How to Report Shared Office Space Energy Use
Introduction
If your company operates from a shared office space, co-working hub, or serviced workspace, you may wonder how to include energy data in your CSRD or VSME report — especially when you don’t control the building’s utilities.
The good news is that shared spaces are fully compatible with sustainability reporting. The Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive (CSRD) and VSME Standard (EFRAG, 2024) both allow proportionate energy reporting based on reasonable estimates. What matters most is that your approach is transparent, consistent, and well-documented.
This article explains how to calculate and disclose your energy use fairly, even without direct meter readings, while staying compliant with EU sustainability standards.
1. Understanding What to Report
Energy use from a shared office typically falls under Scope 2 (indirect emissions) — energy consumed for electricity, heating, or cooling supplied by the landlord or co-working provider.
You’re not expected to measure the building’s total consumption yourself. Instead, report your company’s proportional share of that energy based on available data such as:
- Square metres of floor area used
- Number of workstations or employees
- Hours of occupancy
If utilities are included in your rent or service fees, you can still estimate your share using logical allocation methods.
2. Start by Asking for Building Data
Before estimating, request information from your landlord or co-working provider:
- Total annual building electricity and heating consumption (kWh)
- Number of tenants or desks in use
- Any renewable energy contracts or green certificates (e.g. Guarantees of Origin)
Even partial information helps create a credible baseline. Many providers now track this data for their own ESG reporting and can supply aggregated figures for tenants.
3. Estimation Methods for Shared Offices
If direct energy data isn’t available, you can calculate your share using simple and CSRD-compliant formulas.
Option A: By Floor Area
Your Energy Use = (Your occupied area ÷ Total building area) × Total building energy use
Example: Your company rents 80 m² in a 1,000 m² office building that uses 100,000 kWh/year. → (80 ÷ 1,000) × 100,000 = 8,000 kWh/year
Option B: By Employee Count
Your Energy Use = (Your employees ÷ Total building employees) × Total building energy use
Example: 10 employees in a 120-person building using 180,000 kWh/year. → (10 ÷ 120) × 180,000 = 15,000 kWh/year
Option C: By Average Benchmarks
If you don’t have building-level data, use public office energy benchmarks from national energy agencies (e.g. ADEME, EEA, Umweltbundesamt) — usually expressed in kWh/m²/year.
For instance, a typical modern office in Europe consumes 130–180 kWh/m²/year. You can apply this to your rented area and note the benchmark source.
For more on responsible data estimation, see our guide on how to estimate missing data for CSRD reporting.
4. Converting Energy Use to Emissions
Once you’ve estimated your electricity and heating consumption, you can convert it into greenhouse gas emissions (Scope 2).
Formula: Energy use (kWh) × Emission factor (kg CO₂e/kWh) = Total emissions
Use national or EU emission factors — for example:
- EU average electricity: 0.25 kg CO₂e/kWh
- District heating (EU average): 0.20 kg CO₂e/kWh
If your provider uses 100% renewable electricity, report zero emissions for electricity but still include heating and cooling data for completeness.
5. How to Disclose Shared Office Energy Data
When you report under ESRS E1 (Climate Change) or VSME B7 (Energy and Emissions), include a short note explaining your data source and estimation method.
Example disclosure:
“Energy consumption for our shared office in Berlin (80 m²) was estimated using floor area allocation from the building’s total energy use (EEA 2024 benchmark, 140 kWh/m²/year). The office operates on renewable electricity under a supplier-certified green contract.”
This satisfies CSRD’s transparency and traceability expectations.
6. Improving Data Quality Over Time
You can enhance data accuracy year by year by:
- Asking your provider for annual energy data or certificates.
- Using sub-metered data if your lease offers it.
- Tracking occupancy hours or equipment energy use for refinement.
- Including renewable energy purchases in your Scope 2 disclosure.
These small improvements demonstrate continuous progress — a key principle of the CSRD and VSME frameworks.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I exclude shared office energy use entirely?
No. Even if utilities are bundled in your rent, you’re expected to include an estimate for transparency. Small, well-explained estimates are acceptable under CSRD proportionality rules.
Should I include common areas like kitchens and meeting rooms?
Yes, indirectly. If your estimate is based on floor area or employees, these shared zones are already covered in the building’s total energy use.
What if my office is in a co-working space with hundreds of members?
Use the number of desks or your dedicated area to allocate proportionally. Most co-working operators can provide per-desk annual averages if requested.
How often should I update this data?
Once a year. Use updated consumption data or benchmarks each reporting cycle to maintain consistency and comparability.
Key Terms
- Scope 2 emissions – Indirect GHG emissions from purchased electricity, heat, or steam.
- ESRS E1 – European Sustainability Reporting Standard for climate-related disclosures.
- VSME B7 – Simplified SME reporting category for energy and emissions.
- kWh/m²/year – Benchmark measure of building energy intensity.
- Renewable electricity certificate – Proof that purchased power comes from renewable sources.
Conclusion
Reporting energy use from shared offices doesn’t require perfect data — just a fair, transparent estimation. By using floor area, headcount, or benchmarks, SMEs can confidently meet CSRD and VSME reporting requirements without complex metering systems.
As your provider’s data improves, so will your accuracy — helping you demonstrate continuous progress toward sustainability goals.
For additional help structuring your reporting workflow, see our annual CSRD reporting calendar.
To help you track all the data you need for shared office space reporting, use our checklist generator:
Generate Your Shared Office Data Collection Checklist
Company Profile
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Select your primary business activity
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Where are you in your CSRD reporting journey?
This tool will help you identify all the data points you need to collect, including building information, allocation methods, and energy consumption data.