identified in its most recent inventory);
Makes available on a publicly accessible website an annual
climate disclosure that was completed using the CDP Climate Change
Questionnaire within its current or previous fiscal year; and
Makes available on a publicly accessible website a
science-based target that has been validated by SBTi.
The new representations are intended to assist the contracting
officer in determining whether the policy at 23.XX03 applies to an
offeror and, if so, whether the offeror is in compliance. The new FAR
section 23.XX05, Procedures, provides instructions for the contracting
officer who is reviewing the representations in paragraph (d) of the
provision at FAR 52.223-22 (or the equivalent representations in the
commercial provision at FAR 52.212-3(t)). This section includes tables
to illustrate the specific responses from offerors that are required to
indicate that the offeror is in compliance. If an offeror's
representations indicate that the offeror is a significant or major
contractor and it is not in compliance with the policy at FAR 23.XX03
(or if the contracting officer has reason to question the
representations), then the contracting officer is directed to follow
the procedures at FAR 9.104-3(e) for determining whether the offeror is
responsible (see section II.G. of this preamble).
G. Responsibility Determinations
Per FAR section 23.XX05(c), the contracting officer is directed to
follow the procedures at FAR section 9.104-3(e) for determining
responsibility when an offeror represents that it is not in compliance
with the policy at 23.XX03 when it should be, or if there is reason to
question the offeror's representation.
Per the new procedures at FAR 9.104-3(e), the contracting officer
shall presume the prospective contractor is nonresponsible pursuant to
9.104-1, unless the contracting officer determines that--
Noncompliance resulted from circumstances properly beyond
the prospective contractor's control;
The prospective contractor has provided sufficient
documentation that demonstrates substantial efforts to comply; and
The prospective contractor has made a public commitment to
comply as soon as possible on a publicly accessible website (within one
year).
In making this determination the contracting officer is directed to
request information from the prospective contractor to determine what
efforts it has made to comply with each requirement at FAR 22.XX03 and
the basis for the failure to comply.
FAR 9.104-3(e)(3) also clarifies that a significant or major
contractor who meets one of the exceptions at FAR 23.XX04 (see section
II.C. of this preamble) and acquisitions that are subject to an
exemption or waiver pursuant to FAR 23.XX06 (see section II.H. of this
preamble) are not subject to the new responsibility standard and
procedures.
H. Exemptions and Waivers
The new section at 23.XX06 provides for certain exemptions from and
waivers to the new procedures for determining responsibility at 23.XX05
and the new responsibility standards at FAR 9.104-3(e) for determining
whether a significant or major contractor is responsible (discussed in
section II.G. of this preamble). For example, the new procedures do not
apply to acquisitions listed at FAR 4.1102(a) where the offeror is
exempt from the requirement to be registered in SAM at the time an
offer is submitted, since enforcement of the policy at FAR 23.XX03 is
accomplished via review of a significant or major contractor's
representations in SAM as described in FAR section 23.XX05.
The procedures at FAR section 23.XX05 may be waived by the senior
procurement executive for facilities, business units, or other defined
units for national security purposes, or for emergencies, national
security, or other mission essential purposes. The senior procurement
executive may also provide a waiver for a period not to exceed one
calendar year to enable an entity an additional year to come into
compliance. An agency must make such waivers available on its agency
website.
[[Page 68317]]
I. Definitions
Definitions of the following terms are provided in FAR section
23.XX02 and in paragraph (a) of the solicitation provisions at FAR
52.223-22 and 52.212-3: ``annual climate disclosure,'' ``GHG
inventory,'' ``major contractor,'' ``publicly accessible website,''
``science-based target,'' ``Scope 1 emissions,'' ``Scope 2 emissions,''
``Scope 3 emissions,'' and ``significant contractor.'' The definitions
of ``immediate owner'' and ``highest-level owner'' that are currently
included in the provision at FAR 52.212-3(a) are added to FAR section
23.XX02 and the solicitation provision at FAR 52.223-22. The current
definition of ``greenhouse gases'' remains at FAR section 23.001 with
minor spelling corrections.
J. Conforming Changes
Given that the policy on climate disclosures is moved to a new
subpart at FAR 23.XX, conforming changes are proposed at FAR subpart
23.8 to remove the coverage of disclosure of GHG emissions and
reduction goals. As a result, 23.802(c) and (d) and 23.804(b) are
removed and the remaining paragraphs at FAR sections 23.800 and 23.804
are renumbered accordingly. A cross-reference to the new subpart is
added at 23.800(b). Conforming updates to the cross-references to FAR
23.804 are also proposed in FAR 52.213-4, and the prescription
references at FAR 52.223-11, 52.223-12, 52.223-20, and 52.223-21. In
addition, the title of the provision at FAR 52.223-22 is updated in the
provision at FAR 52.204-8, Annual Representations and Certifications,
and in the list of provisions at FAR 4.1202(a).
K. Public Input
The public is specifically invited to provide public comments on
the following:
The appropriateness of the exceptions identified in
section II.C. of this preamble, including potential alternatives to be
considered in the formation of the final rule.
The use of the standards identified in section II.D. of
this preamble, including potential alternatives to be considered in the
formation of the final rule.
With regards to the CDP Climate Change Questionnaire
discussed in section II.D.3. of this preamble, whether any specificity
beyond ``those portions of the CDP Climate Change Questionnaire that
align with the TCFD as identified by CDP (https://www.cdp.net/en/guidance/how-cdp-is-aligned-to-the-tcfd)'' is necessary.
III. Applicability to Contracts at or Below the Simplified Acquisition
Threshold (SAT), for Commercial Products (Including Commercially
Available Off-the-Shelf (COTS) Items), and for Commercial Services
This rule proposes to amend the annual representation in the
solicitation provision at FAR 52.223-22, Public Disclosure of Climate
Information--Representation, and the corresponding representation in
paragraph (t) of the solicitation provision at FAR 52.212-3, Offeror
Representations and Certifications--Commercial Products and Commercial
Services. The provision at FAR 52.223-22 will continue to be prescribed
for use in solicitations that also include the provision at FAR 52.204-
7, System for Award Management. This prescription ensures that all
offerors who are required to register in SAM and who received $7.5
million or more in Federal contract obligations in the prior Federal
fiscal year, including those who compete exclusively for contracts for
commercial products or commercial services or those valued at or below
the SAT, provide a response to the revised representations.
The new procedures at FAR 22.XX05 and new standards at FAR 9.104
for determining the responsibility of a prospective contractor, if it
is a significant or major contractor, will apply to acquisitions of
commercial products (including COTS items) or commercial services, and
to acquisitions valued at or below the SAT. Failure to apply the new
procedures and standards for responsibility determinations to these
types of acquisitions would not accomplish the intended policy
objective of the Executive Order. These procedures ensure the
Government is able to enforce the disclosure requirements for
significant and major contractors.
IV. Expected Impact of the Rule
This rule proposes to create a new standard of responsibility.
Specifically, a prospective contractor that is a significant or major
contractor will be presumed to be nonresponsible unless--
Starting one year after publication of a final rule, the
significant or major contractor (itself or through its immediate owner
or highest-level owner) has completed a GHG inventory of its annual
Scope 1 and Scope 2 GHG emissions, and the significant or major
contractor has reported the total annual Scope 1 and Scope 2 emissions
from its most recent inventory in SAM at https://www.sam.gov; and
Starting two years after publication of a final rule, a
major contractor (itself or through its immediate owner or highest-
level owner) has submitted an annual climate disclosure within its
current or previous fiscal year by completing those portions of the CDP
Climate Change Questionnaire that align with the TCFD recommendations
as identified by CDP (https://www.cdp.net/en/guidance/how-cdp-is-aligned-to-the-tcfd) and has developed a science-based target and had
the target validated by SBTi within the previous five calendar years.
When making a responsibility determination, a contracting officer
will rely on the representation of a prospective contractor in the
revised solicitation provision at FAR 52.223-22 (or the equivalent
representations in the commercial provision at FAR 52.212-3(t))
regarding whether the prospective contractor is a significant or major
contractor and, if so, whether it is in compliance with the new
disclosure and target requirements, as applicable. If a prospective
contractor's representation indicates that it is a significant or major
contractor, is not subject to an exception, and is not in compliance,
then the contracting officer will request additional information from
the prospective contractor regarding the efforts it has made to comply
before making a responsibility determination, unless an exemption or
waiver applies.
A. General Compliance Requirements
1. Representations in SAM
All offerors that register in SAM will be required to represent in
paragraph (d)(1) of the provision at FAR 52.223-22 (or the equivalent
representations in the commercial provision at FAR 52.212-3(t)(3)(i))
whether the offeror meets the definition of a significant or major
contractor. An offeror is considered a ``significant contractor'' if
the offeror received $7.5 million or more, but not exceeding $50
million, in Federal contract obligations in the prior Federal fiscal
year. An offeror is considered a ``major contractor'' if the offeror
received more than $50 million in Federal contract obligations in the
prior Federal fiscal year. Only offerors that represent that they are a
significant or major contractor will be required to complete the
remaining representations in paragraphs (d)(2) through (d)(5) of the
provision at FAR 52.223-22 (or the equivalent representations in the
commercial provision at FAR 52.212-3(t)(3)(ii) through (v)).
An offeror will represent in paragraph (d)(2) of the provision
whether the offeror meets an exception to the new
[[Page 68318]]
policy per the new section at FAR 23.XX04. The contracting officer uses
the offeror representations in this paragraph to determine if an
offeror who represents in paragraph (d)(1) of the provision that it is
a significant or major contractor is subject to the new disclosure and
compliance requirements.
The representation in paragraph (d)(3) of the provision gathers
information about whether a significant or major contractor (itself or
through its immediate owner or highest-level owner) has completed
within its current or previous fiscal year a GHG inventory of its
annual Scope 1 and Scope 2 emissions. Offerors will be required to
report in this representation the total Scope 1 and Scope 2 emissions
identified in its most recent GHG inventory.
The representations in paragraph (d)(4) and (d)(5) of the provision
gather information regarding whether a major contractor (itself or
through its immediate owner or highest-level owner) makes available on
a publicly accessible website:
An annual climate disclosure that was completed using the
CDP Climate Change Questionnaire within its current or previous fiscal
year; and
A science-based target that has been validated by SBTi
within the previous five calendar years.
An offeror that is a major contractor is also required to report in
paragraph (e) of the provision at FAR 52.223-22 (or in paragraph (t)(4)
of the commercial provision at FAR 52.212-3) the website(s) where the
annual climate disclosure and validated science-based target are made
publicly available. While the compliance requirements referenced in the
last two representations at paragraphs (d)(4) and (d)(5) are only
applicable to major contractors, both significant and major contractors
will be required to complete these representations. This allows the
Government to monitor whether significant contractors are taking steps
to provide enhanced climate disclosures and to reduce their GHG
emissions.
2. GHG Inventory
Starting one year after publication of a final rule, a significant
and major contractor (or their immediate owner or highest-level owner)
must follow the GHG Protocol Corporate Accounting and Reporting
Standard (see section II.D.1. of this preamble) to complete a GHG
inventory of the Scope 1 and Scope 2 emissions. Starting two years
after publication of a final rule, major contractors will also
inventory relevant Scope 3 emissions. Companies completing a GHG
inventory for the first time will often begin by reviewing accounting
standards and methods, determining organizational and operational
boundaries, and choosing a reporting and base year. They will collect
data aligned to that year from across the business (including but not
limited to fuel purchases, such as gasoline and heating oil, and
electricity bills) and utilize a GHG calculator to determine the
associated GHG emissions emitted across Scope 1, Scope 2, and (if
applicable) relevant Scope 3 emissions expressed in MT CO2e. Companies
will likely develop a GHG Inventory Management Plan to formalize data
collection procedures, in order to ensure consistency on an annual
basis.
3. Annual Climate Disclosure
Starting two years after publication of a final rule, a major
contractor (or its immediate or highest-level owner) must provide an
annual climate disclosure that aligns with the 2017 recommendations of
the TCFD and the 2021 TCFD update (see sections II.B.2 and II.D.2. of
this preamble). Companies following the TCFD recommendations will
assess two types of climate risks: (1) transition risks associated with
the transition to a lower-carbon global economy, the most common of
which relate to policy and legal actions, technology changes, market
responses, and reputational considerations; and (2) physical risks
emanating from climate change, which can be event-driven (acute) such
as increased severity of extreme weather events (e.g., cyclones,
droughts, floods, and fires) as well as longer-term shifts (chronic) in
precipitation and temperature and increased variability in weather
patterns (e.g., sea level rise).
The major contractor (or its immediate or highest-level owner) must
provide its annual climate disclosures by completing those portions of
the CDP Climate Change Questionnaire that align with the TCFD as
identified by CDP (https://www.cdp.net/en/guidance/how-cdp-is-aligned-to-the-tcfd). Companies receive an invitation to disclose once annually
through CDP on behalf of all investors, corporate customers, and/or
Government customers requesting their response. Companies who have not
received an invitation can indicate their intention to disclose as a
``self-selected company (SSC)'' by contacting [email protected].
