U.N. campaign toughens standards for company net-zero plans
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[June 15, 2022]
By Simon Jessop and Tommy Wilkes
LONDON (Reuters) - A U.N.-backed campaign
to drive faster climate action is toughening the minimum standards for
companies pledging to cut greenhouse gas emissions, including a
requirement for businesses and banks to curb new fossil fuel projects.
The updated criteria issued on Wednesday by the 'Race to Zero' campaign
are important as they will be reflected in the obligations of a range of
partner organisations marshalling the climate efforts of various
sectors, from banks to insurers and asset managers.
The new rules follow a period of consultation between more than 200
independent experts and will affect many of the world's biggest
companies which have already joined such initiatives and publicly
committed to reaching net-zero emissions.
Under the rules, all members would be explicitly required to phase down
and then phase out all unabated fossil fuels, and to do so in a way that
ensures a so-called 'Just Transition', where the social impacts of the
low-energy transition are mitigated.
"In practice, this means corporations and investors must restrict the
development, financing, and facilitation of new fossil fuel assets,
which includes no new coal projects," the campaign said in a statement.
"The exact pathways and timelines naturally differ across regions and
sectors."
Members would also, for the first time, be required to align their
lobbying and advocacy activities with net-zero by "proactively
supporting" climate policies at the sub-national and national level
"consistent with the Race to Zero criteria".
The updated rules would apply to any new joiners from June 15, while
existing members would have a year to comply.
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Smoke rises above a factory at sunset in Rugby, Britain February 10,
2021. REUTERS/Matthew Childs/
"The clarity these criteria provide, together with
strengthened data transparency, will help us identify the progress
made and gaps remaining," Nigel Topping and Mahmoud Mohieldin,
High-level Climate Champions for the COP26 & COP27 climate talks,
said in a joint statement.
"They will clearly show those actors who are truly
moving ahead versus those who are trying to find loopholes."
Also on Wednesday, the Glasgow Financial Alliance for Net Zero (GFANZ),
a coalition of assets managers, banks and insurance firms launched
in April 2021, released a draft framework to help firms accelerate
their efforts to cut emissions.
The guidelines said their plans should finance net-zero
technologies, increase support for companies aligned to keeping
temperatures to 1.5 degrees Celsius and drive the phase-out of
high-emitting assets.
Climate campaigners welcomed the updated 'Race to Zero' standards,
saying they would pressure GFANZ to demand tougher action from
members.
"GFANZ is going to have to stop waffling on fossil fuels, and will
have to insist that its members stop providing financial services to
the companies driving the climaticide of coal, oil and gas
expansion, while massively increasing their financing of the clean
energy transition," Paddy McCully, senior analyst at Reclaim
Finance, said in a statement.
(Reporting by Simon Jessop and Tommy Wilkes; Editing by William
Maclean)
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