Just 5pc of companies analysed by investor research group Transition Pathway Initiative (TPI) quantify how they will meet their greenhouse gas (GHG) reduction targets. And most firms are also failing to align their decarbonisation plans with future capital expenditure (capex) or clarify how they will use carbon offsets.
Only one in 20 of the more than 1,000 company transition plans analysed by TPI, which is based at the London School of Economics, quantifies how the firm will meet its GHG targets. The assessment, published today, "includes the largest firms in the highest-emitting sectors", TPI said, including oil and gas, steel, and coal mining.
Just 1pc of the companies assessed by TPI have aligned their capex with their decarbonisation goals, and only 2pc have pledged to end capex in carbon-intensive assets and products. Just 2pc provide detail on the role that carbon offsets and negative emissions technologies will have in their transition plans.
Only 52pc of the companies analysed were found to have carried out climate scenario planning, while just 48pc have taken climate risks and opportunities into account in their long-term strategies, TPI said.
But 84pc of the firms have published emissions targets, while 98pc have set out "policy commitments to act", and 92pc have disclosed their scope 1 and 2 GHG emissions. Scope 1 refers to emissions directly stemming from the company's activity, while scope 2 refers to indirect emissions produced during the generation of energy purchased by the company.
Net zero targets up, integrity lacking
The number of companies listed in the Forbes Global 2000 to have set net zero emissions targets has risen significantly in the past 16 months, to 1,003 in October from 702 in June last year, analysis published by the Net Zero Tracker consortium this week shows.
This includes 94pc of the 77 UK-based companies in the Forbes list, which have committed to net zero "despite government backsliding", Net Zero Tracker said. Prime minister Rishi Sunak announced a set of policy changes in September, which appeared to run contrary to net zero implementation.
But the integrity of companies' net zero targets must "urgently improve" to align them with the Paris climate agreement's goal to limit global warming to well below 2°C above pre-industrial levels, and preferably to 1.5°C, Net Zero Tracker said.
The consortium's June stocktake found that "only a small fraction" of companies were enacting most of the best practices set out by a UN-appointed high level group in November 2022 aiming to bring integrity to net zero pledges.