How can investors in high emitting sectors help the drive to net zero? This brief presents insights for the agriculture, steel, cement, and oil and gas sectors.
Divesting from emissions-intensive sectors and companies seems to be the easiest solution to bring investments in line with the Paris Agreement’s goal to bring global greenhouse gas emissions to net zero by mid-century. However, we have yet to see evidence that divestment is having a strong impact on emissions in our economies.
Investors may achieve far more by using their financial power to advance the decarbonization of the sectors responsible for the largest share of emissions: oil and gas, agricultural commodities, steel and cement. Large, very disruptive changes need to be initiated in the next decade to put these four high emitting sectors on track to decarbonize at a pace consistent with the Paris Agreement. That’s because:
Investors willing to engage with these sectors have an enormous opportunity to influence the level of emissions in the real economy. To do so, they need to put coordinated pressure on companies and other actors to initiate serious decarbonization transitions. This requires an understanding of:
The results of such an approach may take time to materialize, but what matters most is to get companies to commit to a long-term decarbonization agenda – to fundamentally change their production systems and business models, and demonstrate that they are implementing these changes.
These issues are examined in detail in the recent report What Does it Take to Achieve Net Zero? Opportunities and Barriers in the Steel, Cement, Agriculture, and Oil and Gas Sectors. This brief presents a summary of six key insights from the report on the following points:
Design and development by Soapbox.