Companies complete and submit their response to the CDP Climate Change
Questionnaire through CDP's online response system (ORS). The CDP
Climate Change Questionnaire can be saved in draft form in the ORS,
exported for internal completion and review, and then submitted through
the ORS prior to the relevant deadline. CDP provides detailed guidance
to support companies in understanding and completing the questionnaire
(see https://www.cdp.net/en/guidance/guidance-for-companies).
4. Science-Based Targets
Starting two years after publication of a final rule, a major
contractor will also be required to develop (itself or through its
immediate or highest-level owner) a science-based target and have the
target validated by SBTi. Companies can commit to set a science-based
target by submitting a letter to SBTi and will be recognized as
``committed'' on the SBTi website. Once committed, a company has 24
months to submit their targets to SBTi for validation. Companies
independently develop their science-based target in line with science-
based criteria (including sector-specific guidance, where relevant),
which are available on the SBTi website (https://sciencebasedtargets.org/). Companies then submit the science-based
target to SBTi for validation. Validated targets are published one
month after validation, unless otherwise instructed. Targets not
receiving validation are provided with detailed feedback from expert
reviewers and an opportunity to resubmit. Following validation,
companies should disclose emissions annually and monitor progress on
reaching the target.
B. Benefit
The Federal Government is the world's single largest purchaser of
goods and services, spending over $650 billion in contracts in fiscal
year 2020 alone. Public procurement can shift markets, drive
innovation, and be a catalyst for adoption of new norms and global
standards. Requiring significant and major contractors to publicly
disclose their GHG emissions and requiring major contractors to
publicly disclose their climate-related financial risk and set science-
based reduction targets will give visibility to major annual sources of
GHG emissions and climate risks throughout the Federal supply chain and
could, in turn, provide insights into the entire U.S. economy. While
disclosure alone does not reduce emissions and climate risk, the
expectation of increased public transparency and accountability may
prompt suppliers to take action following a ``what gets measured gets
managed'' mantra, and thus increase the resilience of the Federal
supply chain.
Several discrete categories of benefits are expected from this
regulation to
[[Page 68319]]
include: identifying areas for increased efficiency and reduced risks;
understanding and reduction of supply chain vulnerabilities; aligning
targets to address climate change; improved transparency,
accountability, and ability of Federal agencies to collaborate with
contractors; and increased efficiency of disclosure via
standardization.
1. Identifying Areas for Increased Efficiency and Reduced Risks
Companies who are required to publicly disclose their GHG emissions
and climate risks may be prompted to thoroughly investigate their
operations and supply chains, which may, in turn, reveal opportunities
to realize efficiencies and manage risks. Any efficiency improvements
would, in turn, flow into the company's performance on Federal
contracts. The activity data that is examined (e.g., fuel and
electricity bills) to conduct a GHG inventory can reveal areas where
efficiencies may be realized. After conducting a GHG inventory, many
companies may choose to address sources of emissions. For example, the
Federal Government's assessment of its GHG footprint has revealed the
most significant areas of GHG emissions and climate risks across the
Federal Government's own operations and supply chains, which prompted
the Federal Sustainability Plan to establish ambitious programs to
address them: zero emissions vehicles, carbon pollution free
electricity, net zero buildings, and net zero procurement. Companies
take widely varied approaches to managing operational efficiencies
relevant to their GHG emissions, ranging from no action to
opportunistic system upgrades to purchasing offsets to address
emissions outside of a company's boundaries. By requiring the
development, maintenance, and public disclosure of contractor GHG
inventories and reduction targets, this rule may prompt contractors to
undertake a comprehensive analysis of their energy and fuel use,
electricity procurement, and other emissions sources (e.g.,
refrigerants, agricultural and industrial activities), which may prompt
action to invest in GHG management opportunities across their
facilities, operations, and supply chains with multi-year paybacks.
Well-managed contractors may choose to voluntarily manage GHGs and cost
savings, but these expanded expectations will set a level playing field
for a wider range of contractors to get started.
Those contractors who choose to address GHG emissions may
experience benefits in cost savings, as shown by the Government's own
experience as well as that of contractors who have voluntarily
disclosed emissions. The Federal Government has tracked and publicly
disclosed its Scope 1 and 2 emissions annually since 2008, while
implementing targets for energy and water efficiency and emissions
reduction. The Government's practice of setting and meeting these
targets has led to a reduction of 32.2 percent in Federal agency
emissions from standard operations since 2008, reduction in total
annual energy use (including all facility and mobile sources) from
approximately 1,143,000 Billion British thermal units (BBtu) in 2008 to
849,000 BBtu in 2020 (25 percent reduction), and a reduction of total
annual energy costs from $29.4 billion in 2008 to $17.1 billion in 2020
(reduction of $12.3 billion annually, or 41.8 percent, in inflation-
adjusted dollars). Similarly, in 2021, companies (including, but not
limited to, Federal contractors) disclosing emissions and climate risk
through the CDP disclosure system independently reported emissions and
cost savings from emissions reduction activities implemented in the
given reporting year; in aggregate, these benefits collectively
amounted to 1.8 billion metric tons (MT) CO2e in emissions reductions
with over $29 billion in associated cost savings for those suppliers.
Public disclosure of this information in a standardized format creates
a global database that can be utilized for tracking year-over-year
progress, sharing ideas among companies with similar emissions
profiles, and enabling benchmarking of performance.
2. Understanding and Reduction of Supply Chain Vulnerabilities
In accordance with E.O. 14030, this proposed rule would require
major contractors who have a significant share of Government business
to identify their climate-related financial risks, including physical
and transition risks. These risks could impact the contractor's
business operations in the short, medium, and long-term. The required
disclosures will prompt entities to investigate and understand these
risks, develop plans to mitigate them, and communicate the risks and
mitigation plans to the public and Federal agencies. These disclosures
will enable the Government to understand how and when the risks faced
by major contractors (some of which are mission-critical) and their
supply chains, including but not limited to increased likelihood of
disruptive climate and weather events and material and energy cost
fluctuations, may impact the agencies' own missions and activities.
This understanding will increase the effectiveness of the Federal
supply chain by enabling agencies to develop and improve their own
plans to safeguard their assets and missions, ensuring uninterrupted
provision of critical services to the U.S. public. Currently, the
Federal Government and general public have significantly reduced
visibility into the preparedness of major contractors upon whom the
Government relies on for products and services (some of which are
critical). For example, per a U.S. Government Accountability Office
report (GAO-16-32, Federal Supply Chains: Opportunities to Improve the
Management of Climate-Related Risks), in October 2012, Superstorm Sandy
caused widespread damage to logistics and transportation networks
throughout the Northeast, leading to major fuel shortages for agencies
to overcome while providing critical Federal services, such as disaster
relief and mail delivery, and causing an estimated $70 billion in
direct damages and lost economic output.
Mitigating the effects of climate change by reducing emissions can
provide important economic, ecological, and social benefits by
significantly reducing major risks to the U.S. economy. According to
the U.S. Fourth National Climate Assessment (see Key Message 2, Chapter
29) published by the U.S. Global Change Research Program in 2018, a
Congressionally mandated, joint report of thirteen U.S. agencies with
research programs and expertise on changes in the global environment
and their implications for society:
In the absence of more significant global mitigation efforts,
climate change is projected to impose substantial damages on the
U.S. economy, human health, and the environment. Under scenarios
with high emissions and limited or no adaptation, annual losses in
some sectors are estimated to grow to hundreds of billions of
dollars by the end of the century. It is very likely that some
physical and ecological impacts will be irreversible for thousands
of years, while others will be permanent.
3. Aligning Targets To Address Climate Change
The Federal Government has committed to reducing its Scope 1, 2,
and 3 GHG emissions, including those associated with Federal
procurement activities, to achieve a net zero economy by 2050. As the
single largest purchaser in the world, Federal procurement represents
both a substantial contribution to climate change emissions and a
significant opportunity to reduce them. GSA has estimated that
emissions from contractors performing Federal contracts are
significantly
[[Page 68320]]
greater (150 million MT CO2e in Fiscal Year 2019) than emissions from
Federal buildings and non-tactical fleets (37 million MT CO2e) (see
https://www.gsa.gov/Governmentwide-initiatives/Federal-highperformance-green-buildings/resource-library/sustainable-acquisition). The Federal
Government has committed to a 65 percent reduction in its Scope 1 and 2
operational emissions by 2030 (from 2008 levels), demonstrating it is
doing its part via internal operations to achieve the U.S. Nationally
Determined Contribution of a 50-52 percent economy-wide reduction in
emissions by 2030. In order to similarly reduce its much greater Scope
3 emissions, the Federal Government's best solution is to require that
its major contractors quantify their GHG emissions and set science-
based targets to align ambitions and identify areas for collaboration
on shared goals.
According to the EPA, in addition to global or national economic
benefits, forward thinking organizations also recognize internal
benefits of setting and publicly disclosing GHG reduction targets,
including increasing senior management attention and funding for
investing in GHG reduction projects, encouraging innovation, improving
employee morale, and helping to recruiting and retain qualified
employees (see https://www.epa.gov/climateleadership/target-setting).
CDP's 2021 post-disclosure survey found that 76 percent of responding
companies say climate disclosure helps ``boost their competitive
advantage'' and 86 percent say that ``protecting and improving the
reputation of my organization'' is an important benefit of disclosure
(see https://www.cdp.net/en/companies-discloser).
More than 3,600 companies globally, representing over one third of
the global economy's market capitalization, have voluntarily committed
to setting science-based targets for reducing emissions (see https://sciencebasedtargets.org/). A 2018 survey of 185 company executives from
SBTi-committed businesses found that 79 percent of companies
experienced a brand reputation boost, 63 percent saw an increase in
innovation, 55 percent reported that preparing for a low-carbon
transition led to a newly earned competitive advantage (see https://sciencebasedtargets.org/blog/six-business-benefits-of-setting-science-based-targets). Companies with targets validated by SBTi are reducing
emissions at an accelerating pace, collectively achieving 12 percent
Scope 1 and 2 emissions reduction in 2020 and a total emissions
decrease of 29 percent between 2015 and 2020. According to SBTi's
science-based target setting methodologies, an annual emissions
reduction of at least 4.2 percent is required to align organizations
with the Paris Agreement goal of 1.5[deg]C maximum global temperature
rise (see https://sciencebasedtargets.org/reports/sbti-progress-report-2021). Requiring that major contractors set, disclose, and maintain
validation of such ambitious climate targets can thus be an effective
tool for addressing the Federal Government's Scope 3 emissions and
associated risks of climate change to the national economy, while
providing economic and other benefits to the contractors themselves.
4. Improved Transparency, Accountability, and Ability To Collaborate
With Suppliers
Without knowledge of existing ``hot spots'' (emissions-intensive
sectors and activities) and cost-effective emissions reduction
opportunities, it may be difficult for Federal agencies and contractors
to understand where to start in seeking to reduce emissions, how to
prioritize emissions reduction programs and activities, and how much to
invest in each. Public disclosure provides transparency into the
historical costs and impacts of organizational strategies and
activities, the current management strategies of peer and partner
organizations, and their future-focused targets. Disclosure of climate
risks and management strategies enables benchmarking and collaborative
opportunities (1) between Federal contractors and (2) between
contractors and the Government, thereby increasing economy of efforts.
Public disclosures thus benefit collective accountability for the
shared challenge of addressing climate change throughout the global
economy and enable transparent tracking of progress over time.
Furthermore, for companies with significant Scope 3 emissions,
supply chain engagement can be an opportunity for further efficiency,
collaboration and innovation. In 2021, of the 13,000 companies
reporting through CDP, 71 percent of companies reported their Scope 1
and 2 emissions, while only 20 percent reported emissions associated
with products and goods they purchase (Scope 3). However, Scope 3
emissions for a company are, on average, over 11 times higher than
operational emissions. Companies can calculate Scope 3 emissions using
a hybrid approach of disclosed and modeled data that improves over time
as data quality and supplier engagement improve. Only 38 percent of
companies who disclose through CDP currently report that they engage
their own suppliers on sustainability, however those who do engage
suppliers realize significant cost and emissions savings; companies
engaging their suppliers through CDP resulted in a reduction of 231
million tons of CO2e in 2021. Supplier engagement represents an
opportunity for many companies to drive additional benefits for the
Federal government and national economy by encouraging contractors to
work with their suppliers, contractors, and other entities in their
supply chains to identify cost-effective ways to reduce emissions.
Through this rule, the Federal Government will communicate to its
prospective contractors and their supply chains that transparent
disclosure and management of supply chain GHG emissions and climate
risk can be a matter of social license to operate and contractual
access to important customers, thus multiplying the potential for
reducing energy costs and associated emissions.
5. Increased Efficiency of Disclosure via Standardization
In addition to the above benefits, this rule will lead to increased
efficiency in the processes and industries by which major contractors
disclose climate related financial risks. By aligning with global
standards such as the TCFD recommendations and SBTi target-setting
methodologies, as well as the leading centralized data platform CDP
(which implements and is aligned with TCFD), this rule will reinforce
existing industry trends toward standardization around these systems,
which are already used by large numbers of U.S. companies because they
are required in order to meet the demands of other entities, such as
non-Federal customers and investors. The standards and systems required
by this rule will thus allow affected companies to develop disclosures
that efficiently meet multiple requirements for Federal procurement
(this rule), access to capital markets (investors' needs), and other
existing market requirements (such as ratings and rankings systems).
