- CO2 AI and BCGโs third annual carbon emissions survey indicates companies are falling short on reduction ambitions, citing a wide array of challenges.ย
As climate-related disasters intensify in frequency and severity, so does the economic impact on communities and businesses. Despite a responsibility to mitigate the crisis with emissions reductions in their operations and supply chains, companies have not made much progress in comprehensively measuring and reducing their emissions over the past year, according to a new study by CO2 AI and Boston Consulting Group (BCG) being released ahead of COP28, which begins at the end of the month.
Titled Why Some Companies Are Ahead in the Race to Net Zero, the study builds on CO2 AI and BCGโs 2021 and 2022 investigations into the progress that businesses around the world have made on emissions measurement and reduction. CO2 AI and BCG surveyed 1,850 executives responsible for emissions measurement, reporting, and reduction in their organisations across 18 major industries and 23 countries. Each organisation surveyed had at least 1,000 employees and annual revenues ranging from $100 million to over $10 billion.
โThere are encouraging signs of progress in measuring and reducing emissions, but it is crucial that businesses redouble their efforts,โ said Hubertus Meinecke, BCGโs global sustainability leader and a coauthor of the study. โDoing so will not only help mitigate the impacts of climate change, but it will also deliver a boost to businessesโ bottom lines.โ
Progress on comprehensive emissions measurement remains slow
According to the survey, just 10% of companies now report comprehensively measuring all their emissions, revealing no improvement relative to the 2022 survey. More concerning, only 14% of companies report reducing emissions in line with their ambitions over the past five years, down 3 pp from 2022, citing difficult economic conditions and capital constraints as challenges to their reduction efforts.
However, companies that have made decarbonisation progress are realising both financial and non-financial benefits to their business, citing reputational value, lower operating costs, and regulatory compliance among the top benefits. When asked to quantify, 40% of respondents estimate an annual financial benefit of at least $100 million from meeting emissions reduction targets, a 3 pp increase compared with last yearโs survey.
An improvement in Scope 3 emissions measurementย
The number of respondents indicating partial measurement and reporting of Scope 3 emissions has increased by 19 pp since 2021, from 34% to 53%. In tandem, more respondents said they have set Scope 3 reduction targetsโup 12 pp since 2021, from 23% to 35%โwith the most common areas of focus being waste management and purchased goods and services. ย ย
Some regions have demonstrated clear improvement in comprehensive measurement of emissions in the past two years. Asia Pacific respondents improved comprehensive reporting of Scope 1 (direct emissions from company-owned and controlled resources), 2 (indirect emissions from the generation of purchased energy that an organisation consumes), and 3 (indirect emissions that occur in the value chain of a company, including both upstream and downstream missions) emissions by 7 pp since 2021. The number of South American and North American respondents improved comprehensively reporting their internal emissions, Scopes 1 and 2, by 9 pp and 5 pp, respectively.
Four traits of companies reducing emissions in line with ambitionsย
Companies that report reducing their emissions in line with their ambitions were found to display four notable traits more strongly:
- Collaborating with suppliers and customers on emissions measurement and reduction: 75% of companies that reduced emissions in line with their ambition have joint reduction initiatives with most of their suppliers, and 54% have similar initiatives with most of their customers.
- Calculating emissions at the product level: The survey found that 75% of companies attempt to calculate emissions for at least some of their products โfrom cradle to gate,โ that is, from raw materials to distribution.
- Harnessing the power of digital technology in the emissions-management process: Companies with automated digital solutions for measurement are 2.5 times more likely to measure their emissions comprehensively. In addition, 30% of companies plan to expand the deployment of AI-powered tools within the next three years to improve accuracy, efficiency, and decision-making in emissions management.
- Viewing regulations positively: They are 2.0 times more likely to view emissions-reporting regulations to be a key enabler of reduction.
โBusinesses are increasingly acknowledging the transformative power of technologies and artificial intelligence in bridging the divide between their reduction ambitions and real, tangible impact,โ said Charlotte Degot, CEO and Founder of CO2 AI and a coauthor of the report. โThere is no time to lose in scaling these best practices.โ
Download the publication here.
Authors:ย Diana Dimitrova,ย Courtney Dong,ย Hubertus Meinecke, andย
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