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The Business Case for Aggressive Climate and Energy Action Is like a Gathering Storm hero image

The Business Case for Aggressive Climate and Energy Action Is like a Gathering Storm

The business case for aggressive climate and energy action is gathering in strength and expanding in scope, much like how many believe . More and more companies are setting in response.

As I explained in my previous blog, companies are increasingly aligning themselves with the vision of a climate-compatible future by setting science-based targets. But what’s the fundamental business case behind this trending ambition in climate and energy?

The short answer: Today, there is range of top-line, bottom-line, and ancillary business factors that compel companies to act. They go beyond productivity, for minimizing environmental impact in the pursuit of efficiency gains and cost reductions. Businesses taking climate and energy issues seriously are reaping a variety of benefits in surprising ways. Here’s how:

  • Revenue: Products addressing climate and energy challenges serve expanding market demand, fueling top-line growth. For the past decade, than that of GE’s overall product portfolio.
  • Brand: A company’s reputation is increasingly built (or destroyed) by social and environmental performance. The Coca-Cola trademark——is , which is why helps create and conserve brand equity.
  • Innovation: Climate and energy solutions increasingly inform innovation and product development. take aim at product users near the tail of its value chain, incentivizing its engineers to embed energy conservation in consumer electronics at the earliest stages of design.
  • Customers: Increasingly, customers are evaluating social and environmental indicators when making procurement decisions. of greenhouse gas emissions from its supply chain last year by directly engaging suppliers.
  • Investors: Stranded assets, endowment divestment, green bonds, and so on—investors are increasingly concerned with climate and energy. Earlier this year, proxy season saw a dealing with climate change, with .
  • Supply: Climate change impacts such as extreme weather, droughts, floods, and shifting rains threaten the stability of global supply chains. That’s why General Mills, which depends on crops and farms to do business, views its science-aligned climate goals as a means to improve agricultural resilience and supply continuity.
  • Regulation: Most climate-change-causing carbon emissions come from power generation, which makes the sector particularly susceptible to related regulatory intervention. against possible regulation.
  • Productivity: Amid global competition and uneconomic uncertainty, companies today must continually cut costs. Climate and energy is a natural complement to productivity because reductions in carbon emissions and energy use typically come at net economic savings.

As you can tell, the swirling system of business drivers for aggressive climate and energy action is strengthening and expanding, much like how storms in a warming world are intensifying. This is both appropriate and necessary. In order to avoid the worst consequences of climate change, businesses must mobilize resources, galvanize action, and demonstrate leadership. One way companies can do this is by . Now that you know what they are and why to use them, join me in my next post, where I will explain how to go about setting science-based climate targets.

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Ran Tao

Former Manager, 黑料正能量

New York

Resilient business strategies for a complex world.

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