In addition to being mainly false, the net-zero emissions plans of 24 multinational corporations serve as a diversion from the inability to reduce emissions in accordance with the Paris climate targets.
The most recent Corporate Climate Responsibility Monitor, published by the New Climate Institute, a German think tank, depicts the business sector’s evasion of substantial decarbonization.
Due to insufficient or unclear pledges, the research concluded that 15 of the 24 corporations surveyed had “poor” or “very low integrity” in their climate policies.
In the next three decades, almost all of the firms have pledged to achieving carbon neutral or net-zero. According to the report’s authors, net-zero can only be achieved with a minimum reduction of 90%.
But, according to the analysis, the corporations’ average reduction in greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions will only be about 36%, which is “wholly insufficient” to keep global warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius (2.7 degrees Fahrenheit).
Only five of the 24 businesses—H&M Group, Holcim, Stellantis, Maersk, and Thyssenkrupp—commit to reducing their carbon dioxide emissions by at least 90% by their respective net-zero target years.
Lower CO2 Emissions While Doing Business
Because they only correspond to 3% of total emissions, the claims of carbon neutrality made by half of the companies examined, including IT giants Apple, Google, and Microsoft, as well as the German postal delivery service Deutsche Post DHL, are seriously deceptive.
Thomas Day, an analyst at the New Climate Institute and a co-author of the paper, remarked that it is “quite shocking” that the majority of the firms’ own emissions are not included.
According to him, terminology of net zero “should really mean deep decarbonization to not mislead investors and consumers.”
Only three businesses, the shipping company Maersk, the telecoms companies Vodafone and Deutsche Telekom, pledge to significantly reduce all of their emissions across the whole value chain.
“This creates a really difficult situation for the handful of companies that are genuinely ambitious and are taking part in the process with more honesty and integrity, because it’s impossible for them to distinguish themselves from companies who are greenwashing,” said Thomas Day.
The promises’ insufficiency is exacerbated by the fact that two-thirds of the businesses want to rely on carbon credits to offset emissions rather than reducing emissions at the source.
The corporations frequently use forests and other biological carbon reservoirs to offset their emissions.
All of the companies are participants in the UN effort Race to Zero, whose membership has increased thrice to nearly 9,000 companies since January 2022, according to the report.
The paper did warn that if destroyed by forest fires, for instance, such offsets could not be able to permanently balance GHG emissions.
Additionally, if all businesses planned their CO2 compensation strategies on the same scale, two to four planets would be needed.
Goals won’t be met by 2030
According to the authors, the inadequate and ambiguous longer-term net-zero corporate plans hide the even greater failure to implement urgent emissions reductions consistent with 2030 targets.
In order to become carbon neutral by the middle of the century, according to the analysis, businesses must reduce their emissions by 43% from 2019 levels by 2030.
“On average, these 24 companies commit only 15% emissions reductions by 2030,” noted Thomas Day. “So it’s much closer to business as usual than it is to where we need to be going.”
Businesses are setting objectives and exhibiting their climate leadership in response to demands from customers, shareholders, and regulators to decarbonize.
“[But] the fragmentation of approaches and the general lack of regulation or oversight, means that it is more difficult than ever to distinguish between real climate leadership and unsubstantiated greenwashing,” according to the report.
Moreover, the ambiguity of these net zero targets is “actually distracting from the grave insufficiency of short-term targets,” said Day.
According to the authors, there hasn’t been much progress since the initial Business Climate Responsibility Monitor was published a year ago.
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