| Literature DB >> 35854785 |
Anders Bjørn1,2, Joachim Peter Tilsted3, Amr Addas4, Shannon M Lloyd1.
Abstract
Purpose of Review: Companies increasingly set science-based targets (SBTs) for reducing greenhouse gas emissions. We review literature on SBTs to understand their potential for aligning corporate emissions with the temperature goal of the Paris Agreement. Recent Findings: SBT adoption by larger, more visible companies in high-income countries has accelerated. These companies tend to have a good prior reputation for managing climate impacts and most appear on track for meeting their scope 1 and 2 SBTs. More research is needed to distinguish between substantive and symbolic target-setting and understand how companies plan to achieve established SBTs. There is no consensus on whether current target-setting methods appropriately allocate emissions to individual companies or how much freedom companies should have in setting SBTs. Current emission accounting practices, target-setting methods, SBT governance, and insufficient transparency may allow companies to report some emission reductions that are not real and may result in insufficient collective emission reductions. Lower rates of SBT diffusion in low- and middle-income countries, in certain emission-intensive sectors, and by small- and medium-sized enterprises pose potential barriers for mainstreaming SBTs. While voluntary SBTs cannot substitute for more ambitious climate policy, it is unclear whether they delay or encourage policy needed for Paris alignment. Summary: We find evidence that SBT adoption corresponds to increased climate action. However, there is a need for further research from a diversity of approaches to better understand how SBTs may facilitate or hinder a just transition to low-carbon societies.Entities:
Keywords: Climate change; Corporate emissions; Literature review; Paris Agreement; Science-based targets
Year: 2022 PMID: 35854785 PMCID: PMC9287239 DOI: 10.1007/s40641-022-00182-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Clim Change Rep
Fig. 1SBT approval for 1039 companies by temperature goal through November 2021. Data extracted from SBTi dataset on 2 December 2021 [37]. Companies who have only committed to setting SBTs are not included. Companies with revised targets are only counted at the timing of their latest target approval
Fig. 2Geographical distribution of 1039 companies with approved SBTs through November 2021. Data extracted from SBTi dataset on 2 December 2021 [37]. Companies who have only committed to setting SBTs are not included. Two companies in Bermuda are not shown. Map created using Datawrapper [38]
Fig. 3Sectoral distribution of 1039 companies with approved SBTs through November 2021. Data extracted from SBTi dataset on 2 December 2021 [37]. Companies who have only committed to setting SBTs are not included. See Table 2 in the Appendix for a translation between SBTi sectors and the sectors used here
Translation from SBTi sectors to the sectors used in Fig. 3
| SBTi sector | Sector used in Fig. 3 | Number of approved SBTs through November 2021 |
|---|---|---|
| Chemicals | Chemicals | 19 |
| Building products | Construction | 20 |
| Construction and engineering | Construction | 33 |
| Construction materials | Construction | 17 |
| Homebuilding | Construction | 9 |
| Consumer durables, household, and personal products | Consumer goods | 54 |
| Food and beverage processing | Consumer goods | 86 |
| Textiles, apparel, footwear, and luxury goods | Consumer goods | 61 |
| Tobacco | Consumer goods | 7 |
| Aerospace and defense | Equipment and components | 1 |
| Automobiles and components | Equipment and components | 29 |
| Containers and packaging | Equipment and components | 17 |
| Electrical equipment and machinery | Equipment and components | 50 |
| Healthcare equipment and supplies | Equipment and components | 7 |
| Semiconductors and semiconductor equipment | Equipment and components | 8 |
| Technology hardware and equipment | Equipment and components | 36 |
| Tires | Equipment and components | 4 |
| Banks, diverse financials, insurance | Other services | 9 |
| Education services | Other services | 2 |
| Healthcare providers and services and healthcare technology | Other services | 1 |
| Hotels, restaurants and leisure, and tourism services | Other services | 23 |
| Media | Other services | 18 |
| Pharmaceuticals, biotechnology, and life | Other services | 31 |
| Software and services | Other services | 44 |
| Specialized consumer services | Other services | 1 |
| Specialized financial services, consumer finance, insurance brokerage firms | Other services | 2 |
| Telecommunication services | Other services | 36 |
| Trading companies and distributors and commercial services and supplies | Other services | 15 |
| Solid waste management utilities | Other utilities | 5 |
| Water utilities | Other utilities | 5 |
| Electric utilities and independent power producers and energy traders (including fossil, alternative, and nuclear energy) | Power | 37 |
| Electric utilities and IPPs and energy traders | Power | 1 |
| Professional services | Professional services | 118 |
| Food production: agricultural production | Raw materials | 12 |
| Food production: animal source food production | Raw materials | 7 |
| Forest and paper products: forestry, timber, pulp, and paper, rubber | Raw materials | 13 |
| Mining: iron, aluminum, other metals | Raw materials | 9 |
| Mining: other (rare minerals, precious metals, and gems) | Raw materials | 2 |
| Real estate | Real estate | 68 |
| Food and staple retailing | Retailing | 21 |
| Retailing | Retailing | 47 |
| Air freight transportation and logistics | Transport | 19 |
| Air transportation: airport services | Transport | 2 |
| Ground transportation: highways and railtracks | Transport | 3 |
| Ground transportation: railroads transportation | Transport | 15 |
| Ground transportation: trucking transportation | Transport | 10 |
| Water transportation: ports and services | Transport | 2 |
| Water transportation: water transportation | Transport | 3 |