Much of this standardization to date has occurred outside of the
Federal Government, led by NGOs, investors, companies and ratings and
rankings platforms as well as cities, states, and other national
governments. As discussed in section I. of this preamble, the SEC
recently proposed a regulation that if adopted would require similar
annual disclosures of climate related financial risk for SEC
registrants, including publicly listed/traded companies, many of whom
are also Federal contractors. To the extent that there may be alignment
between the
[[Page 68321]]
SEC's proposed rule and this rule if both are adopted, companies making
these disclosures and users of the information (e.g., the Federal
Government, investors, and other entities) will benefit from greater
standardization of climate-related disclosures.
C. Estimated Public Costs
The total estimated public costs associated with this FAR rule in
millions over a ten-year period (calculated at a 3-percent and 7-
percent discount rate) are as follows:
------------------------------------------------------------------------
3% Discount 7% Discount
Estimated costs rate rate
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Present Value........................... $3,935 $3,262
Annualized.............................. 461 464
------------------------------------------------------------------------
The following is a summary from the Regulatory Impact Analysis
(RIA) of the estimated costs impact for each general compliance
requirement on significant and major contractors (see section II.A. of
this preamble). The full RIA is available at https://www.regulations.gov (search for ``FAR Case 2021-015'' click ``Open
Docket,'' and view ``Supporting Documents''). The RIA includes a
detailed discussion of the assumptions and methodologies used to
estimate the cost of this regulatory action, including the specific
impact and costs for small businesses. On March 15, 2021, the SEC's
Acting Chair Allison Herren Lee posted a request for information (RFI)
on costs associated with preparation of annual climate disclosures for
consideration in the development of their proposed rule (see discussion
in section I of this preamble). Several respondents to the RFI provided
specific cost data for companies that currently provide annual climate
disclosures that align with the TCFD or other voluntary disclosure
frameworks. Additionally, consulting firms submitted information on
prices charged for associated climate consultant services. The cost
information considered by the SEC in their proposing release was used
to estimate the potential costs of this proposed FAR rule. This
includes information provided in response to the RFI and information
from the impact assessment produced by the United Kingdom (UK)
Department for Business, Energy & Industrial Strategy, as part of its
Green Finance Strategy, for a UK rule that requires certain TCFD-
aligned disclosures from suppliers (see https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/Government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/1055931/tcfd-final-stage-ia.pdf).
1. Regulatory Familiarization
Regulatory familiarization includes the amount of time and effort
it takes a company to become familiar with the requirements of the
proposed rule and the references standards. A page count of the rule,
the various standards, the CDP Climate Change Questionnaire, and the
SBTi Guidance is used to calculate the cost for regulatory
familiarization. We assume individuals who review the documents will
spend 6 minutes per page. Significant contractors (regardless of
business size) and major contractors that are small businesses will be
required to become familiar with the requirements of this rule and the
GHG Protocol Corporate Standard (except Scope 3 guidance). The total
page count is 360 pages, which take 36 hours per person to review (360
pages * 0.1 hours/page). Major contractors that are other than small
business will be required to become familiar with the rule and all GHG
Protocol, TCFD, CDP, and SBTi guidance referenced in this rule. The
total page count is 967 pages, which take 97 hours per person to review
(967 pages * 0.1 hours/page rounded to the nearest whole number). The
per entity and total costs are summarized as follows:
For a significant contractor that is other than a small
business, it is estimated that 1 manager at a rate of $94 per hour, 1
management analyst at a rate of $77 per hour, and 2 business
specialists at a rate of $61 per hour will review the relevant
documents, a total cost of $10,548 per contractor. The total estimated
cost for regulatory familiarization in the first year of implementation
is $16,644,744 (1,578 contractors * $10,548/contractor).
For a significant contractor that is a small business, it
is estimated that 1 manager and 1 management analyst will review the
relevant documents, a total cost of $6,156 per contractor. The total
estimated cost is $17,452,260 (2,835 contractors * $6,156/contractor).
For a major contractor that is other than a small
business, it is estimated that 1 manager, 2 management analysts, and 4
business specialists will review the relevant documents, a total cost
of $47,724. The total estimated cost is $46,005,936 (964 contractors *
$47,724/contractor).
For a major contractor that is a small business, it is
estimated that 1 manager and 1 business specialist will review the
relevant documents, a total cost of $8,928 per contractor. The total
estimated cost is $17,452,260 (389 contractors * $8,928/contractor).
2. Annual Representations
All 491,690 entities that are registered in SAM as interested in
pursuing Government contracts, of which 364,290 entities are considered
small for their primary NAICS code, will be required to complete the
first representation in SAM for the provision at FAR 52.223-22(d)(1)
and/or the commercial provision at FAR 52.212-3(t)(3)(i) regarding
whether they meet the definition of a significant or major contractor.
It is estimated that, on average for each registration, it will take a
business specialist six minutes at an hourly rate of $61 to determine
whether they meet the definition of a significant or major contractor.
The total estimated annual cost is $2,999,309 (491,690 registrants *
0.1 hours/registrant * $61/hour), of which $2,222,169 is attributed to
364,290 small businesses. The estimated cost to complete the
representation is the same in subsequent years.
The 5,766 significant and major contractors expected to be impacted
by this rule will be required to complete the remaining representations
regarding whether the offeror meets an exemption and whether the
offeror (itself or through its immediate owner or highest-level owner)
has completed the GHG inventory of scope 1 and 2 emissions, made an
annual climate disclosure via CDP, and set science-based targets. It is
estimated that, on average for each registrant, it will take a business
specialist one hour to complete the remaining representations. The
total estimated annual cost is $351,726 (5,766 registrants * 1 hour/
registrant * $61/hour), of which $196,664 is attributed to 3,224 small
businesses. The estimated cost to complete the representations is the
same in subsequent years.
3. GHG Inventory of Scope 1 and 2 Emissions
The following is a summary of the costs for significant contractors
[[Page 68322]]
(regardless of size) and major contractors (small businesses only) to
complete inventories of their Scope 1 and Scope 2 emissions. It is
expected that a contractor will use a mix of internal personnel and
external consultants to complete the annual greenhouse gas inventory.
Internal personnel costs include the cost for contractor employees to
gather, compile, and review GHG emissions data. A contractor may use
external consultants to assist with, and advise on, GHG inventories. It
is also assumed that contractors will see a 25 percent reduction in
burden after the first year of implementation.
For a significant contractor that is other than a small business,
it is estimated that it takes two business specialists 40 hours each at
an hourly rate of $61 to gather information, one management analyst 20
hours at an hourly rate of $77 to process and compile the information,
and one senior manager 2 hours at an hourly rate of $94 to review the
compiled information. It is estimated that a significant contractor
that is other than a small business will require approximately 409
external consultant hours at an hourly rate of $104. The total
estimated cost per entity is $63,868 in the initial year of
implementation and $47,983 annually thereafter.
For significant and major contractors that are small businesses, it
is estimated that it will take half as much time to conduct a GHG
inventory, or 20 hours for one business specialist, 10 hours for one
management analyst, and 1 hour for one senior manager. These
contractors are also estimated to require approximately 153 external
consultant hours. The total estimated cost per entity is $24,724 in the
initial year of implementation and $18,640 annually thereafter.
Therefore, for the 1,578 other than small business significant
contractors, the total estimated cost to conduct Scope 1 and 2 GHG
inventories is $100,783,704 (1,578 contractors * $63,868/contractor) in
the initial year of implementation and $75,717,174 (1,578 contractors *
$47,983/contractor) annually thereafter. For the 2,835 significant
contractors and 389 major contractors that are small businesses, the
total estimated cost is $79,710,176 (3,224 contractors * $24,724/
contractor) in the initial year of implementation and $60,095,360
(3,244 contractors * $18,640/contractor) annually thereafter.
4. Annual Climate Disclosure and Science-Based Targets
The estimate of internal and external costs for major contractors
that are other than small businesses to prepare an annual climate
disclosure, submit the disclosure via the CDP Climate Change
Questionnaire, set a science-based target, and have the target
validated by SBTi, is based on cost information shared by respondents
in response to the RFI. The RIA available at https://www.regulations.gov (search for ``FAR Case 2021-015'' click ``Open
Docket,'' and view ``Supporting Documents'') includes a summary of the
respondent information and assumptions made to estimate these costs. As
stated in the SEC proposed rule, the respondents to the RFI provided
information on general costs for climate disclosures. Some respondent
estimates included costs for activities not covered by this rule, which
is similar to the FAR rule. Other respondents provided an aggregate
cost estimate making it difficult to determine how representative the
costs are. Actual costs for individual contractors impacted by this
rule may vary significantly depending on the contractor's size,
industry, business model, corporate structure, level of experience with
climate disclosures, etc.
Approximately 671 of the 964 major contractors that are other than
small businesses currently represent that they do not publicly disclose
information about their emissions or reduction goals. As such, it is
assumed that these contractors have no experience with climate
disclosures or targets. It is estimated that these contractors will
have internal personnel costs of approximately $257,103 and external
consultant costs of approximately $201,600, a total of $458,703 per
contractor in the first year of implementation. The estimated annual
cost after the first year is $412,825, a 10 percent reduction. These
contractors will also be required to pay a $9,500 fee for SBTi to
validate their science-based target every five years, an annualized
cost of $1,900 per year. Therefore, the total estimated cost for these
major contractors is $309,064,613 (671 * $460,603/contractor) in the
initial year of implementation, and $278,280,475 (671 * $414,725/
contractor) annually thereafter.
Of the 964 major contractors that are other than small business,
approximately 293 represent that they do publicly disclose information
about their emissions. An analysis of the websites reported by these
major contractors indicates that there are 122 distinct disclosures
associated with these 293 contractors. In other words, of the 293
contractors, approximately 42 percent appear to be disclosing data
attributed to (or compiled by) their immediate or highest-level owner,
whereas the other 58 percent are performing the calculations and
compiling the climate disclosures directly. Given that these major
contractors (or their owners) already have policies and procedures in
place to inventory and publicly disclose their emissions (and in many
cases to also set and disclose reduction goals), the burden associated
with complying with this FAR rule is estimated to be 50 percent of the
cost of starting with no prior disclosure experience. Therefore, it is
estimated that the internal personnel and external consultant costs
associated with these disclosures is approximately $229,390 in the
first year of implementation and $206,451 annually thereafter. The
$9,500 SBTi fee for validation of the science-based target also
applies. Therefore, the total estimated costs attributed to this rule
for the major contractors that currently disclose either themselves or
through an immediate or highest-level owner is $28,217,380 (122
disclosing entities * $231,290/entity) in the initial year of
implementation and $25,418,822 (122 disclosing entities * $208,351/
entity) annually thereafter.
5. Summary of Public Costs
The total estimated cost of compliance with this proposed rule is
$604,702,840 in the initial year of implementation and $442,826,866
annually thereafter.
D. Estimated Government Costs
The total estimated Government costs associated with this FAR rule
in millions over a ten-year period (calculated at a 3-percent and 7-
percent discount rate) are as follows:
------------------------------------------------------------------------
3% Discount 7% Discount
Estimated costs rate rate
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Present Value........................... $10 $8
Annualized.............................. 1 1
------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 68323]]
This is a summary of the costs associated with this proposed rule.
Additional information on this cost estimate in the RIA available at
https://www.regulations.gov (search for ``FAR Case 2021-015'' click
``Open Docket,'' and view ``Supporting Documents'').
1. Updates to SAM
The Government will be required to update the representations
associated with FAR 52.223-22 and 52.212-3 in SAM. The adjustment to
the representation is considered a medium level of effort that will
cost approximately $260,000 to complete.
2. Workforce Development
Government contracting officers will need to become familiar with
the new policy at FAR 23.XX, the new standard of responsibility at FAR
9.104, and the representations in the provisions at FAR 52.223-22 and
52.212-3. The procedures at FAR 23.XX05 provides tables to help
contracting officers evaluate offeror representations. Similarly, FAR
9.104-3(e) includes information on the type of information a
contracting officer should request from an offeror that represents that
it is in compliance with the new policy and the minimum requirements
that must be met in order to determine a contractor responsible. No
specialized training is required for Government contracting officers.
The requirement to remain current on policies for Government
procurement, such as changes to the FAR, is considered a part of the
normal duties of contracting personnel. As such, this analysis does not
quantify the time and effort for contracting officers to become
familiar with the rule. In addition, there are Federal resources
allocated to assisting small businesses in procurement, particularly in
the Small Business Administration. It is acknowledged that this there
is time and effort for these Federal workforces to become familiar with
the rule or the tools available and to assist contractors with
compliance, though those potential burden hours and costs are not
quantified.
