Biohazard and Trauma Scene Cleanup: Scope 3 Emissions Mapping and Calculation Guide

Biohazard and trauma scene cleanup is the fifth core restoration job type covered under the Restoration Carbon Protocol. Its Scope 3 emissions profile is distinct from the other four categories in one critical way: virtually all waste generated is classified as regulated medical or biohazardous waste, triggering disposal emission factors that are 3–5× higher than standard C&D waste. Combined with intensive PPE requirements and specialized treatment chemicals, biohazard cleanup generates significant emissions from a relatively small affected area.

Job Classification

Job TypePrimary Waste ClassificationDominant Emission CategoryTypical Range per Scene
Unattended death / decompositionRegulated medical waste + affected porous materialsCat 5 (biohazard disposal) + Cat 12 (demolished materials)0.8–3.0 tCO2e
Trauma scene (blood/bodily fluids, limited area)Regulated medical waste, minimal structure affectedCat 5 dominant0.3–1.2 tCO2e
Crime scene with structural damageRegulated medical waste + C&D debrisCat 5 + Cat 121.0–4.0 tCO2e
Sharps/drug paraphernalia scenesSharps waste (regulated) + affected surfacesCat 5 (sharps disposal) dominant0.4–1.5 tCO2e
Hoarding remediation with biohazard componentMixed solid waste + biohazard materialsCat 4 (volume transport) + Cat 51.5–6.0 tCO2e

Category 4: Transportation

Vehicle Typekg CO2e per mileUse
Biohazard response vehicle (dedicated, sealed)0.503–1.084Crew and initial materials transport (van or truck)
Medical waste hauler (regulated)2.80Regulated biohazardous waste to licensed medical waste facility
Dump truck (standard C&D, non-biohazard portion)2.25 loadedNon-regulated demolition debris for hoarding jobs

Medical waste facility distance: Licensed medical waste treatment facilities (autoclaves, incinerators) are less common than standard landfills. Average distance from job site to licensed biohazard disposal facility is 40–80 miles in most US markets. Use actual manifest distances; apply 60 miles as default where manifests are unavailable.

Category 1: Materials

MaterialUnitkg CO2e per unitNotes
Hospital-grade disinfectant (quaternary ammonium, EPA-registered)Liter2.8EPA EEIO — chemical manufacturing
Enzyme treatment / biological digesterLiter1.6EPA EEIO — specialty chemical
Ozone generator treatment (odor/pathogen)Day-unit0.35Equipment embodied carbon amortized
Hydroxyl generator treatmentDay-unit0.40Equipment embodied carbon amortized
Level B PPE full kit (Tyvek + face shield + supplied air)Kit4.2Required for decomposition / unattended death
Level C PPE kit (Tyvek + half-face P100/OV)Kit1.8Trauma scenes with active biohazard
6-mil poly sheeting (containment + floor protection)0.55EPA EEIO — plastics manufacturing
Biohazard bags (red, 33-gallon)Each0.65Medical-grade polyethylene, red-colored
Sharps disposal container (1-gallon)Each0.35EPA EEIO — plastics/medical equipment

Category 5: Waste — Biohazard Disposal

Waste TypeDisposal MethodtCO2e per tonSource
Regulated medical waste (soft tissue, bodily fluids, porous materials)Autoclave + landfill0.55EPA medical waste incineration / autoclave factors
Regulated medical waste — high pathogen riskHigh-temperature incineration0.85EPA hazardous waste incineration factors
Sharps waste (needles, glass)Sharps autoclave or incineration0.65EPA medical waste — sharps category
Contaminated porous building materials (drywall, carpet, subfloor)Licensed medical waste landfill or standard landfill (jurisdiction-dependent)0.38–0.55Apply higher factor when facility requires medical waste classification
Non-biohazard C&D debris (hoarding, structural)Standard landfill0.16EPA WARM v16 — standard C&D
Spent PPE (biohazard-contaminated)Licensed medical waste facility0.55Same as regulated medical waste stream

Jurisdiction note on porous material classification: Whether mold-contaminated porous building materials from biohazard scenes must be disposed of as regulated medical waste (vs. standard C&D waste) varies by state and local regulation. Check with your licensed waste hauler for the applicable classification in your jurisdiction. Apply the higher emission factor (0.55) in conservative calculations or when disposal classification is uncertain.

