Almost all companies across the electric utilities and automotive sectors are set to exceed their 1.5°C warming scenario budgets, new findings from the World Benchmarking Alliance, CDP and ADEME show today. With COP26 now concluded and pressure mounting on businesses, these critical industries are shown to be lagging far behind where they should be on reducing emissions and their reliance on fossil fuels.
The largest study of its kind, the research ranks the most influential 50 electric utilities and 30 automotive companies on their commitments and progress on achieving a low-carbon transition, in line with the milestones for achieving net zero set out in NZE(1).
The first assessment of these critical sectors released since world governments came together at COP26 to agree to a ‘phasing down’ of fossil fuel production, it shows that both sectors continue to rely heavily on fossil fuels, with nearly all (98%) companies in the electric utilities sector and 93% of the automotive sector set to exceed their carbon budgets.
In the automotive sector, half of the companies assessed have increased the share of low-carbon vehicles they sell, but this shift is not accelerating fast enough. The key findings are:
In the electric utilities sector, the key findings are:
Vicky Sins, Decarbonisation and Energy Transformation Lead at WBA says, "Transforming these two critical industries will have a significant impact on the fight to drive down global emissions. With companies in these sectors lagging behind on both transition planning and in reducing net emissions, we need investors, governments, civil society and other actors to engage with these keystone businesses and hold them accountable for the gaps between ambition & performance right now, and not in the future. Poor performance of the most influential automotive and electric utilities companies could undermine the legacy that COP26 sets out."
Nicolette Bartlett, Chief Impact Officer at CDP says, “To stay on track for safe levels of warming, we need to see massive strides from both of these critical sectors. At present, we’re simply not seeing change happen fast enough. The automotive sector has only increased its low-carbon vehicle share by 5% over the past five years - that kind of progress is not going to get us where we need to be by 2030. Likewise, the fact that only 8 out of 50 companies are currently investing enough in low-carbon tech to align with a 1.5°C warming scenario is a red flag for the entire industry. Companies must increase ambition and deliver against climate transition plans or it will prove disastrous for their businesses and for our overall climate efforts.”
“While policy makers are wondering if, when and how to address the question of companies’ transition plans alignment with 1.5°C, these updated benchmarks prove once again that the world can’t only rely on private sector’s commitments to reach planetary carbon neutrality. Challenging mandatory schemes like the European Union’s taxonomy, enlightened choices from the financial sector and civil society pressure should accelerate actual transition plans implementation”. Said Romain Poivet, coordinator of the ACT Initiative at ADEME.
These benchmarks are the latest iterations in a series of analyses from WBA, CDP & ADEME tracking the progress of the sectors (the second iteration of the electric utilities sector and the third of the automotive). Earlier this year, the first Oil and Gas Benchmarkwas also published, as well as the Just Transition assessment of 180 companies in high-emitting sectors, launched at COP26.