3. Responsibility Determinations
Starting one year after publication of a final rule, Government
contracting officers will begin validating prospective contractor
representations for FAR 52.223-22(d) and 52.212-3(t)(3) to ensure that
significant and major contractors have completed the GHG inventory of
Scope 1 and 2 emissions. Starting two years after publication of a
final rule, contracting officers will also validate that major
contractors have completed annual climate disclosures and set a
science-based targets. For each award, the contracting officer will log
into https://www.sam.gov, search ``Entity Information'' for the
prospective contractor, select the prospective contractor's
registration, click on ``Reps and Certs,'' and (depending on the type
of acquisition) click on FAR 52.212-3 or 52.223-22 to view the
offeror's representations. If the prospective contractor represents
that it is a significant or major contractor, then it must complete all
of the remaining representations in the solicitation provision. The
contracting officer may use the tables at FAR 23.XX05, Procedures, to
assist in determining whether the prospective contractor is subject to
an exception and, if not, whether the prospective contractor complies
with the policy. Per FAR 23.XX05(c), a contracting officer may rely on
these representations when making a responsibility determination,
unless the contracting officer has reason to question the
representation. If a representation indicates noncompliance, then the
contracting officer will request additional information from the
prospective contractor to assist in making a responsibility
determination.
It is not possible to quantify how often contracting officers will
need to request additional information from prospective contractors.
Most offerors registering in SAM will represent that they are not a
significant or major contractor. It is expected that the majority of
significant and major contractors will represent that they are in
compliance with the new policy. While it will take longer for a
contracting officer to review the representations for a significant or
major contractor, it is estimated that it will take the contracting
officer three minutes to review most representations. According to FPDS
data for FY 2021, there were approximately 276,467 awards valued over
the micro-purchase threshold, where contracting officers would be
required to make a responsibility determination prior to awarding a
contract. We assume that the majority of responsibility determinations
are made by a GS-12/step 5 contracting officer at a loaded rate of $66
per hour. Therefore, the total estimated cost is $912,341 (276,467
awards * 0.05 hours/award * $66/hour).
4. Policy Development
Contract policy offices for Government departments and agencies
will need to develop procedures for requesting senior procurement
executive (SPE) approval of waivers in accordance with FAR 23.XX06(b).
Specifically, the SPE approve a waiver for specific facilities,
business units, or other defined units for national security purposes
or for emergencies, national security, or other mission essential
purposes. In addition, the SPE may approve a waiver to enable a
significant or major contractor to come into compliance with the policy
at 23.XX03 for a period not to exceed 1 calendar year. Such waivers
must be made publicly available on the agency's website. Developing
policies and procedures to support the contracting activities of a
department or agency are considered a part of the normal course of
doing business for contract policy offices. As such, this analysis does
not quantify the time and effort for contracting officers to become
familiar with the rule.
5. Analysis of Annual Climate Disclosures
The Government will also use the disclosures made pursuant to this
FAR rule to inform development of policies and programs to reduce
climate risks and GHG emissions associated with Federal procurement
activities, and to incentivize and enable technologies critical to
achieving a national economy and industrial sector that are resilient
to the physical and transition risks of climate change and net zero
emissions by 2050. As stated in OMB Memo M-22-06, to assist the Federal
Government in assessing the results of efforts to reduce supply chain
emissions, and as requested by CEQ and OMB, GSA will provide periodic
recommendations on further actions to reduce supply chain emissions,
based on information and data collected through supplier disclosures
pursuant to this FAR rule and other publicly available information. The
estimated annual cost for the Government to obtain a report of the data
disclosed to CDP is $47,000. GSA further estimates that the annual cost
to analyze the data provided is approximately $200,000.
6. Summary of Government Costs
The total estimate cost to the Government in the initial year of
implementation is $1,419,341. This includes the costs to update SAM,
for reviewing offeror representations, and analyzing annual climate
disclosure information. In subsequent years, the estimate cost to the
Government is $1,159,341, which includes only the cost for reviewing
offeror representations and analyzing annual climate disclosure
information.
[[Page 68324]]
E. Total Estimated Costs
The total estimated overall costs associated with this FAR rule in
millions over a ten-year period (calculated at a 3-percent and 7-
percent discount rate) are as follows:
------------------------------------------------------------------------
3% Discount 7% Discount
Estimated costs rate rate *
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Present Value........................... $3,945 $3,270
Annualized.............................. 462 466
------------------------------------------------------------------------
* Total of Government and public costs is higher due to rounding.
F. Alternatives Considered
The Government considered other mechanisms for enforcement of the
compliance requirements. One alternative was to use a contract clause
to require submission of the GHG inventory, annual climate disclosure,
and validated science-based target as a deliverable under Government
contracts. However, given the intent to require disclosure at the
entity-level, disclosure on a contract-by-contract basis is not
appropriate.
The Government also considered making noncompliance a go/no-go
decision for award. In this alternative, a significant or major
contractor would be ineligible for award of Government contracts unless
the significant or major contractor represents that it complies with
the new policy. The Government ultimately determined that treatment of
contractor compliance as a matter of responsibility, not only
establishes the Government's position that responsible contractors take
action to address and reduce climate-related financial risk, but also
allows contracting officers some flexibility to determine what actions
a noncompliant contractor has taken to comply.
The Government also considered the following thresholds when
establishing a definition of ``major Federal supplier,'' the term used
in E.O. 14030: $7.5 million, $50 million, and $250 million. The
Government also considered whether the threshold should be based on the
total Government contract award value, or the total Government contract
funds obligated. Currently, many larger Federal suppliers provide some
disclosure, but few set science-based targets. Even fewer smaller
suppliers disclose GHG emissions and climate-related risk, and science-
based targets are very rare. Ultimately, the Government settled on dual
thresholds to ensure smaller Federal suppliers (i.e., ``significant
contractors'' with $7.5 million to $50 million in obligations in the
prior FY) take steps to understand their GHG emissions and the larger
Federal suppliers (i.e., ``major contractors'' with more than $50
million in obligations in the prior FY) take steps to disclose climate-
related financial risks and to reduce their GHG emissions.
V. Executive Orders 12866 and 13563
Executive Orders (E.O.s) 12866 and 13563 direct agencies to assess
all costs and benefits of available regulatory alternatives and, if
regulation is necessary, to select regulatory approaches that maximize
net benefits (including potential economic, environmental, public
health and safety effects, distributive impacts, and equity). E.O.
13563 emphasizes the importance of quantifying both costs and benefits,
of reducing costs, of harmonizing rules, and of promoting flexibility.
This is anticipated to be an economically significant regulatory action
and, therefore, was subject to review under section 6(b) of E.O. 12866,
Regulatory Planning and Review, dated September 30, 1993.
VI. Congressional Review Act
As required by the Congressional Review Act (5 U.S.C. 801-808)
before an interim or final rule takes effect, DoD, GSA, and NASA will
send the rule and the ``Submission of Federal Rules Under the
Congressional Review Act'' form to each House of the Congress and to
the Comptroller General of the United States. A major rule cannot take
effect until 60 days after it is published in the Federal Register.
This proposed rule is anticipated to be a major rule under 5 U.S.C.
804.
VII. Regulatory Flexibility Act
DoD, GSA, and NASA expect this rule may have a significant economic
impact on a substantial number of small entities within the meaning of
the Regulatory Flexibility Act, 5 U.S.C. 601-612. An Initial Regulatory
Flexibility Analysis (IRFA) has been performed and is summarized as
follows:
DoD, GSA, and NASA are proposing to amend the FAR to implement
section 5(b)(i) of E.O. 14030, Climate-Related Financial Risk.
Section 5(b)(i) of the E.O. directs the Federal Acquisition
Regulatory Council to ensure that major Federal suppliers publicly
disclose their greenhouse gases and climate-related financial risk
and set science-based targets.
The objective of this rule is to implement the E.O. by creating
a new FAR subpart at 23.XX, which establishes the requirement for a
major Federal supplier to publicly disclose certain climate
information. For the purposes of this rule, a major Federal supplier
is categorized as either a significant contractor or a major
contractor. A significant contractor is an offeror who received $7.5
million or more, but not exceeding $50 million, in Federal contract
obligations in the prior Federal fiscal year. A major contractor is
an offeror who received more than $50 million in Federal contract
obligations in the prior Federal fiscal year. The legal basis for
this rule is 40 U.S.C. 121(c); 10 U.S.C. chapter 137; and 51 U.S.C.
20113.
Per the new policy proposed at 23.XX03, a contracting officer
will presume that an offeror who is a significant or major
contractor is nonresponsible unless--
Starting one year after publication of a final rule,
the significant or major contractor (itself or through its immediate
owner or highest-level owner) has completed a GHG inventory of the
annual Scope 1 and Scope 2 GHG emissions within its current or
previous fiscal year, and the significant or major contractor has
reported the total annual Scope 1 and Scope 2 emissions from its
most recent inventory in SAM at https://www.sam.gov; and
Starting two years after publication of a final rule,
the major contractor (itself or through its immediate owner or
highest-level owner) has submitted an annual climate disclosure
within its current or previous fiscal year by completing those
portions of the CDP Climate Change Questionnaire that align with the
TCFD and has developed a science-based target and had the reduction
target validated by SBTi within the previous five calendar years.
This proposed rule provides exceptions at FAR 23.XX04(a). A
significant or major contractor is not required to complete a GHG
inventory of Scope 1 and Scope 2 emissions, if it is one of the
following: an Alaska Native Corporation, a Community Development
Corporation, an Indian tribe, a Native Hawaiian Organization, or a
Tribally owned concern, as those terms are defined at 13 CFR 124.3;
a higher education institution (defined as institutions of higher
education in the OMB Uniform Guidance at 2 CFR part 200, subpart A,
and 20 U.S.C. 1001); a nonprofit research entity; or, an entity
deriving 80 percent or more of its annual revenue from Federal M&O
contracts that are subject to agency annual site sustainability
reporting requirements. Per 23.XX04(b), a major
[[Page 68325]]
contractor who is registered in SAM as a small business for its
primary NAICS code or is a nonprofit organization, is exempt from
the requirement to complete an annual climate disclosure and to set
a science-based target.
This proposed rule will revise the annual representations in the
provisions at FAR 52.223-22 and 52.212-3 to collect information a
contracting officer will need to determine whether an offeror is a
significant or major contractor is in compliance with the new
policy. The contracting officer will follow the proposed procedures
at FAR 23.XX05 and FAR 9.104-3(e) when making the responsibility
determination.
According to SAM, as of January 2022, 491,690 entities are
registered in SAM, of which approximately 364,290 (74 percent) were
registered as small for their primary NAICS code. According to award
data available in FPDS for FY 2021, there were approximately 4,413
entities that meet the definition of a significant contractors and
are not subject to an exception, of which 2,835 (64 percent) are
estimated to be small businesses. There were approximately 1,353
entities that meet the definition of a major contractor, of which
389 (29 percent) are estimated to be small businesses.
SAM registrants will be required to complete annual
representations and certifications in SAM will be required to
complete the first representation in FAR 52.223-22(d)(1) (or the
equivalent representation in the commercial provision in FAR 52.212-
3(t)(3)(i)) regarding whether the registrant meets the definitions
of a significant or major contractor. A registrant that represents
that it is a significant or major contractor, will be required to
complete the remaining representations in FAR 52.223-22(d)(2)
through (5) (or equivalent representations in FAR 52.212-3(t)(3)(ii)
through (v)) regarding whether they have conducted a GHG inventory,
made an annual climate disclosure, and a set science-based target.
Starting one year after publication of a final rule, significant or
major contractors will be required to have conducted (itself or
through its immediate or highest-level owner) within its current or
previous FY a GHG inventory of its annual Scope 1 and 2 emissions
and reported in SAM the results of its most recent inventory.
A significant or major contractor that represents that it has
not conducted a GHG inventory of its annual Scope 1 and Scope 2
emissions or has not provided the results of the most recent
inventory in SAM, will be presumed to be a nonresponsible
prospective contractor. In such cases the contracting officer will
follow the proposed procedures at FAR 9.104-3(e) and seek
information from the significant contractor on the efforts it has
made to comply before making a responsibility determination. Per the
existing procedures at FAR 9.104-3(d)(1), upon making a
determination of nonresponsibility with regard to a small business
concern, the contracting officer shall refer the matter to the Small
Business Administration, which will decide whether to issue a
Certificate of Competency (see FAR subpart 19.6).
A RIA has been prepared for this proposed FAR rule, which
includes a detailed discussion and explanation about the assumptions
and methodology used to estimate the cost of this regulatory action,
including the specific impact and costs for small businesses. Costs
for small businesses expected to be impacted by this rule include
the cost of regulatory familiarization, completing the annual SAM
representations, and conducting the Scope 1 and 2 GHG inventory each
year. The total estimated cost to small businesses is $103,054,261
(17 percent of the total estimated public costs) in the initial year
of implementation and $62,514,193 (14 percent of the total estimated
public cost) in subsequent years. The following is a summary of the
estimated cost of per entity for small business significant and
major contractors:
Estimated Cost of Compliance per Entity
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Entity type Significant contractor Major contractor
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Subsequent Subsequent
Compliance requirement Initial year years Initial year years
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Familiarization................................. $6,156 N/A $8,928 N/A
First SAM Rep................................... 6 $6 6 $6
Other SAM Reps.................................. 61 61 61 61
GHG Inventory................................... 24,724 18,640 24,724 18,640
---------------------------------------------------------------
Total Cost.................................. 30,947 18,707 33,719 18,707
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
A summary of the RIA is provided in section IV. of this
preamble. The full RIA is available at https://www.regulations.gov
(search for ``FAR Case 2021-015'' click ``Open Docket,'' and view
``Supporting Documents'').