Summary of the seventeen reviewed studies chronologically ordered. Only the studies’ aspects related to SBTs are included. The lens numbers refer to existing corporate engagement (1), methods and governance (2), and diffusion (3)
| Study reference | Lenses addressed | Methodological approach | Main outcome |
|---|---|---|---|
| Trexler and Schendler [ | 2, 3 | Commentary | Argues that SBTs hinder substantial emissions reductions by implying that corporate action can substitute for public policy, that decarbonizations is unrealistic without carbon pricing, and that only a few companies can reach their targets without ambitious regulation |
| Marland et al. [ | 3 | Comment on Trexler and Schendler [ | Argues that SBTs and other corporate climate initiatives can be a positive force for the demand and implementation of climate policy |
| Giesekam et al. [ | 2, 3 | Review of SBT methods and SBTi material | Identifies several challenges for setting SBTs for the construction sector and problematizes the missing link between SBTs and national climate targets |
| Lister [ | 2, 3 | Review of SBT methods and SBTi material and the broader literature on corporate carbon management | Argues that lack of standardization in SBT-setting makes comparison of company targets impossible and proposes state co-regulation |
| Aden [ | 2 | Review of SBT methods and SBTi material | Provides a brief overview of seven SBT methods and outlines new research questions |
| Li et al. [ | 2 | Coupling of multiregional input − output database with existing SBT method | Presents a new method for setting SBTs for scope 3 emissions that is consistent with the sectoral decarbonization approach (SDA) [ |
| Faria and Labutong [ | 2 | Review of SBT methods and SBTi material and simulation of target-setting | Provides an in-depth description of four SBT methods and finds that SBTs can be as sensitivity to the choice of emission scenario as the choice target equation |
| Dagnet et al. [ | 2, 3 | Review of SBTs and corporate climate disclosure in the context of potential interactions with policy | Argues that the private sector and governments may form positive feedback loops related to data and climate ambition and discusses how this can take place in the context of SBTs, drawing on examples from Asia |
| Walenta [ | 2, 3 | Review of SBT methods and SBTi material and the broader literature on climate capitalism | Highlights a need for future critical research on the origins, diffusion and impacts of SBTs, the lack of uptake in some sectors, and the use of renewable energy certificates |
| Tuhkanen et al. [ | 1 | Review of corporate climate disclosure and documentations of green bonds | Investigates whether capital raised via green bond issuance is directed towards emission reduction targets but finds inconclusive evidence |
| Bjørn et al. [ | 2 | Review of SBT methods and SBTi material and simulation of target-setting | Provides an in-depth description of seven SBT methods and finds that individual methods and mixes of methods lead to emission imbalances (see footnote 17) of varying sizes and signs |
| Giesekam et al. [ | 1, 2 | Review of SBTs and corporate emission disclosure | Finds that most companies are on track to meeting SBTs for scope 1 and 2 emissions, but not for scope 3 emissions, and that insufficient emission disclosure prevents a complete picture of target progress |
| SBTi [ | 1, 2, 3 | Review of SBTs and corporate emission disclosure and literature on diffusion of innovations | Finds that companies with SBTs in combination have reduced scope 1 and 2 emissions at a rate exceeding what is required globally for meeting the 1.5 °C target, calls for higher quality in corporate emission disclosure. and proposes that reaching a threshold of 20% of companies with SBTs in a geography or sector will lead to rapid adoption by the remaining companies |
| Kuo and Chang [ | 1 | Ordinal logistic regression on the relationship between climate disclosure to CDP and CDP score for 1,994 Japanese companies | Determines that for companies in non-high-carbon emitting industries, there was a strong relationship between SBT adoption and the CDP score, and that in high-carbon emitting industries, the CDP score was higher for companies that adopted both SBTs and internal carbon pricing |
| Freiberg et al. [ | 1 | Empirical analysis of the determinants of external standard (SBT) adoption and difference-in-differences research design assessing the impact of SBT adoption on climate efforts | Finds that companies are more likely to set SBTs if they achieved ambitious targets in the past, perceive economic risks to their business from climate change, and have carbon-intensive operations, finds that companies set more challenging targets and invest more in emission reduction initiatives after SBT adoption, and suggests that companies set SBTs to ensure sufficiently ambitious targets |
| Bolton and Kacperczyk [ | 1, 3 | Statistical analysis evaluating the association of company, industry, and country-level characteristics with target-setting and the effect of target-setting on overall emissions | Finds that companies are more likely to set SBTs and other targets if they are larger, more visible, already disclose emissions, and have lower absolute emissions, finds a small but statistically insignificant relationship between the growth in target-setting and the reduction in annual growth of aggregate scope 1 emissions, concludes that target-setting initiatives have successfully drawn in companies most able and willing to commit but not companies that “that need to reduce their emissions the most” |
| Piper and Longhurst [ | 1 | A sequential mixed methods approach, including literature review, discussions with “sustainability thought leaders,” surveys, and interviews to assess corporate action towards carbon neutrality among a small number of UK corporations | Finds that economics (rather than climate change concerns) is the main driver for target-setting and identifies credibility and standardization as the two predominant motivations for setting SBTs |