Iran Daily

Majority of European firms have no CO reduction targets

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Most European companies have no target for reducing their greenhouse gas emissions even though 80 percent see climate change as a business risk, a survey has found.

Among those that have set climate goals, only one in three stretch beyond 2025, according to the annual Carbon Disclosure Project (CDP) report, theguardia­n.com wrote.

Instead, corporate action has focused in the boardroom, with 47 percent of firms rewarding their CEOS for climate performanc­e, and a quarter tying incentives to environmen­tal goals.

European firms now make up half of the CDP’S environmen­tal ‘A-list’ and the managing director for Europe, Steven Tebbe, praised climate disclosure’s entry into the financial mainstream.

“The next decade is vital if our shift to a sustainabl­e economy is to be successful, and companies lie at the heart of this transition,” he said.

A-list companies on the Stoxx global climate change leaders index outperform­ed their peers by 5.5 per annum this decade, he noted.

Although 53 percent of companies surveyed did not yet have climate goals, 58 percent reported carbon cuts in 2018, amounting to a total reduction of the equivalent of 85m tons of CO — as much as Austria’s annual emissions.

One third of companies reported increased emissions.

One A-listed property management firm, Landsec, has cut its greenhouse gases by 17 percent since 2014 — on the way to a planned 40 percent tail-off by 2030.

Caroline Hill, Landsec’s head of sustainabi­lity, said, “We set what was the first sciencebas­ed carbon reduction target in real estate, based on what was needed in our sector to ensure the world keeps within 1.5°C to 2°C of global warming.”

She said the company drove down energy consumptio­n in London of- fices and suburban retail parks by upgrading to LED lighting and systematic­ally installing rooftop solar panels.

This year, CDP received climate disclosure­s from 849 European companies in 23 countries, with combined emissions of around 2.3 billion tons of CO2 — a total greater than the UK, Germany and France combined.

Campaigner­s responded angrily to the inclusion on the A-list of fossil fuel firms such as Engie, Naturgy Energy Group SA and Neste Oyj, chemical firms Bayer AG and BASF, and food companies such as Nestlé.

Pascoe Sabido, a spokesman for Corporate Europe Observator­y, said, “If these companies represent the crème de la crème of environmen­tally-friendly big businesses, then we really are in trouble.

“They shouldn’t be celebrated, they should be kept as far away from our policy-makers as possible.”

Tebbe said, “We are not claiming these are perfect companies — far from it — but they are really going beyond the consensus and showing leadership in their sectors.”

 ??  ?? JOHN GILES/PA
JOHN GILES/PA

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