The SEC is proposing to require climate-related financial risk
disclosures from SEC registrants, including publicly listed/traded
companies (see 87 FR 21334, April 11, 2022). Both the SEC proposed
rule and the FAR proposed rule leverage the GHG Protocol Corporate
Accounting and Reporting Standard; therefore, the rules are
considered to be in alignment. Per the exceptions at FAR 23.XX04(b),
the requirement to provide an annual climate disclosure and set a
science-based target is not applicable to a company that is
registered in SAM as a small business for its primary NAICS code.
The burden imposed on small entities is the minimum necessary to
implement the requirements of section 5(b)(i) of E.O. 14030. To
minimize the burden on Federal contractors, this rule leverages
standards that are widely used by companies to inventory their GHG
emissions and analyze their climate risks. Efforts were also taken
to align with the approach of the SEC proposed rule, which further
minimizes burden for small businesses. As a result of this rule, a
small business that received $7.5 million in Federal contract
obligations in the prior Federal fiscal year is considered a
significant contractor and will be required to complete the GHG
inventory of Scope 1 and Scope 2 emissions. However, those entities
that received more than $50 million in Federal contract obligations
in the prior Federal fiscal year (a major contractor) and are
registered in SAM as a small business for their primary NAICS code
are exempt from the requirement to complete an annual climate
disclosure and set a science-based target. Several alternatives were
considered but not accepted as they would not accomplish the
intended policy objective of the E.O. The alternatives considered
include:
Exemption for small business. One alternative
considered was an exemption for small businesses who are significant
contractors from the requirement to inventory and publicly disclose
their Scope 1 and 2 emissions. It was determined that the limited
Scope 1 and 2 reporting will be beneficial for these small
businesses and the Government. By inventorying their Scope 1 and 2
emissions, small businesses--including those that are not ``carbon
intensive'' can find opportunities to minimize climate risks both in
their operations and their own supply chains. This rule will also
prepare these small businesses to respond to requests for similar
data from customers besides the Federal Government. It is also
beneficial for the Government to collect this data from these small
businesses to have a more complete understanding of the impact of
GHG emissions on the Federal supply chain and to calculate its own
emissions and set its own reduction targets.
Delayed or rolling compliance dates. Another
alternative considered was a delay in the effective date of the
Scope 1 and 2 reporting requirements for small business significant
contractors. Consideration was given to a two-year delay, or a
rolling effective date based on Federal contract obligations in the
prior fiscal year. Ultimately, it was determined that given the
widely adopted and simple exercise of quantifying Scope 1 and 2
emissions, and the E.O. target of a net-zero emissions economy by no
later than 2050, it may be confusing
[[Page 68326]]
to have separate tiers and timelines for significant contractor
reporting while failing to advance the E.O.'s stated goals.
Furthermore, since GHG emissions inventory occurs once a year
retroactively based on the previous year's data, no additional
actions or changes to business practice would need to be taken to
prepare for this reporting, and thus there would be no minimized
burden from a delay.
Use other sources of data. Other sources of data on
Scope 1 and 2 emissions were also considered, such as current CDP
data, corporate websites, and/or corporate reports. Third party
``modeled emissions'' using industry averages were also considered.
However, it was determined that this alternative would not advance
the stated target of the E.O. for a variety of reasons: the lack of
standardization, reduced accuracy of models to capture the actual
business practices unique to producing goods and services for the
Federal Government, and the lack of GHG emissions reporting by many
small businesses. Furthermore, the burden to comply with this
proposed rule for small businesses who currently inventory their GHG
emissions will be extremely low, only requiring two numbers the
entity has already generated (or are easily calculated using free
Excel tools) to be entered into SAM.
The Regulatory Secretariat Division has submitted a copy of the
IRFA to the Chief Counsel for Advocacy of the Small Business
Administration. A copy of the IRFA may be obtained from the Regulatory
Secretariat Division. DoD, GSA, and NASA invite comments from small
business concerns and other interested parties on the expected impact
of this rule on small entities.
DoD, GSA, and NASA will also consider comments from small entities
concerning the existing regulations in subparts affected by the rule in
accordance with 5 U.S.C. 610. Interested parties must submit such
comments separately and should cite 5 U.S.C. 610 (FAR Case 2021-015),
in correspondence.
VIII. Paperwork Reduction Act
The Paperwork Reduction Act (44 U.S.C. 3501-3521) applies because
the proposed rule contains information collection requirements.
Accordingly, the Regulatory Secretariat Division has submitted to OMB a
request for approval of a revision to ``OMB Control Number 9000-0107,
Federal Acquisition Regulation Part 23 Requirements'' concerning the
information collection requirements in the provision at FAR 52.223-22
or its equivalent at FAR 52.212-3(t).
A. Public Reporting Burden
Public reporting burden for the following collections of
information include the time for reviewing instructions, searching
existing data sources, gathering and maintaining the data needed, and
completing and reviewing the collection of information in the provision
at FAR 52.223-22 or its equivalent at 52.212-3(t). The contracting
officer uses this information to determine whether a prospective
contractor is a significant or major contractor and, if so, if the
prospective contractor is responsible (see FAR 9.104-3(e)). A
prospective contractor that is a significant or major contractor is
presumed to be nonresponsible if it represents that it is not in
compliance with the GHG inventory, annual climate disclosure, and
science-based target setting requirements, as applicable. In such
situations the contracting officer will ask for additional information
from the prospective contractor to determine what efforts have been
made to comply. The Government will also use the disclosures made
pursuant to this FAR rule to inform development of policies and
programs to reduce climate risks and GHG emissions associated with
Federal procurement activities, and to incentivize and enable
technologies critical to achieving a national economy and industrial
sector that are resilient to the physical and transition risks of
climate change and net zero emissions by 2050. As stated in OMB
Memorandum M-22-06, to assist the Federal Government in assessing the
results of efforts to reduce supply chain emissions, and as requested
by CEQ and OMB, GSA will provide periodic recommendations on further
actions to reduce supply chain emissions, based on information and data
collected through supplier disclosures pursuant to this FAR rule and
other publicly available information.
1. First Representation
The representations in the provision at FAR 52.223-22 (and the
commercial equivalent at FAR 52.212-3(t)) are being revised to require
an offeror, when initially registering or when updating a registration
in SAM at https://www.sam.gov, to represent whether it is a significant
or major contractor. A significant contractor is an offeror who
received $7.5 million or more in Federal contract obligations in the
prior Federal fiscal year. A major contractor is an offeror who
received $50 million or more in Federal contract obligations in the
prior Federal fiscal year. Public reporting burden for this collection
of information is estimated to average 0.1 hours per response. The
annual reporting burden is estimated as follows:
Respondents: 491,690.
Total Annual Responses: 491,690.
Total Burden Hours: 49,169.
2. Remaining Representations
If the offeror represents that it is a significant or major
contractor, then the offeror is required to complete additional
representations in the provision regarding whether it meets an
exception and whether it has (itself or through its immediate owner or
highest-level owner) completed a GHG inventory of Scope 1 and 2
emissions, provided an annual climate disclosure, and set a science-
based target. If an offeror represents that it publicly discloses an
annual climate disclosure or science-based target, it also must report
the websites where disclosures and targets are made publicly available.
Public reporting burden for this collection of information is estimated
to average one hour per response. The annual reporting burden is
estimated as follows:
Respondents: 5,766.
Total Annual Responses: 5,766.
Total Burden Hours: 5,766.
3. GHG Inventory of Scope 1 and 2 Emissions
Unless an exception at 23.XX04(a) applies, a significant or major
contractor must (itself or through its immediate owner or highest-level
owner) conduct a GHG inventory of the annual Scope 1 and Scope 2
emissions. The significant or major contractor itself must report the
results of the most recent GHG inventory in SAM. Public reporting
burden for the GHG inventory of Scope 1 and 2 emissions is estimated to
average approximately 255 hours per response. The annual reporting
burden is estimated as follows:
Respondents: 4,802.
Total Annual Responses: 4,802.
Total Burden Hours: 1,222,983.
4. Annual Climate Disclosure and Science-Based Targets
Unless an exception at 23.XX04(b) applies, a major contractor must
submit an annual climate disclosure and set science-based targets. To
make the annual climate disclosure, the major contractor must (itself
or through its immediate owner or highest-level owner) conduct a GHG
inventory of relevant Scope 3 emissions (in addition to the Scope 1 and
2 inventory), conduct a climate risk assessment, develop disclosures
aligned with the Recommendations of the Task Force on Climate Related
Financial Risk, and complete relevant portions of the CDP (formerly
Carbon Disclosure Project) Climate Change Questionnaire within its
previous or current fiscal year. The major contractor must (itself or
through its immediate owner or highest-level
[[Page 68327]]
owner) also set science-based targets to reduce its emissions and have
the science-based targets validated by SBTi within the previous five
calendar years. A major contractor will likely support its preparation
of the disclosure and setting targets. Public reporting burden for the
annual climate disclosure is estimated to average approximately 1,946
hours per response. The annual reporting burden is estimated as
follows:
Respondents: 793.
Total Annual Responses: 793.
Total Burden Hours: 3,265,025.
B. Request for Comments Regarding Paperwork Burden
Submit comments on this collection of information no later than
January 13, 2023 through https://www.regulations.gov and follow the
instructions on the site. All items submitted must cite OMB Control No.
9000-0107, Federal Acquisition Regulation Part 23 Requirements.
Comments received generally will be posted without change to https://www.regulations.gov, including any personal and/or business
confidential information provided. To confirm receipt of your
comment(s), please check https://www.regulations.gov, approximately two
to three days after submission to verify posting. If there are
difficulties submitting comments, contact the GSA Regulatory
Secretariat Division at 202-501-4755 or [email protected].
Public comments are particularly invited on:
The necessity of this collection of information for the
proper performance of the functions of Federal Government acquisitions,
including whether the information will have practical utility;
The accuracy of the estimate of the burden of this
collection of information;
Ways to enhance the quality, utility, and clarity of the
information to be collected; and
Ways to minimize the burden of the collection of
information on respondents, including the use of automated collection
techniques or other forms of information technology.
Requesters may obtain a copy of the supporting statement from the
General Services Administration, Regulatory Secretariat Division by
calling 202-501-4755 or emailing [email protected]. Please cite OMB
Control Number 9000-0107, Federal Acquisition Regulation Part 23
Requirements, in all correspondence.
List of Subjects in 48 CFR Parts 1, 4, 9, 23, and 52
Government procurement.
William F. Clark,
Director, Office of Government-wide Acquisition Policy, Office of
Acquisition Policy, Office of Government-wide Policy.
Therefore, DoD, GSA, and NASA propose amending 48 CFR parts 1, 4,
9, 23, and 52 as set forth below:
0
1. The authority citation for 48 CFR parts 1, 4, 9, 23, and 52
continues to read as follows:
Authority: 40 U.S.C. 121(c); 10 U.S.C. chapter 137; and 51
U.S.C. 20113.
PART 1--FEDERAL ACQUISITION REGULATIONS SYSTEM
0
2. In section 1.106, amend the table by revising the entry for
``52.223-22'' to read as follows:
1.106 OMB approval under the Paperwork Reduction Act.
* * * * *
------------------------------------------------------------------------
OMB control
FAR segment No.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
* * * * *
52.223-22............................................... 9000-0107
* * * * *
------------------------------------------------------------------------
PART 4--ADMINISTRATIVE AND INFORMATION MATTERS
0
3. Amend section 4.1202 by revising paragraph (a)(26) to read as
follows:
4.1202 Solicitation provision and contract clause.
(a) * * *
(26) 52.223-22, Public Disclosure of Climate Information--
Representation.
* * * * *
PART 9--CONTRACTOR QUALIFICATIONS
0
4. Amend section 9.104-1 by revising paragraph (g) to read as follows:
9.104-1 General standards.
* * * * *
(g) Be otherwise qualified and eligible to receive an award under
applicable laws and regulations (for example, see the inverted domestic
corporation prohibition at 9.108 and requirements at 9.104-3(e) and
subpart 23.XX for certain contractors to disclose climate information).
0
5. Amend section 9.104-3 by adding paragraph (e) to read as follows:
9.104-3 Application of standards.
* * * * *
(e) Public disclosure of climate information. Starting on the dates
specified at 23.XX03(a) and (b), the following procedures apply:
(1) Except as provided in paragraph (e)(3) of this section, the
contracting officer shall presume that a prospective contractor is
nonresponsible pursuant to 9.104-1 if the prospective contractor is a
significant or major contractor (see definitions in 23.XX02) who has
not complied with the policy at 23.XX03 (see procedures at 23.XX05),
unless the contracting officer determines that--
(i) The noncompliance resulted from circumstances properly beyond
the prospective contractor's control;
(ii) The prospective contractor has provided documentation
sufficient for purposes of award that demonstrates substantial efforts
taken to comply, e.g., the prospective contractor has performed one or
more of the actions described in 23.XX03; and
(iii) The prospective contractor has made a public commitment to
comply as soon as possible (within 1 calendar year) on a publicly
accessible website as defined at 23.XX02.
(2) When making the determination, the contracting officer shall--
(i) Request information from the prospective contractor to
determine what efforts it has made to comply and the basis for its
failure to comply; and
(ii) Consider the information provided by the prospective
contractor relevant to each requirement at 23.XX03 and determine
responsibility based on the prospective contractor's efforts to comply
with each requirement.
