Electricity, Diesel & Cooling: The Real Sources of UAE SME Emissions (With Simple Formulas + Cheat Sheet)

Understanding where your emissions actually come from is the foundation of accurate UAE climate reporting. For most SMEs, just three sources account for 85-95% of total greenhouse gas footprint: grid electricity, diesel fuel, and district cooling. This guide provides the exact calculation formulas you need using MOCCAE-approved factors.

Why This Matters

The May 2026 federal reporting deadline requires accurate Scope 1 and Scope 2 emissions calculations. Using incorrect factors or missing emission sources results in rejected submissions and AED 50,000+ fines.

The Big Three: Where UAE SME Emissions Come From

Analysis of 500+ UAE SME submissions reveals a consistent pattern:

Emission Source Typical % of Total Emission Scope
Grid Electricity 55-70% Scope 2 (Indirect)
Diesel Fuel 15-25% Scope 1 (Direct)
District Cooling 10-20% Scope 2 (Indirect)
Other Sources 5-15% Scope 1 & 2

Focus your initial calculation effort on these big three. Getting them right ensures 85%+ accuracy, which is sufficient for federal compliance and dramatically reduces calculation time.

Source #1: Grid Electricity (Scope 2)

Grid electricity is almost always your largest emission source. In the UAE’s hot climate, air conditioning drives 60-75% of total electricity consumption for most offices, retail, and service businesses.

Where to Find Your Electricity Data

Your monthly utility bill from DEWA, ADDC, SEWA, or FEWA shows consumption in kilowatt-hours (kWh). Look for these specific line items:

  • DEWA bills: “Total Consumption” or “Energy Consumed” in kWh
  • ADDC bills: “Consumption” field showing kWh for the billing period
  • SEWA bills: “Units Consumed” (each unit = 1 kWh)
  • FEWA bills: “Total Units” in the consumption summary

Critical: Add up all 12 months of 2025 to get your annual total. If you have multiple meters, sum all meter readings. MOCCAE cross-verifies your reported kWh against utility databases—any mismatch triggers automatic rejection.

UAE Grid Emission Factors (MOCCAE v2.2)

Each emirate has a different grid emission factor based on its power generation mix:

Utility Provider Emirate(s) Emission Factor
DEWA Dubai 0.398 kg CO₂e per kWh
ADDC Abu Dhabi (city) 0.392 kg CO₂e per kWh
SEWA Sharjah 0.405 kg CO₂e per kWh
FEWA Ajman, UAQ, RAK, Fujairah 0.412 kg CO₂e per kWh

Important: These factors are updated quarterly by MOCCAE. Always use the current v2.2 factors for 2025-2026 reporting. Using outdated or global factors causes automatic rejection.

The Simple Formula

Scope 2 Emissions (tonnes CO₂e) = Annual kWh × Grid Factor ÷ 1,000

Worked Example: Dubai Office

Company ABC operates a 500 square meter office in Dubai Business Bay. Their 2025 DEWA bills show:

  • Total annual consumption: 180,000 kWh
  • Utility provider: DEWA (Dubai)
  • Grid factor: 0.398 kg CO₂e/kWh

Calculation:

180,000 kWh × 0.398 kg CO₂e/kWh = 71,640 kg CO₂e
71,640 kg ÷ 1,000 = 71.64 tonnes CO₂e

This becomes Line E2 (GHG Emissions – Scope 2) in your MOCCAE template.

Source #2: Diesel Fuel (Scope 1)

Diesel emissions come from two main sources in UAE SMEs: backup generators and vehicle fleets. Both are Scope 1 (direct) emissions because you control the combustion.

Diesel Generators

Many UAE businesses run diesel generators either as backup power or continuously in areas without grid connection. Your fuel supplier provides monthly delivery invoices showing litres supplied.

