Arab News, Thu, Jun 19, 2024 | Dhu al-Hijjah 13, 1445
Industries must make massive
investments for net-zero by 2050
RIYADH: Global industries must halve emissions by the end of this decade
to reach 2050 net-zero targets, according to a new analysis urging for increased
clean energy infrastructure spending.
In its latest report, compiled in association with BAE Systems, US-based
consultancy firm Oliver Wyman emphasized the urgency of preserving clean water,
stopping deforestation, and protecting nearly 1 million threatened species to
safeguard the planet.
The UN has set ambitious climate targets, including reducing global emissions by
45 percent by 2030 and achieving net-zero emissions by 2050, in line with the
Paris Agreement’s goal of limiting global warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius above
pre-industrial levels.
Governments, particularly major emitters, are called upon to significantly
enhance their Nationally Determined Contributions and take immediate, decisive
actions to curb emissions, as outlined by the UN.
Underlining the importance of acting swiftly, the Oliver Wyman report said: “To
avoid the worst impacts of climate change and ecosystem degradation, we must cut
global emissions in half, halt and reverse nature loss, and achieve climate
resilience by the end of this decade.”
It added: “The scale of this challenge is monumental. It requires the wholesale
reallocation of capital from brown to green, the transformation of assets and
supply chains from climate-vulnerable to climate-resilient, and the protection
and restoration of ecosystems on a global scale.”
The report disclosed that just 1 percent — equivalent to $27 billion — of
today’s $2.7 trillion annual infrastructure investment is climate-resilient.
“By 2030, that $27 billion needs to have grown to $6.9 trillion. In the same
period, investment in nature-based solutions must triple to $400 billion a
year,” said the consulting firm.
Supply chain resilience and sustainability
The report indicates that climate-related supply chain disruptions are
increasing globally, yet most firms lack the tools to analyze and manage these
rapidly evolving remote risks.
Oliver Wyman also pointed out that many companies have inadequate visibility
into their supply chains and struggle to identify and mitigate vulnerabilities.
“As many as 85 percent of chief procurement officers are unable to evaluate
risks beyond their first-tier suppliers, resulting in significant blind spots,”
said the consulting firm.
It added: “Companies typically attribute over 90 percent of their physical
climate risk exposure to direct operations and less than 10 percent to their
supply chains, where in reality most of their material disruption risks reside.”
The study further highlighted that the implementation of AI and remote sensing
will transform this landscape, enabling companies to monitor and identify the
environmental impact of their material suppliers and dependent infrastructure.
Moreover, these technologies will allow risk managers and chief procurement
officers to analyze data comprehensively, pinpoint their companies’ key
strategic exposures, and assess disruption risks, thereby enabling them to
address critical vulnerabilities effectively.
“Companies can begin to monitor their suppliers in real-time, anticipate
disruptions, and make informed decisions about how to restructure supply chains
to minimize risk,” the report highlighted.
Earlier this month, another report from the International Energy Agency
highlighted the crucial role advanced technologies will play in transitioning to
more secure and sustainable energy systems.
The IEA analysis also noted that the pace of deploying digital technologies in
the energy sector will depend heavily on the ability to build a workforce with
the right skills.
Furthermore, the think tank revealed that advanced technologies have the
potential to enhance energy efficiency, reliability, connectivity, and reduce
emissions.
Prioritizing sustainable financing
The Oliver Wyman report emphasizes that companies should categorize their supply
chain activities into sustainable and unsustainable operations. This approach
provides a clearer understanding of the environmental impact in different areas.
“With this disaggregated, near real-time view of a corporation’s environmental
footprint and physical risk exposure, capital providers will be able to more
confidently target sustainable finance toward climate-resilient green projects
in brown sectors,” said the report.
Furthermore, this practice will incentivize transition without starving
high-carbon sectors of capital.
In addition, insurers and banks will gain a comprehensive view of a company’s
physical risk exposures across its operations, enabling them to develop
customized risk management solutions for critical vulnerabilities.
The report also underscores that transitioning to a net-zero, climate-resilient
future is not only an existential necessity but also a significant opportunity
to reshape the global economy.
“Trillions of dollars a year of investment is needed — in low-carbon
technologies and infrastructure, nature-based solutions, resilient supply
chains, and new business models,” said the consulting firm.
It added: “Companies and financial institutions better able to quantify
environmental risks and reliably assess how investment opportunities align with
transition objectives will have a distinct advantage.”
Last year, consultancy firm Wood Mackenzie released a report stating that global
annual investments of $2.7 trillion are necessary to achieve net-zero emissions
by 2050 and prevent temperatures from rising above 1.5 degrees Celsius this
century.
The report emphasized that renewable energy sources such as wind and solar power
must become the world’s primary sources of electricity to support the
electrification of transport and the production of green hydrogen.
In April, the IEA highlighted the need to scale up battery production to meet
climate and energy security objectives set during the UN COP28 summit held in
the UAE last year.
At the event, nearly 200 countries agreed to triple global renewable energy
capacity by 2030, accelerate energy efficiency improvements, and transition away
from fossil fuels.
The report also specified that achieving this goal would require deploying 1,500
gigawatts of battery storage by the end of this decade to support the expanded
renewable energy capacity.