(3) Upon making a determination of nonresponsibility with regard to
a small business concern, the contracting officer shall refer the
matter to the Small Business Administration in accordance with
paragraph (d)(1) of this section.
(4) A significant or major contractor is not subject to the
standard in paragraph (e)(1) of this section if--
(i) It is an entity described in 23.XX04(a);
(ii) For a major contactor, it is an entity described in
23.XX04(b); or
(iii) An exemption or waiver described in 23.XX06 applies.
PART 23--ENVIRONMENT, ENERGY AND WATER EFFICIENCY, RENEWABLE ENERGY
TECHNOLOGIES, OCCUPATIONAL SAFETY, AND DRUG-FREE WORKPLACE
0
6. Amend section 23.001 by removing the definition ``Greenhouse gases''
and adding a definition for ``Greenhouse gas'' in its place to read as
follows:
[[Page 68328]]
23.001 Definitions.
* * * * *
Greenhouse gas means carbon dioxide, methane, nitrous oxide,
hydrofluorocarbons, perfluorocarbons, nitrogen trifluoride, or sulfur
hexafluoride.
* * * * *
0
7. Revise section 23.800 to read as follows:
23.800 Scope of subpart.
(a) This subpart sets forth policies and procedures for the
acquisition of items that--
(1) Contain, use, or are manufactured with ozone-depleting
substances; or
(2) Contain or use high global warming potential
hydrofluorocarbons.
(b) For coverage of public disclosure of climate information,
including greenhouse gas emissions, see subpart 23.XX.
23.802 [Amended]
0
8. Amend section 23.802 by--
0
a. In paragraph (a), removing the words ``release or'' and adding
``release, or'' in its place, and adding the word ``and'' to the end of
the paragraph after the semicolon;
0
b. In paragraph (b)(2), removing the semicolon and adding a period in
its place; and
0
c. Removing paragraphs (c) and (d).
0
9. Revise section 23.804 to read as follows:
23.804 Contract clauses.
Except for contracts for supplies that will be delivered outside
the United States and its outlying areas, or contracts for services
that will be performed outside the United States and its outlying
areas, insert the following clauses:
(a) 52.223-11, Ozone-Depleting Substances and High Global Warming
Potential Hydrofluorocarbons, in solicitations and contracts for--
(1) Refrigeration equipment (in product or service code (PSC)
4110);
(2) Air conditioning equipment (PSC 4120);
(3) Clean agent fire suppression systems/equipment (e.g., installed
room flooding systems, portable fire extinguishers, aircraft/tactical
vehicle fire/explosion suppression systems) (in PSC 4210);
(4) Bulk refrigerants and fire suppressants (in PSC 6830);
(5) Solvents, dusters, freezing compounds, mold release agents, and
any other miscellaneous chemical specialty that may contain ozone-
depleting substances or high global warming potential
hydrofluorocarbons (in PSC 6850);
(6) Corrosion prevention compounds, foam sealants, aerosol mold
release agents, and any other preservative or sealing compound that may
contain ozone-depleting substances or high global warming potential
hydrofluorocarbons (in PSC 8030);
(7) Fluorocarbon lubricants (primarily aerosols) (in PSC 9150); and
(8) Any other manufactured end products that may contain or be
manufactured with ozone-depleting substances.
(b) 52.223-12, Maintenance, Service, Repair, or Disposal of
Refrigeration Equipment and Air Conditioners, in solicitations and
contracts that include the maintenance, service, repair, or disposal
of-
(1) Refrigeration equipment, such as refrigerators, chillers, or
freezers; or
(2) Air conditioners, including air conditioning systems in motor
vehicles.
(c) 52.223-20, Aerosols, in solicitations and contracts--
(1) For products that may contain high global warming potential
hydrofluorocarbons as a propellant, or as a solvent; or
(2) That involve maintenance or repair of electronic or mechanical
devices.
(d) 52.223-21, Foams, in solicitations and contracts for--
(1) Products that may contain high global warming potential
hydrofluorocarbons or refrigerant blends containing hydrofluorocarbons
as a foam blowing agent, such as building foam insulation or appliance
foam insulation; or
(2) Construction of buildings or facilities.
0
10. Add subpart 23.XX to read as follows:
Subpart 23.XX--Public Disclosure of Climate Information
Sec.
23.XX00 Scope.
23.XX01 Authorities.
23.XX02 Definitions.
23.XX03 Policy.
23.XX04 Exceptions.
23.XX05 Procedures.
23.XX06 Exemptions and waivers.
23.XX07 Solicitation provision.
Subpart 23.XX--Public Disclosure of Climate Information
23.XX00 Scope.
This subpart implements requirements for certain Federal
contractors to publicly disclose their greenhouse gas emissions and
climate-related financial risk and to set science-based targets to
reduce their greenhouse gas emissions.
23.XX01 Authorities.
(a) Section 1 of Executive Order 13990 of January 20, 2021,
Protecting Public Health and the Environment and Restoring Science to
Tackle the Climate Crisis.
(b) Section 206 of Executive Order 14008 of January 27, 2021,
Tackling the Climate Crisis at Home and Abroad.
(c) Section 5(b)(i) of Executive Order 14030 of May 20, 2021,
Climate-Related Financial Risk.
(d) Section 302 of Executive Order 14057 of December 8, 2021,
Catalyzing Clean Energy Industries and Jobs Through Federal
Sustainability, and section II.1. of the accompanying Office of
Management and Budget Memorandum M-22-06.
23.XX02 Definitions.
As used in this subpart--
Annual climate disclosure means an entity's set of disclosures
that--
(1) Aligns with--
(i) The 2017 Recommendations of the Task Force on Climate-Related
Financial Disclosures (TCFD) (see https://assets.bbhub.io/company/sites/60/2021/10/FINAL-2017-TCFD-Report.pdf), which cover governance,
strategy, risk management, and metrics and targets (see figure 4 of the
2017 recommendations for an outline of disclosures); and
(ii) The 2021 TCFD Annex: Implementing the Recommendations of the
Task Force on Climate-related Financial Disclosures, which includes
updates to reflect the evolution of disclosure practices, approaches,
and user needs (see https://assets.bbhub.io/company/sites/60/2021/07/2021-TCFD-Implementing_Guidance.pdf); and
(2) Includes--
(i) A greenhouse gas inventory of its Scope 1, Scope 2, and
relevant Scope 3 emissions; and
(ii) Descriptions of the entity's climate risk assessment process
and any risks identified.
Greenhouse gas inventory means a quantified list of an entity's
annual greenhouse gas emissions that--
(1) Represents emissions during a continuous period of 12 months,
ending not more than 12 months before the inventory is completed; and
(2) Is conducted in accordance with the Greenhouse Gas Protocol
Corporate Accounting and Reporting Standard, which includes the
following, as applicable:
(i) Greenhouse Gas Protocol Corporate Standard, 2004 revised
edition (see https://ghgprotocol.org/sites/default/files/standards/ghg-protocol-revised.pdf).
(ii) Required Greenhouse Gases in Inventories: Accounting and
Reporting
[[Page 68329]]
Amendment, 2013 (see https://www.ghgprotocol.org/sites/default/files/ghgp/NF3-Amendment_052213.pdf).
(iii) GHG Protocol Scope 2 Guidance, 2015 (see https://ghgprotocol.org/sites/default/files/standards/Scope%202%20Guidance_Final_Sept26.pdf).
(iv) GHG Protocol Corporate Value Chain (Scope 3) Accounting and
Reporting Standard Guidance, 2011 (see https://ghgprotocol.org/sites/default/files/standards/Corporate-Value-Chain-Accounting-Reporing-Standard_041613_2.pdf).
Highest-level owner means the entity that owns or controls an
immediate owner of the offeror, or that owns or controls one or more
entities that control an immediate owner of the offeror. No entity owns
or exercises control of the highest-level owner.
Immediate owner means an entity, other than the offeror, that has
direct control of the offeror. Indicators of control include, but are
not limited to, one or more of the following: ownership or interlocking
management, identity of interests among family members, shared
facilities and equipment, and the common use of employees.
Major contractor means an offeror who received more than $50
million in total Federal contract obligations (as defined in OMB
Circular A-11) in the prior Federal fiscal year as indicated in the
System for Award Management at https://www.sam.gov.
Publicly accessible website means a website that the general public
can discover using commonly used search engines and read without cost.
It includes a website of the offeror or a website managed by a
recognized third-party greenhouse gas emissions reporting program.
Science-based target means a target for reducing greenhouse gas
emissions that is in line with reductions that the latest climate
science deems necessary to meet the goals of the Paris Agreement to
limit global warming to well below 2[deg]C above pre-industrial levels
and pursue efforts to limit warming to 1.5[deg]C (see SBTi frequently
asked questions at https://sciencebasedtargets.org/faqs#what-are-science-based-targets). For information on the latest climate science
see 2018 Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) Special
Report on 1.5[deg]C at https://www.ipcc.ch/sr15/.
Scope 1 emissions means direct greenhouse gas emissions from
sources that are owned or controlled by the reporting entity.
Scope 2 emissions means indirect greenhouse gas emissions
associated with the generation of electricity, heating and cooling, or
steam, when these are purchased or acquired for the reporting entity's
own consumption but occur at sources owned or controlled by another
entity.
Scope 3 emissions means greenhouse gas emissions, other than those
that are Scope 2 emissions, that are a consequence of the operations of
the reporting entity but occur at sources other than those owned or
controlled by the entity.
Significant contractor means an offeror who received $7.5 million
or more, but not exceeding $50 million, in total Federal contract
obligations (as defined in OMB Circular A-11) in the prior Federal
fiscal year as indicated in the System for Award Management at https://www.sam.gov.
23.XX03 Policy.
The Government's policy is that the contracting officer shall treat
a prospective contractor that is a significant or major contractor as
nonresponsible under 9.104-3(e), except as provided in sections 23.XX04
and 23.XX06, unless the following requirements are met:
(a) Significant and major contractors. Starting on [date 1 year
after publication of a final rule], the significant or major contractor
(see 23.XX02) has--
(1) Completed (itself or through its immediate owner or highest-
level owner) within its current or previous fiscal year a greenhouse
gas inventory of its annual Scope 1 and Scope 2 emissions; and
(2) Reported in the System for Award Management (SAM) (https://www.sam.gov) the total annual Scope 1 and Scope 2 emissions identified
through its most recent greenhouse gas inventory.
(b) Major contractors. Starting on [date 2 years after publication
of final rule], the major contractor has (itself or through its
immediate owner or highest-level owner)--
(1) Submitted an annual climate disclosure, as defined in 23.XX02,
by completing those portions of the CDP Climate Change Questionnaire
that align with the TCFD recommendations as identified by CDP (https://www.cdp.net/en/guidance/how-cdp-is-aligned-to-the-tcfd) within its
current or previous fiscal year and made the annual climate disclosure
available on a publicly accessible website; and
(2) Developed a science-based target, as defined in 23.XX02; had
the science-based target validated by the Science-Based Targets
Initiative (see https://sciencebasedtargets.org/) within the previous 5
calendar years; and made the validated science-based target available
on a publicly accessible website.
23.XX04 Exceptions.
(a) The requirements in section 23.XX03(a) and (b) do not apply to
a significant or major contractor who is--
(1) An Alaska Native Corporation, a Community Development
Corporation, an Indian tribe, a Native Hawaiian Organization, or a
Tribally owned concern, as those terms are defined at 13 CFR 124.3;
(2) A higher education institution (defined as institutions of
higher education in the OMB Uniform Guidance at 2 CFR part 200, subpart
A, and 20 U.S.C. 1001);
(3) A nonprofit research entity;
(4) A state or local government; or
(5) An entity deriving 80 percent or more of its annual revenue
from management and operating contracts (see subpart 17.6) that are
subject to agency annual site sustainability reporting requirements.
(b) The requirements in paragraph (b) of section 23.XX03 do not
apply to a major contractor who is--
(1) Considered a small business for the North American Industry
Classification System (NAICS) code identified in its SAM registration
as its primary NAICS code; or
(2) A nonprofit organization.
23.XX05 Procedures.
(a) Starting on [date 1 year after publication of a final rule],
unless an exemption or waiver applies in accordance with section
23.XX06, the contracting officer shall review an offeror's
representations in paragraph (d) of the provision at 52.223-22 or its
equivalent at 52.212-3(t)(3) (see paragraph (b) of this section) when
determining whether the offeror is a responsible prospective contractor
(see section 9.104-3).
(1) Other than a significant or major contractor. If an offeror
represents in 52.223-22(d)(1) that it ``is not'' a significant
contractor and ``is not'' a major contractor, then the offeror is not
subject to the policy at 23.XX03 and no other representations are
required.
(2) Significant contractor. If an offeror represents that it ``is''
a significant contractor (see 52.223-22(d)(1)(i)) and ``is not'' an
excepted entity (see 52.223-22(d)(2)(i)), the following responses
indicate that the offeror is in compliance with the policy at
23.XX03(a):
[[Page 68330]]
Significant Contractors
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Representations in 52.223-22(d) or
equivalent at 52.212-3(t)(3) Offeror responses
------------------------------------------------------------------------
(i) Paragraph (d)(3)(i) or (t)(3)(iii)(A). Response must be ``has''.
