Climate Action

What’s really driving corporate climate action?

A woman walks past a map showing the elevation of the sea in the last 22 years during the World Climate Change Conference 2015 (COP21) at Le Bourget, near Paris, France, December 11, 2015.  REUTERS/Stephane Mahe  TPX IMAGES OF THE DAY  - LR1EBCB148RZ4

New research reveals what drives large companies' efforts to fight climate change. Image: REUTERS/Stephane Mahe

Philippe Delorme
President & CEO, Kone Corporation
This article is part of: World Economic Forum Annual Meeting

The theme of Globalization 4.0 at this year’s World Economic Forum meeting in Davos brings together the current digital revolution and its growing integration among people, companies and governments. Innovation combined with a society mobilized for action is the path to solving global challenges, including climate change.

However, this issue is complex and multi-layered. Because it’s not only about taking steps to cultivate a sustainable environment, progress needs to happen in a way that supports financial growth. A healthy planet with healthy economies is the ultimate goal.

It is with this end in mind that companies around the world are moving forward, taking the lead in efforts to slow global warming. By demonstrating that the bottom line is not in conflict with resource efficiency and carbon management, the business community is demonstrating the potential impact and positive effects of social responsibility.

To better understand what is driving corporations to address climate change and the progress made to-date, Schneider Electric partnered with Greenbiz Research to survey energy and sustainability professionals from large companies ($100 million or more in annual revenue) around the world. The findings, which you can view here, show that public sustainability commitments have affected attitudes and actions, and conservation measures such as efficiency improvements and renewable energy are being adopted en masse.

While these are promising advances, the research also reveals areas for improvement — such as shifting views of project and programme financing, better data quality and sharing, and more investment in new technologies. Given the urgency of the overarching problem, these are issues that require urgent attention.

Here are four key findings from the research:

1) Public sustainability commitments are driving action and can accelerate corporate gains

More than half - 57% - of the companies surveyed have made public sustainability commitments, and setting public goals seems to be driving action. Companies that have made a public commitment use almost all available strategies and technologies at a higher rate, including on- and offsite renewables, combined heat and power, and clean fleet technologies.

Companies located in Europe are twice as likely to make a public commitment than those in North America or Asia-Pacific. And companies that are making commitments are more driven by brand awareness and environmental concerns than companies that have no public commitment.

Image: Schneider Electric
2) Capital for projects is available if there is a demonstrated return on investment and executive leadership

Contrary to common perception, capital isn’t the only thing — or even the primary thing — standing in the way of more energy and sustainability projects.

While many companies struggle with making the business case for resource-efficiency and carbon-reduction initiatives, 51% of respondents who said they are successful indicated that demonstrated return on investment (ROI) was the key to success, while 30% cited executive leadership. Only 10% pointed to available capital.

Image: Schneider Electric

The research also showed a positive correlation between more data and a successful business case. A full 90% of respondents who agreed that "departments see all data from other functions or peer groups" also felt they were successful at making business cases, and getting funds for projects and programs.

3) Lack of data isn’t the challenge — it’s data quality, internal sharing and collaboration that are barriers

The companies surveyed are generating a lot of energy and sustainability data. Utility bills are the most common source of data - used by 89% of companies - followed by energy management systems at 73% and spreadsheets at 52%. But nearly half feel their data is unreliable, 41% feel they don’t have the right tools to manage the flow of information and 40% say they lack the expertise to analyze this data.

Only 22% of companies share all energy and sustainability data across relevant departments, while 21% share no data between departments - a clear area for improvement.

Image: Schneider Electric
4) Energy efficiency dominates, renewable energy accelerates and newer technologies are gaining traction

A huge majority - 93% - of respondents are working to be more energy and resource-efficient. Renewable energy use is also on the rise, increasing 12% compared to similar research conducted in 2018. Technologies such as combined heat and power and battery storage have a lower adoption rate but show 11% growth year over year.

To meet climate goals, the world needs to scale renewable energy six times faster than the current pace and global corporations are driving the renewable energy boom. Nearly 160 of the world’s leading companies have already pledged to move to 100% renewable energy.

Image: Schneider Electric

So what can companies do to improve their energy and sustainability programmes?

Overall, this new research reveals promising indications that companies are making headway in the fight against climate change. The Fourth Industrial Revolution will bring more data and new technologies, and companies need to ensure they have the right tools and expertise to navigate this landscape. Their opportunities for improvement include:

Provide access to good quality energy and sustainability data, aggregated in a cloud-based platform that ensures consistency across the enterprise

Engage corporate leadership to support building business cases for energy and sustainability projects

Make a public commitment to sustainability — whether through an established initiative like RE100 and science-based targets, or by setting company-specific targets

Explore renewable energy generation, storage and load-shifting strategies to both reduce emissions and enable new financial opportunities.

Companies that embrace decarbonization, decentralization and digitalization will have a strong advantage both now and in the future.

To learn more about the Schneider Electric and GreenBiz Research study and findings, read the 2019 Corporate Energy & Sustainability Progress Report.

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The views expressed in this article are those of the author alone and not the World Economic Forum.

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