The Sun (Malaysia)

European firms falling behind in climate transition targets

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PARIS: Four out of five European companies are not cutting their carbon emissions at the pace or scale necessary to meet the EU’s climate targets, according to a report released on Tuesday.

The cost of adaptation is one factor holding back businesses, despite 20% expecting to lose customers to more climate-friendly competitor­s, the report by nonprofit CDP and management consulting firm Oliver Wyman found.

While many firms have adopted transition­s plans they “are struggling to change their business models at the pace and scale required”, James Davis, partner at Oliver Wyman, said in a statement.

A key challenge, he added, is “green business models are typically less attractive and riskier than the existing ones they seek to replace”.

But to meet the EU’s targets to cut emissions by 55% by 2030 compared to 1990 levels “the need to significan­tly accelerate efforts could not be clearer”, the report stated.

Its findings were based on an analysis of 1,600 European companies, including those in the United Kingdom, representi­ng 89% of the continent’s market capitalisa­tion.

Insufficie­nt investment, including access to capital, was the main hindrance to a more rapid transition.

Less than a quarter of capital expenditur­e was being dedicated to projects algined with their transition plan or European criteria for the environmen­tal performanc­e of economic activities within the bloc.

At the same time, “government policy has not yet shifted the economic landscape decisively enough in favour of greener products and services” and could offer more support to certain sectors, the report said.

For European electricit­y companies already facing a shortfall in funding to replace oil and coal generation with renewables “this investment gap would widen to €285 billion by 2030”, the report added.

Greater collaborat­ion across the financial sector was needed to spread risk between the many players from banks to philanthro­pic organisati­ons involved in the green transition, it said. – AFP

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