Greenhouse gas inventory..
(ii) Paragraph (d)(3)(ii) or Scope 1 and Scope 2 totals
(t)(3)(iii)(B). Greenhouse gas inventory.. must be provided.
(iii) Paragraph (d)(4) or (t)(3)(iv). Response may be ``does'' or
Annual climate disclosure.. ``does not''.
(iv) Paragraph (d)(5) or (t)(3)(v). Science- Response may be ``does'' or
based targets.. ``does not''.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
(3) Major contractor. Starting on [date 2 years after publication
of a final rule], if an offeror represents that it ``is'' a major
contractor (see 52.223-22(d)(1)(ii)) and ``is not'' an excepted entity
(see 52.223-22(d)(2)(i)), the following responses indicate that the
offeror is in compliance with the policy at 23.XX03(b):
Major Contractors
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Offeror responses
----------------------------------------
Representations in 52.223-22(d) Other than small
or equivalent at 52.212-3(t)(3) Small business or business or
nonprofit nonprofit
organization organization
------------------------------------------------------------------------
(i) Paragraph (d)(2)(ii) or If Offeror checked If Offeror checked
(t)(3)(ii)(B). Excepted ``is'' for (A) or ``is not'' for
entities.. (B), then: (A) and (B),
then:
(ii) Paragraph (d)(3)(i) or Response must be Response must be
(t)(3)(iii)(A). Greenhouse gas ``has''. ``has''.
inventory..
(iii) Paragraph (d)(3)(ii) or Scope 1 and Scope 2 Scope 1 and Scope
(t)(3)(iii)(B). Greenhouse gas totals must be 2 totals must be
inventory.. provided. provided.
(iv) Paragraph (d)(4) or Response may be Response must be
(t)(3)(iv). Annual climate ``does'' or ``does ``does''.
disclosure.. not''.
(v) Para (d)(5) or (t)(3)(v). Response may be Response must be
Science-based targets.. ``does'' or ``does ``does''.
not''.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
(b) For an acquisition of commercial products or commercial
services, the contracting officer shall look for equivalent
representations from a significant or major contractor in the
solicitation provision at 52.212-3(t)(3).
(c) The contracting officer may rely on the offeror's
representations in the provisions at 52.223-22(d) or 52.212-3(t)(3)
that it is not a significant or major contractor, that it is subject to
an exception, or that it is in compliance with the policy at 23.XX03.
If the significant or major contractor's representations indicate that
the offeror is not in compliance with the policy at 23.XX03, or if the
contracting officer questions the representations, then the contracting
officer shall follow the procedures at 9.104-3(e) for determining
responsibility.
23.XX06 Exemptions and waivers.
(a) Exemptions. The procedures at 23.XX05 do not apply to
acquisitions listed at 4.1102(a) where the offeror or quoter is exempt
from the requirement to be registered in System for Award Management at
the time an offer or quotation is submitted.
(b) Waivers. The senior procurement executive may provide the
following types of waivers:
(1) Waiver of procedures. The senior procurement executive may
waive the procedures at 23.XX05 and the requirement to consider whether
a significant or major contractor is in compliance with the policy at
23.XX03 when determining responsibility for--
(i) Facilities, business units, or other defined units for national
security purposes; or
(ii) Emergencies, national security, or other mission essential
purposes; and
(2) Entity waiver. The senior procurement executive may provide a
waiver to enable a significant or major contractor to come into
compliance with the policy at 23.XX03. The period for such waivers
shall not exceed 1 calendar year. Agencies shall make such waivers
publicly available on the agency's website.
23.XX07 Solicitation provision.
The contracting officer shall insert the provision at 52.223-22,
Public Disclosure of Climate Information--Representation, in
solicitations only when 52.204-7, System for Award Management, is
included in the solicitation (see 52.204-8, Annual Representations and
Certifications).
PART 52--SOLICITATION PROVISIONS AND CONTRACT CLAUSES
0
11. Amend section 52.204-08 by revising the date of the provision and
paragraph (c)(1)(xix) to read as follows:
52.204-8 Annual Representations and Certifications.
* * * * *
Annual Representations and Certifications (DATE)
* * * * *
(c)(1) * * *
(xix) 52.223-22, Public Disclosure of Climate Information--
Representation. This provision applies to solicitations that include
the clause at 52.204-7.
* * * * *
0
12. Amend section 52.212-3 by--
0
a. Revising the date of the provision;
0
b. In paragraph (a):
0
i. Adding in alphabetical order definitions for ``Annual climate
disclosure'', ``Greenhouse gas'', and ``Greenhouse gas inventory'';
0
ii. In the definition of ``Highest-level owner'' removing from the
second sentence the words ``highest level'' and adding ``highest-
level'' in its place;
0
iii. Adding in alphabetical order definitions for ``Major contractor'',
``Publicly accessible website'', ``Science-based target'', ``Scope 1
emissions'', ``Scope 2 emissions'', ``Scope 3 emissions'', and
``Significant contractor''; and
0
c. Revising paragraph (t).
The revisions and additions read as follows:
[[Page 68331]]
52.212-3 Offeror Representations and Certifications--Commercial
Products and Commercial Services.
* * * * *
Offeror Representations and Certifications-Commercial Products and
Commercial Services (DATE)
* * * * *
(a) Definitions. As used in this provision--
Annual climate disclosure means an entity's set of disclosures
that--
(1) Aligns with--
(i) The 2017 Recommendations of the Task Force on Climate-Related
Financial Disclosures (TCFD) (see https://assets.bbhub.io/company/sites/60/2021/10/FINAL-2017-TCFD-Report.pdf), which covers governance,
strategy, risk management, and metrics and targets (see figure 4 of the
2017 recommendations for an outline of disclosures); and
(ii) The 2021 TCFD Annex: Implementing the Recommendations of the
Task Force on Climate-related Financial Disclosures, which includes
updates to reflect the evolution of disclosure practices, approaches,
and user needs (see https://assets.bbhub.io/company/sites/60/2021/07/2021-TCFD-Implementing_Guidance.pdf); and
(2) Includes--
(i) A greenhouse gas inventory of its Scope 1, Scope 2, and
relevant Scope 3 emissions; and
(ii) Descriptions of the entity's climate risk assessment process
and any risks identified.
* * * * *
Greenhouse gas means carbon dioxide, methane, nitrous oxide,
hydrofluorocarbons, perfluorocarbons, nitrogen trifluoride, or sulfur
hexafluoride.
Greenhouse gas inventory means a quantified list of an entity's
annual greenhouse gas emissions that--
(1) Represents emissions during a continuous period of 12 months,
ending not more than 12 months before the inventory is completed; and
(2) Is conducted in accordance with the Greenhouse Gas Protocol
Corporate Accounting and Reporting Standard, which includes the
following, as applicable:
(i) Greenhouse Gas Protocol Corporate Standard, 2004 revised
edition (see https://ghgprotocol.org/sites/default/files/standards/ghg-protocol-revised.pdf).
(ii) Required Greenhouse Gases in Inventories: Accounting and
Reporting Amendment, 2013 (see https://www.ghgprotocol.org/sites/default/files/ghgp/NF3-Amendment_052213.pdf).
(iii) GHG Protocol Scope 2 Guidance, 2015 (see https://ghgprotocol.org/sites/default/files/standards/Scope%202%20Guidance_Final_Sept26.pdf).
(iv) GHG Protocol Corporate Value Chain (Scope 3) Accounting and
Reporting Standard Guidance, 2011 (see https://ghgprotocol.org/sites/default/files/standards/Corporate-Value-Chain-Accounting-Reporing-Standard_041613_2.pdf).
* * * * *
Major contractor means an offeror who received more than $50
million in total Federal contract obligations (as defined in OMB
Circular A-11) in the prior Federal fiscal year as indicated in the
System for Award Management at https://www.sam.gov.
* * * * *
Publicly accessible website means a website that the general public
can discover using commonly used search engines and read without cost.
It includes a website of the offeror or a website managed by a
recognized third-party greenhouse gas emissions reporting program.
* * * * *
Science-based target means a target for reducing greenhouse gas
emissions that is in line with reductions that the latest climate
science deems necessary to meet the goals of the Paris Agreement to
limit global warming to well below 2[deg]C above pre-industrial levels
and pursue efforts to limit warming to 1.5[deg]C (see SBTi frequently
asked questions at https://sciencebasedtargets.org/faqs#what-are-science-based-targets). For information on the latest climate science
see 2018 Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) Special
Report on 1.5[deg]C at https://www.ipcc.ch/sr15/.
Scope 1 emissions means direct greenhouse gas emissions from
sources that are owned or controlled by the reporting entity.
Scope 2 emissions means indirect greenhouse gas emissions
associated with the generation of electricity, heating and cooling, or
steam, when these are purchased or acquired for the reporting entity's
own consumption but occur at sources owned or controlled by another
entity.
Scope 3 emissions means greenhouse gas emissions, other than those
that are Scope 2 emissions, that are a consequence of the operations of
the reporting entity but occur at sources other than those owned or
controlled by the entity.
* * * * *
Significant contractor means an offeror who received $7.5 million
or more, but not exceeding $50 million, in total Federal contract
obligations (as defined in OMB Circular A-11) in the prior Federal
fiscal year as indicated in the System for Award Management at https://www.sam.gov.
* * * * *
(t) Public Disclosure of Climate Information (Executive Order
14030). Applies in all solicitations that require offerors to register
in SAM (12.301(d)(1)).
(1) Responsibility. Except as provided in paragraph (t)(2) of this
provision, an offeror that is a significant or major contractor will be
treated as nonresponsible pursuant to FAR section 9.104-3(e) unless the
following requirements are met:
(i) Significant or major contractor. Starting on [date 1 year after
publication of a final rule], if the offeror is a significant or major
contractor, then the offeror shall have--
(A) Completed (itself or through its immediate owner or highest-
level owner) within its current or previous fiscal year a greenhouse
gas inventory of its annual Scope 1 and Scope 2 emissions; and
(B) Reported in SAM (https://www.sam.gov) the total annual Scope 1
and Scope 2 emissions identified through its most recent greenhouse gas
inventory.
(ii) Major contractor. Starting on [date 2 years after publication
of a final rule], if the offeror is a major contractor, then the
offeror (itself or through its immediate owner or highest-level owner)
shall have completed the following:
(A) Annual climate disclosure. Submitted its annual climate
disclosure, as defined in paragraph (a) of this provision, by
completing those portions of the CDP Climate Change Questionnaire that
align with the TCFD recommendations as identified by CDP (https://www.cdp.net/en/guidance/how-cdp-is-aligned-to-the-tcfd) within its
current or previous fiscal year and made the annual climate disclosure
available on a publicly accessible website. The time periods for
submitting the CDP Climate Change Questionnaire are identified at
https://www.cdp.net/en/guidance/guidance-for-companies.
(B) Science-based target. Developed a science-based target, as
defined in paragraph (a) of this provision; had the science-based
target validated by the Science-Based Targets Initiative (see https://sciencebasedtargets.org/) within the previous 5 calendar years; and
made the validated science-based target available on a publicly
accessible website. The validation process and time period are
identified at https://sciencebasedtargets.org/set-a-target.
[[Page 68332]]
(2) Exceptions. (i) The requirements in paragraphs (t)(1)(i) and
(t)(1)(ii) of this provision do not apply to a significant or major
contractor who is--
(A) An Alaska Native Corporation, a Community Development
Corporation, an Indian tribe, a Native Hawaiian Organization, or a
Tribally owned concern, as those terms are defined at 13 CFR 124.3;
(B) A higher education institution (defined as institutions of
higher education in the OMB Uniform Guidance at 2 CFR part 200, subpart
A, and 20 U.S.C. 1001);
(C) A nonprofit research entity;
(D) A state or local government; or
(E) An entity deriving 80 percent or more of its annual revenue
from management and operating contracts (see FAR subpart 17.6) that are
subject to agency annual site sustainability reporting requirements.
(ii) The requirements in paragraph (t)(1)(ii) of this provision do
not apply to a major contractor who is--
(A) Considered a small business for the North American Industry
Classification System (NAICS) code identified in its SAM registration
as its primary NAICS code; or
(B) A nonprofit organization.
(3) Representations. The Offeror shall complete the representation
at paragraph (t)(3)(i) of this provision. If the Offeror represents in
paragraph (t)(3)(i) that it ``is'' a significant contractor or major
contractor, then the Offeror shall complete the representations in
paragraphs (t)(3)(ii) through (v).
(i) Significant or major contractor. The Offeror represents the
following:
(A) It [ ] is, [ ] is not a significant contractor (see definition
in paragraph (a) of this provision).
(B) It [ ] is, [ ] is not a major contractor (see definition in
paragraph (a) of this provision).
(ii) Excepted entities. The Offeror represents the following:
(A) It [ ] is, [ ] is not an excepted entity described in paragraph
(t)(2)(i) of this provision.
(B) For the purposes of applying the exception to the requirement
of paragraph (t)(1)(ii) of this provision--
(1) It [ ] is, [ ] is not considered a small business for the NAICS
code identified in its SAM registration as its primary NAICS code; and
(2) It [ ] is, [ ] is not a nonprofit organization.