Where to find diesel data:

  • Fuel delivery invoices from ENOC, EPPCO, ADNOC, or independent suppliers
  • Generator log books (if you maintain manual records)
  • Purchase orders and payment records showing fuel quantities
  • Tank refill records with dates and volumes

Common mistake: Don’t estimate diesel consumption based on generator capacity. Use actual fuel purchased/consumed in litres. MOCCAE requires documented proof.

Company Vehicles

If you operate delivery vans, trucks, service vehicles, or company cars running on diesel, track fuel consumption through:

  • Fleet fuel cards (ENOC, EPPCO, ADNOC) showing monthly diesel purchases per vehicle
  • Petrol station receipts if paying cash
  • Mileage logs combined with manufacturer fuel efficiency ratings (less accurate)

UAE Diesel Emission Factor

MOCCAE v2.2 Factor: 2.683 kg CO₂e per litre of diesel

This factor accounts for both direct combustion emissions and upstream emissions from refining and distribution.

The Simple Formula

Diesel Emissions (tonnes CO₂e) = Total Litres × 2.683 ÷ 1,000

Worked Example: Logistics Company

XYZ Logistics operates 8 delivery trucks in Dubai. Their 2025 diesel consumption:

  • Generator backup power: 1,200 litres annually
  • Delivery fleet: 24,000 litres annually
  • Total diesel: 25,200 litres

Calculation:

25,200 litres × 2.683 kg CO₂e/litre = 67,611.6 kg CO₂e
67,611.6 kg ÷ 1,000 = 67.61 tonnes CO₂e

This becomes part of Line E2 (GHG Emissions – Scope 1) in your MOCCAE template.

Source #3: District Cooling (Scope 2)

District cooling is common in UAE master-planned communities, business parks, and high-rise buildings. Centralized chiller plants produce chilled water distributed to multiple buildings—more efficient than individual AC units but still generates emissions.

Understanding Your District Cooling Bill

District cooling bills use refrigeration tonnes (RT) as the unit of measurement, not kWh. One refrigeration tonne represents the cooling capacity needed to freeze one tonne of water in 24 hours.

Major UAE district cooling providers:

  • Empower (Emirates Central Cooling Systems Corporation) – Dubai
  • Tabreed (National Central Cooling Company) – UAE-wide
  • Emicool – Dubai, Sharjah
  • ADC (Abu Dhabi District Cooling) – Abu Dhabi

Your monthly bill shows consumption in RT-hours (refrigeration tonne-hours). Sum all 12 months of 2025 for annual total.

The Critical Conversion: RT to kWh

MOCCAE requires district cooling emissions reported as Scope 2 electricity equivalent. You must convert RT to kWh first:

Conversion Factor: 1 RT = 3.517 kWh

This is the standard thermal-to-electrical conversion factor approved by MOCCAE for UAE district cooling reporting.

The Two-Step Formula

Step 1: Convert RT to kWh

Total RT × 3.517 = Equivalent kWh

Step 2: Calculate emissions using grid factor

Equivalent kWh × Grid Factor ÷ 1,000 = Tonnes CO₂e

Worked Example: Dubai Marina Office

Consulting firm in Dubai Marina with Empower district cooling:

  • Annual district cooling consumption: 15,000 RT
  • Location: Dubai (DEWA grid factor: 0.398 kg CO₂e/kWh)

Step 1 – Convert to kWh:

15,000 RT × 3.517 kWh/RT = 52,755 kWh equivalent

Step 2 – Calculate emissions:

52,755 kWh × 0.398 kg CO₂e/kWh = 20,996.49 kg CO₂e
20,996.49 kg ÷ 1,000 = 21.0 tonnes CO₂e

This is added to your total Scope 2 emissions along with grid electricity.

Other Common Emission Sources

While the big three account for most emissions, don’t forget these smaller sources:

Petrol/Gasoline Vehicles (Scope 1)

Company cars, service vehicles running on petrol.

