Report Timing
The time needed for an embodied carbon report depends on the project scope, available documentation and the level of detail required.
Embodied carbon report timeframes vary because each project requires a different level of review. A simple early stage assessment may be relatively straightforward, while a detailed report for a larger commercial, multi residential or formal reporting pathway may require more coordination, data review and documentation checking.
The timeframe is influenced by what the report needs to include, how complete the project information is and whether the assessment is being prepared for internal review, design advice, planning, procurement, Life Cycle Assessment or NABERS Embodied Carbon.
In most cases, the best first step is to review the available project documents, confirm the reporting purpose and identify whether the scope is broad, detailed or formal.
In Brief
Clear drawings, schedules, specifications, quantities and product data can make the assessment more efficient.
Incomplete information, unclear scope or formal reporting requirements can extend the timeframe because assumptions, clarifications and additional checks may be needed.
Time Drivers
The time needed to prepare an embodied carbon report depends on several practical factors. The most important are usually project scale, assessment scope, documentation quality and whether quantities are already available.
Larger projects usually involve more materials, systems, quantities and documentation streams.
Structure only, whole building, façade, services, external works and lifecycle stages all affect timing.
Clear drawings and specifications reduce uncertainty and help the review progress more smoothly.
A bill of quantities or material take off can reduce the need to estimate quantities from drawings.
EPDs, supplier data and product specific information may require additional checking and coordination.
NABERS, Green Star or LCA requirements may add methodology, evidence or quality review steps.
Early Stage
An early stage embodied carbon review can often begin before every detail is final. Preliminary drawings, broad material assumptions and early structural information may be enough to identify likely carbon hotspots and guide design discussion.
The advantage of an early review is that the project team may still have time to consider structure, material choices, façade strategy, retention, reuse and specification options before decisions are locked in.
The limitation is that early reviews usually rely on more assumptions. These should be documented clearly so the project team understands the level of confidence in the results.
Detailed Report
A detailed embodied carbon report may require a deeper review of architectural drawings, structural drawings, specifications, quantities, product selections and Environmental Product Declarations. It may also require clarification from the design team, builder, quantity surveyor or suppliers.
This can take longer than an early concept review, but the output is usually more refined because it is based on clearer project information.
Detailed reports are often more appropriate when the report will support procurement, design verification, planning, rating tools or external reporting.
Documents
The report can usually progress more smoothly when the documentation clearly shows the building form, structural system, façade design, material specifications and quantities. This reduces the need for assumptions and repeated clarification.
Useful information may include architectural drawings, structural drawings, specifications, material schedules, façade information, services documentation, a bill of quantities and product data where available.
For a practical checklist, see What Information Is Needed for an Embodied Carbon Report?.
Formal Pathways
A general embodied carbon report may be prepared for project understanding, design advice or internal sustainability review. A formal pathway may require more specific evidence, methodology and quality processes.
For example, a NABERS Embodied Carbon pathway must align with the relevant NABERS process, while a broader Life Cycle Assessment may require a wider scope and additional environmental indicators.
If a formal pathway applies, it should be identified early so the project team can gather the right documents and allow for the right level of review.
Delays
Most delays are caused by unclear scope, missing information or unresolved design decisions. The report does not always need perfect documentation, but it does need enough clarity to support the intended level of assessment.
These issues can usually be managed more easily when the embodied carbon pathway is discussed early.
Preparation
The most effective way to reduce delays is to provide a clear document set and explain why the report is needed. The assessment can then be scoped correctly from the beginning.
This allows the consultant to confirm what can be assessed, what assumptions are needed and what information may still be missing.
Design Value
It is natural to ask how quickly an embodied carbon report can be completed, but timing is not only about speed. The most valuable review is often the one that happens early enough to influence decisions.
If the report is commissioned after structure, façade, procurement and material selections are already fixed, there may be fewer opportunities to reduce impact. If it is reviewed earlier, the project team may still be able to consider lower carbon specifications, efficient structural design, retention, reuse or alternative material strategies.
For this reason, embodied carbon should be considered as part of the design process rather than only as an end stage reporting task.
Related Question
Timing and cost are often connected because both depend on scope and information quality. A project with clear documentation and confirmed scope may be more efficient to assess than one where information is incomplete or still changing.
Early reviews can be efficient if the goal is to identify broad carbon hotspots. Detailed later stage reports may take more time because they often require more complete quantities, specifications and evidence.
For more detail, read How Much Does an Embodied Carbon Report Cost?.
Summary
An embodied carbon report may be relatively straightforward when the project scope is clear and the documentation is well prepared. It can take longer when the project is complex, quantities are missing, product information is incomplete or a formal pathway applies.
The best way to understand timing is to review the available project information and confirm what the report needs to achieve.
Next Step
Certified Energy can review your project documentation and advise what information is needed, what pathway may apply and how the embodied carbon report should be scoped.
Read the Embodied Carbon Report Knowledge Hub