Fossil fuel company net-zero plans ‘largely meaningless’: Report

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A study found that about 90 per cent of countries’ net-zero targets were unlikely to be achieved.

A study found that about 90 per cent of countries’ net-zero targets were unlikely to be achieved.

PHOTO: REUTERS

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- The number of fossil fuel companies setting net-zero emissions targets has risen sharply over the past year, but most fail to address key concerns, making them “largely meaningless”, a report showed on Monday.

A total of 75 of the world’s largest 112 fossil fuel companies have now committed to reaching net-zero – the point at which greenhouse gas emissions are negated by deep cuts in output elsewhere and methods to absorb atmospheric carbon dioxide.

That is up from just 51 a year ago, according to the assessment of publicly available data by Net Zero Tracker, run in part by the Britain-based Energy and Climate Intelligence Unit and the University of Oxford.

But most targets do not fully cover or lack transparency on

Scope 3 emissions

– which include the use of a company’s products, the biggest source of emissions for fossil fuel companies – or do not include short-term reduction plans, the report added.

That made them “largely meaningless”, it said. The report also found that none of the fossil fuel companies were making the needed commitments to move away from fossil fuel extraction or production.

As it stands, some 4,000 countries, states, regions, cities and companies globally have now committed to net-zero. Last November, the United Nations issued guidance on what a “good” net-zero strategy should look like to avoid greenwashing.

“We haven’t yet seen a huge move from fossil fuel companies or other companies on meeting those (guidelines), so there’s still a lot of work to do to come up to that level,” said the University of Oxford’s Professor Thomas Hale, who co-authored the report.

Ms Daisy Streatfeild, sustainability director at global asset manager Ninety One, said “credible plans and meaningful execution are not going to happen overnight”, with many companies doing a better job than national governments.

A study published last week in the journal Science found that about 90 per cent of countries’ net-zero targets were unlikely to be achieved.

The analysis examined the net-zero plans of about three dozen countries, ranking them according to confidence levels of “lower” or “much lower”.

Among the laggards were India, Australia, Brazil, Indonesia, South Africa and the United Arab Emirates, host of the upcoming United Nations climate summit.

The world’s top two emitters, China and the United States, ranked in the “lower” category. REUTERS

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