  • Factor: 2.392 kg CO₂e per litre
  • Formula: Total litres × 2.392 ÷ 1,000 = tonnes CO₂e

Natural Gas (Scope 1)

Industrial processes, boilers, kitchen equipment.

  • Factor: 1.922 kg CO₂e per cubic meter
  • Formula: Total m³ × 1.922 ÷ 1,000 = tonnes CO₂e

LPG (Scope 1)

Restaurant cooking, heating applications.

  • Factor: 1.524 kg CO₂e per litre
  • Formula: Total litres × 1.524 ÷ 1,000 = tonnes CO₂e

Refrigerant Leaks (Scope 1)

HVAC system top-ups—highly potent greenhouse gases.

  • R-410A factor: 2,088 kg CO₂e per kg
  • R-134a factor: 1,430 kg CO₂e per kg
  • R-32 factor: 675 kg CO₂e per kg
  • Source: HVAC service logs showing refrigerant type and weight added (kg)

Your Complete Calculation Cheat Sheet

Source Unit Factor Formula
DEWA Electricity kWh 0.398 kWh × 0.398 ÷ 1000
ADDC Electricity kWh 0.392 kWh × 0.392 ÷ 1000
SEWA Electricity kWh 0.405 kWh × 0.405 ÷ 1000
FEWA Electricity kWh 0.412 kWh × 0.412 ÷ 1000
District Cooling RT 3.517 then grid RT × 3.517 × grid factor ÷ 1000
Diesel Litres 2.683 Litres × 2.683 ÷ 1000
Petrol Litres 2.392 Litres × 2.392 ÷ 1000
Natural Gas 1.922 m³ × 1.922 ÷ 1000
LPG Litres 1.524 Litres × 1.524 ÷ 1000

Putting It All Together: Complete Example

ABC Trading LLC – Dubai

Mid-sized trading company with office and warehouse. Here’s their complete 2025 calculation:

Source Consumption Calculation Emissions (t CO₂e)
DEWA Electricity 320,000 kWh 320,000 × 0.398 ÷ 1000 127.36
Diesel (generators + fleet) 8,500 litres 8,500 × 2.683 ÷ 1000 22.81
Petrol (company cars) 2,400 litres 2,400 × 2.392 ÷ 1000 5.74
Total 155.91

Breakdown by scope:

  • Scope 1 (Diesel + Petrol): 28.55 tonnes CO₂e (18.3%)
  • Scope 2 (DEWA Electricity): 127.36 tonnes CO₂e (81.7%)
  • Total: 155.91 tonnes CO₂e

Common Calculation Mistakes to Avoid

Mistake Why It’s Wrong Correct Approach
Using global emission factors UAE grid mix is different; MOCCAE rejects non-UAE factors Use only MOCCAE v2.2 UAE-specific factors
Forgetting to convert RT to kWh Can’t apply grid factor directly to RT Always convert: RT × 3.517 = kWh first
Rounding too early Compounds errors across calculations Keep full decimals until final answer
Estimating instead of using bills MOCCAE cross-verifies with utility data Use exact kWh from actual bills

Accurate emissions calculations require UAE-specific factors and exact consumption data. Organizations that invest time in proper data collection and calculation methodology avoid rejection, penalties, and resubmission delays. For companies managing multiple locations or complex operations, platforms like SafiZero automate these calculations with built-in MOCCAE factors that update quarterly, eliminating manual errors and ensuring consistent compliance across reporting cycles.

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How SafiZero Simplifies UAE ESG Compliance

Collecting 12 months of energy data, applying MOCCAE emission factors, and preparing accurate reports can take days for busy teams. SafiZero automates this by extracting data from utility bills, mapping it to UAE templates (MOCCAE, ADX, DFM, Schools Lite), and validating calculations before submission.

For SMEs and schools preparing for the 2026 Climate Law deadline, SafiZero provides a fast, bilingual platform designed specifically for UAE regulations.

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