Category 12: Demolished Building Materials

Biohazard scenes frequently require demolition of affected porous materials — flooring, subfloor, drywall — that absorbed biological contamination and cannot be cleaned to restoration standards. When these materials are classified as regulated medical waste at removal, their disposal emissions are captured in Category 5 (same as ACM materials in hazmat abatement). When they are classified as standard C&D waste at the jurisdiction level, use Category 12 EPA WARM factors (same as water damage demolition materials).

Apply Category 12 factors to demolished materials only when they flow to standard C&D landfill rather than medical waste disposal. When in doubt, apply medical waste disposal factors and capture in Category 5.

Worked Example: Unattended Death, Single Apartment Unit

Job profile: Unattended death in a 650 sq ft apartment, discovered after 10 days. Affected area: 400 sq ft (bedroom and hallway). Scope: removal of all porous materials in affected area (carpet, subfloor, drywall to 24″ height), disinfection of all surfaces, odor treatment. Duration: 2 days. Crew: 2 technicians in Level B PPE. Facility: 15 miles from job site. Licensed medical waste facility: 58 miles from job site.

Category 4 — Transportation

Crew vehicle: 1 van × 30 mi RT × 3 trips = 90 mi × 0.503 = 45 kg
Medical waste hauler: 1 × 116 mi RT × 2.80 = 325 kg
Category 4 total: 370 kg = 0.37 tCO2e

Category 1 — Materials

Hospital-grade disinfectant (400 sq ft × 0.025 L/sq ft × 2 applications): 20 L × 2.8 = 56 kg
Enzyme treatment: 8 L × 1.6 = 13 kg
Ozone generator: 2 day-units × 0.40 = 1 kg
Level B PPE (2 workers × 2 days × 3 exits/day = 12 kit replacements): 12 × 4.2 = 50 kg
Biohazard bags (20 bags): 20 × 0.65 = 13 kg
Poly sheeting (floor protection + containment): 80 m² × 0.55 = 44 kg
Category 1 total: 177 kg = 0.18 tCO2e

Category 5 — Waste

Regulated medical waste (soft materials, porous materials, PPE): estimated 0.6 tons × 0.55 = 0.33 tCO2e
Non-hazard debris (drywall, not in medical waste stream): 0.25 tons × 0.16 = 0.04 tCO2e
Category 5 total: 0.37 tCO2e

Category 12

Carpet/pad (400 sq ft): 0.55 tons × 0.33 = 0.18 tCO2e
Subfloor (400 sq ft plywood): 0.40 tons × -0.05 = -0.02 tCO2e
Category 12 total: 0.16 tCO2e

CategorytCO2e
Category 4 — Transportation0.37
Category 1 — Materials0.18
Category 5 — Waste (regulated medical)0.37
Category 12 — Demolished materials0.16
Total1.08 tCO2e

Is biohazard cleanup typically covered by commercial property insurance?

Yes — biohazard cleanup at commercial properties is typically covered under property insurance. The emissions data from an RCP biohazard calculation should be provided to the commercial property manager for their Scope 3 inventory in the same format as other restoration job types.

How do you handle hoarding remediation with both biohazard and standard C&D waste streams?

Split the waste into its classified streams: regulated biohazardous material (apply medical waste disposal factors), standard C&D debris (apply WARM factors), and any hazardous materials encountered (apply hazmat factors). Document each stream separately in the Category 5 breakdown. The mixed nature of hoarding jobs makes them the most complex biohazard calculation scenario.

Does the RCP apply to crime scenes where law enforcement is involved?

Yes. The RCP calculation is based on the remediation contractor’s scope of work regardless of the cause of the biohazard condition. The emissions calculation is performed after the scene is released to the contractor and is based on the actual materials used, waste generated, and transportation involved in the cleanup — independent of the legal context of the event.

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