Getting Our Hands Dirty
There is no silver-bullet solution to keep our planet from warming beyond an average surface temperature of 1.5°C above pre-industrial levels. Building out new green energy capacity is a necessary place to start. But an incredible amount of work still needs to be done to reduce emissions and close the gap to achieve global decarbonization goals—work that can only be accomplished by also actively engaging with the global economy’s highest-emitting sectors and partnering with them to decarbonize their businesses.
The opportunity is in “going where the emissions are”—the “where” being not only power generation, but also other hard-to-abate industries such as steel, cement, chemicals and transportation. Rather than avoiding or divesting from carbon-intensive businesses, this strategy seeks them out with the objective of transforming them into low-carbon operations. In the case of utilities, it means converting their thermal capacity into clean power generation. In hard-to-abate industries such as cement and steel, this strategy aims to reduce emissions by changing the manufacturing processes.
Going where the emissions are is not easy. But not “going there” has a higher cost. For every dollar of financing for fossil fuels, $4 needs to be invested in the transition by 2030 to meet publicly stated net zero goals. As of 2022, just 73 cents was invested in the transition for each dollar invested in fossil fuels.1 Without rapid action, carbon emissions from these industries are likely to increase by more than 30% by 2050 compared with 2010 levels2—and the chances of meeting global climate goals will decline substantially.
At the same time, investors who are unwilling to take on initial carbon emissions can risk missing out on a transformational opportunity from both an economic and an environmental standpoint. Going where the emissions are enables investors to target a wider spectrum of transition opportunities, finding more situations to invest for more. It also allows investors to tie their decarbonization objectives to appropriate risk-adjusted economic returns that will make a meaningful contribution to our collective climate goals.