(iii) Greenhouse gas inventory. [Inventory is required for a
significant or major contractor, except as provided in paragraph
(t)(2)(i) of this provision.] The Offeror represents that--
(A) It [ ] has, [ ] has not (itself or through its immediate owner
or highest-level owner) completed within its current or previous fiscal
year a greenhouse gas inventory of its annual Scope 1 and Scope 2
emissions; and
(B) Its most recent greenhouse gas inventory indicates the
following total annual greenhouse gas emissions in metric tons of
carbon dioxide equivalent (MT CO2e):
Scope 1 emissions: _
[Offeror to enter total MT CO2e].
Scope 2 emissions: _
[Offeror to enter total MT CO2e].
(iv) Annual climate disclosure. [Disclosure is required for a major
contractor, except as provided in paragraphs (t)(2)(i) and (t)(2)(ii)
of this provision.] The Offeror represents that it [ ] does, [ ] does
not (itself or through its immediate owner or highest-level owner) make
available on a publicly accessible website an annual climate disclosure
that was completed using the CDP Climate Change Questionnaire in its
current or previous fiscal year.
(v) Science-based targets. [Target is required for a major
contractor, except as provided in paragraphs (t)(2)(i) and (ii) of this
provision.] The Offeror represents that it [ ] does, [ ] does not
(itself or through its immediate owner or highest-level owner) make
available on a publicly accessible website a science-based target that
has been validated by the Science-Based Targets Initiative within the
previous 5 calendar years.
(4) Website(s). If the Offeror checked ``does'' in paragraph
(t)(3)(iv) or (v) of this provision, then the Offeror shall provide the
publicly accessible website(s) where the required disclosures and
targets are reported: _.
* * * * *
0
13. Amended section 52.213-4 by
0
a. Revising the date of the clause; and
0
b. In paragraph (b)(1)(xii), removing the phrase ``at FAR
23.804(a)(1)'' and adding ``in FAR 23.804(a)'' in its place.
The revision reads as follows:
52.213-4 Terms and Conditions--Simplified Acquisitions (Other Than
Commercial Products and Commercial Services).
* * * * *
Terms and Conditions--Simplified Acquisitions (Other Than
Commercial Products and Commercial Services) (DATE)
* * * * *
0
14. Amend section 52.223-11 by revising the introductory text to read
as follows:
52.223-11 Ozone-Depleting Substances and High Global Warming
Potential Hydrofluorocarbons.
As prescribed in 23.804(a), insert the following clause:
* * * * *
0
15. Amend section 52.223-12 by revising the introductory text to read
as follows:
52.223-12 Maintenance, Service, Repair, or Disposal of Refrigeration
Equipment and Air Conditioners.
As prescribed in 23.804(b), insert the following clause:
* * * * *
0
16. Amend section 52.223-20 by revising the introductory text to read
as follows:
52.223-20 Aerosols.
As prescribed in 23.804(c), insert the following clause:
* * * * *
0
17. Amend section 52.223-21 by revising the introductory text to read
as follows:
52.223-21 Foams.
As prescribed in 23.804(d), insert the following clause:
* * * * *
0
18. Revise section 52.223-22 to read as follows:
52.223-22 Public Disclosure of Climate Information--Representation.
As prescribed in 23.XX07, insert the following provision:
Public Disclosure of Climate Information--Representation (DATE)
(a) Definitions. As used in this provision--
Annual climate disclosure means an entity's set of disclosures
that--
(1) Aligns with--
(i) The 2017 Recommendations of the Task Force on Climate-Related
Financial Disclosures (TCFD) (see https://assets.bbhub.io/company/sites/60/2021/10/FINAL-2017-TCFD-Report.pdf), which covers governance,
strategy, risk management, and metrics and targets (see figure 4 of the
2017 recommendations for an outline of disclosures); and
(ii) The 2021 TCFD Annex: Implementing the Recommendations of the
Task Force on Climate-related Financial Disclosures, which includes
updates to reflect the evolution of disclosure practices, approaches,
and user needs (see https://assets.bbhub.io/company/sites/60/2021/07/2021-TCFD-Implementing_Guidance.pdf); and
(2) Includes--
(i) A greenhouse gas inventory of its Scope 1, Scope 2, and
relevant Scope 3 emissions; and
(ii) Descriptions of the entity's climate risk assessment process
and any risks identified.
Greenhouse gas means carbon dioxide, methane, nitrous oxide,
hydrofluorocarbons, perfluorocarbons,
[[Page 68333]]
nitrogen trifluoride, or sulfur hexafluoride.
Greenhouse gas inventory means a quantified list of an entity's
annual greenhouse gas emissions that--
(1) Represents emissions during a continuous period of 12 months,
ending not more than 12 months before the inventory is completed; and
(2) Is conducted in accordance with the Greenhouse Gas Protocol
Corporate Accounting and Reporting Standard, which includes the
following, as applicable:
(i) Greenhouse Gas Protocol Corporate Standard, 2004 revised
edition (see https://ghgprotocol.org/sites/default/files/standards/ghg-protocol-revised.pdf).
(ii) Required Greenhouse Gases in Inventories: Accounting and
Reporting Amendment, 2013 (see https://www.ghgprotocol.org/sites/default/files/ghgp/NF3-Amendment_052213.pdf).
(iii) GHG Protocol Scope 2 Guidance, 2015 (see https://ghgprotocol.org/sites/default/files/standards/Scope%202%20Guidance_Final_Sept26.pdf).
(iv) GHG Protocol Corporate Value Chain (Scope 3) Accounting and
Reporting Standard Guidance, 2011 (https://ghgprotocol.org/sites/default/files/standards/Corporate-Value-Chain-Accounting-Reporing-Standard_041613_2.pdf).
Highest-level owner means the entity that owns or controls an
immediate owner of the offeror, or that owns or controls one or more
entities that control an immediate owner of the offeror. No entity owns
or exercises control of the highest-level owner.
Immediate owner means an entity, other than the offeror, that has
direct control of the offeror. Indicators of control include, but are
not limited to, one or more of the following: ownership or interlocking
management, identity of interests among family members, shared
facilities and equipment, and the common use of employees.
Major contractor means an offeror who received more than $50
million in total Federal contract obligations (as defined in OMB
Circular A-11) in the prior Federal fiscal year as indicated in the
System for Award Management at https://www.sam.gov.
Publicly accessible website means a website that the general public
can discover using commonly used search engines and read without cost.
It includes a website of the offeror or a website managed by a
recognized third-party greenhouse gas emissions reporting program.
Science-based target means a target for reducing greenhouse gas
emissions that is in line with reductions that the latest climate
science deems necessary to meet the goals of the Paris Agreement to
limit global warming to well below 2[deg]C above pre-industrial levels
and pursue efforts to limit warming to 1.5[deg]C (see SBTi frequently
asked questions at https://sciencebasedtargets.org/faqs#what-are-science-based-targets). For information on the latest climate science
see 2018 Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) Special
Report on 1.5[deg]C at https://www.ipcc.ch/sr15/.
Scope 1 emissions means direct greenhouse gas emissions from
sources that are owned or controlled by the reporting entity.
Scope 2 emissions means indirect greenhouse gas emissions
associated with the generation of electricity, heating and cooling, or
steam, when these are purchased or acquired for the reporting entity's
own consumption but occur at sources owned or controlled by another
entity.
Scope 3 emissions means greenhouse gas emissions, other than those
that are Scope 2 emissions, that are a consequence of the operations of
the reporting entity but occur at sources other than those owned or
controlled by the entity.
Significant contractor means an offeror who received $7.5 million
or more, but not exceeding $50 million, in total Federal contract
obligations (as defined in OMB Circular A-11) in the prior Federal
fiscal year as indicated in the System for Award Management at https://www.sam.gov.
(b) Responsibility. Except as provided in paragraph (c) of this
provision, an offeror that is a significant or major contractor will be
treated as nonresponsible pursuant to Federal Acquisition Regulation
(FAR) section 9.104-3(e) unless the following requirements are met:
(1) Significant or major contractor. Starting on [date 1 year after
publication of a final rule], if the offeror is a significant or major
contractor, then the offeror shall have--
(i) Completed (itself or through its immediate owner or highest-
level owner) within its current or previous fiscal year a greenhouse
gas inventory of its annual Scope 1 and Scope 2 emissions; and
(ii) Reported in the System for Award Management (SAM) the total
annual Scope 1 and Scope 2 emissions identified through its most recent
greenhouse gas inventory.
(2) Major contractor. Starting on [date 2 years after publication
of a final rule], if the offeror is a major contractor, then the
offeror (itself or through its immediate owner or highest-level owner)
shall have completed the following:
(i) Annual climate disclosure. Submitted its annual climate
disclosure, as defined in paragraph (a) of this provision, by
completing those portions of the CDP Climate Change Questionnaire that
align with the TCFD recommendations as identified by CDP (https://www.cdp.net/en/guidance/how-cdp-is-aligned-to-the-tcfd) within its
current or previous fiscal year and made the annual climate disclosure
available on a publicly accessible website. The time periods for
submitting the CDP Climate Change Questionnaire are identified at
https://www.cdp.net/en/guidance/guidance-for-companies.
(ii) Science-based target. Developed a science-based target, as
defined in paragraph (a) of this provision; had the science-based
target validated by the Science-Based Targets Initiative (see https://sciencebasedtargets.org/) within the previous 5 calendar years; and
made the validated science-based target available on a publicly
accessible website. The validation process and time period are
identified at https://sciencebasedtargets.org/set-a-target.
(c) Exceptions. (1) The requirements in paragraphs (b)(1) and
(b)(2) of this provision do not apply to a significant or major
contractor who is--
(i) An Alaska Native Corporation, a Community Development
Corporation, an Indian tribe, a Native Hawaiian Organization, or a
Tribally owned concern, as those terms are defined at 13 CFR 124.3;
(ii) A higher education institution (defined as institutions of
higher education in the OMB Uniform Guidance at 2 CFR part 200, subpart
A, and 20 U.S.C. 1001);
(iii) A nonprofit research entity;
(iv) A State or local government; or
(v) An entity deriving 80 percent or more of its annual revenue
from management and operating contracts (see FAR subpart 17.6) that are
subject to agency annual site sustainability reporting requirements.
(2) The requirements in paragraph (b)(2) of this provision do not
apply to a major contractor who is--
(i) Considered a small business for the North American Industry
Classification System (NAICS) code identified in its SAM registration
as its primary NAICS code; or
(ii) A nonprofit organization.
(d) Representations. [The Offeror shall complete the representation
at paragraph (d)(1) of this provision. If the Offeror represents in
paragraph (d)(1) that it ``is'' a significant contractor or major
contractor, then the Offeror shall
[[Page 68334]]
complete the representations in paragraphs (d)(2) through (d)(5)].
(1) Significant or major contractor. The Offeror represents the
following:
(i) It [ ] is, [ ] is not a significant contractor (see definition
in paragraph (a) of this provision).
(ii) It [ ] is, [ ] is not a major contractor (see definition in
paragraph (a) of this provision).
(2) Excepted entities. The Offeror represents the following:
(i) It [ ] is, [ ] is not an excepted entity described in paragraph
(c)(1) of this provision.
(ii) For the purposes of applying the exception to the requirements
of paragraph (b)(2) of this provision--
(A) It [ ] is, [ ] is not considered a small business for the NAICS
code identified in its SAM registration as its primary NAICS code; and
(B) It [ ] is, [ ] is not a nonprofit organization.
(3) Greenhouse gas inventory. [Inventory is required for a
significant or major contractor, except as provided in paragraph (c)(1)
of this provision.] The Offeror represents that--
(i) It [ ] has, [ ] has not (itself or through its immediate owner
or highest-level owner) completed within its current or previous fiscal
year a greenhouse gas inventory of its annual Scope 1 and Scope 2
emissions; and
(ii) Its most recent greenhouse gas inventory indicates the
following total annual greenhouse gas emissions in metric tons of
carbon dioxide equivalent (MT CO2e):
Scope 1 emissions: _
[Offeror to enter total MT CO2e].
Scope 2 emissions: _
[Offeror to enter total MT CO2e].
(4) Annual climate disclosure. [Disclosure is required for a major
contractor, except as provided in paragraphs (c)(1) and (c)(2) of this
provision.] The Offeror represents that it [ ] does, [ ] does not
(itself or through its immediate owner or highest-level owner) make
available on a publicly accessible website an annual climate disclosure
that was completed using the CDP Climate Change Questionnaire within
its current or previous fiscal year.
(5) Science-based target. [Target is required for a major
contractor, except as provided in paragraphs (c)(1) and (c)(2) of this
provision]. The Offeror represents that it [ ] does, [ ] does not
(itself or through its immediate owner or highest-level owner) make
available on a publicly accessible website a science-based target that
has been validated by the Science-Based Targets Initiative within the
previous 5 calendar years.
(e) website(s). If the Offeror checked ``does'' in paragraphs
(d)(4) or (d)(5) of this provision, then the Offeror shall provide the
publicly accessible website(s) where the required disclosures and
targets are reported: _.
(End of provision)
[FR Doc. 2022-24569 Filed 11-10-22; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6820-EP-P