Board Paper Implementing Net Zero for SMEs
A board paper for building net-zero objectives and targets into corporate strategy. It also provides for ongoing monitoring and evaluation of a company’s progress against its net-zero targets.
A board paper for building net-zero objectives and targets into corporate strategy. It also provides for ongoing monitoring and evaluation of a company’s progress against its net-zero targets.
A board paper for building net-zero objectives and targets into corporate strategy. It also provides for ongoing monitoring and evaluation of a company’s progress against its net-zero targets.
Board paper: net zero
Purpose of meeting
This meeting has been convened to consider, and if thought fit, resolve the following:
OR
[Management is seeking board approval to carry out a program of work to develop science-based targets to reduce organisational emissions to net zero in line with the Paris Agreement.]
Overview
Climate-related risk is a material financial and legal risk issue for our organisation. Robust and proactive management of climate-related risks is not only necessary and prudent but presents an opportunity for value capture and market leadership.
Setting net-zero targets will enable [the Company] to:
This board paper assists the board in:
(i) understanding the importance of the economic transition to net-zero greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions, and the risks posed by climate change to the business;
(ii) setting net-zero objectives and targets;
(iii) establishing procedures to implement the objectives and targets, and monitor progress; and
(iv) communicating the objectives and targets to stakeholders.
Detail is provided in the annexes to this board paper as follows:
It was resolved:
a) undertake a strategic review to assess [the Company’s] emissions footprint; and
b) revert to the board with a report containing recommendations for science-based organisational emissions-reduction targets over short-, medium- and long-term time horizons, including net zero by 2050 or sooner, by [date]. The report should also provide recommendations for any updates required to our business plan in order to meet those targets.
Annex A
Net Zero - Our decarbonisation journey
For a three minute video explainer on net zero and how companies can begin their decarbonisation journey, see Net zero climate plans, explained - YouTube.
Why do we need to consider net zero?
What is net zero?
Scope 1 | Scope 2 | Scope 3 |
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Who has already set net zero targets?
Many governments and local authorities have declared a climate emergency. As at September 2021 governments responsible for more than 73 percent of the world's emissions have set net zero by 2050 targets (including China by 2060). There are many approaches to dealing with any emergency and opportunities exist for every business to reduce its carbon footprint.
Although the Paris Agreement was signed by states, the whole global economy must rapidly transition. Race to Zero is the UN-backed global campaign rallying non-state actors to take rigorous and immediate action to halve global emissions by 2030. Businesses can join through partner organisations, one of which, the SME Climate Hub, is targeted at SMEs.
Risk management and disclosure
Alongside setting net-zero targets (taking responsibility for the Company’s impact on the climate), the board needs to consider current and future risks to the Company from the climate crisis.
Larger companies are increasingly being asked by investors and regulators to make climate-related disclosures in annual financial filings in accordance with the recommendations of the IFRS in areas spanning governance, strategy, risk management, metrics and targets. While it may not be currently mandatory for our business to report against IFRS recommendations, the framework provides us with useful guidance to draw from and prepare our own disclosures when such disclosures are legally required. It also provides a useful framework with which to 'future-cast' the potential impacts of climate change on our business across the plausible range of climate futures – whether that is a swift and disorderly transition to a low-emissions economy, to more delayed action that may result is higher physical risks to the natural and built environment.
Annex B
Checklist for developing our climate strategy
A. Understand how climate affects our business
1. Assess the likely impact of climate change on our business, now and in the future
a) How will the following areas of the business be impacted by climate change risks: finance, operations, supply chain, brand, reputation, compliance or regulatory?
b) What are potential physical, economic transition and litigation risks?
c) What are the specific risks for our business?
d) What level of risk do they involve and how can we manage and mitigate such risk?
e) How do we implement climate risk management and mitigation solutions for our business?
f) Consider how these risks may materialise for the business in short-, medium- and long-term timelines (for example, in 3 or 5 or 10 years).
Additional resources:
B. Set targets
2. Measure and estimate the company’s current greenhouse gas emissions.
a) Read WWF’s Emission Possible guide for an introduction to measuring.
b) See The Greenhouse Gas Protocol guidance on Scope 2 and Scope 3 emissions and its free calculator.
To understand carbon product footprints, see The Carbon Trust’s Carbon Footprint Calculator and Carbon Footprinting Guide, Business Road Map to Real Net Zero - Compare Your Footprint, Doconomy’s interactive tool for service footprints, see the Climate Hero Carbon Calculator for service businesses.
3. Set short- and medium-term targets for emissions reductions, and a base year against which the Company will measure those reductions.
a) Define short-, medium- and long-term horizons for the business. [Note: It is recommended that companies cut absolute GHGs emissions by at least 50% before 2030. This means the Company’s own emissions (Scope 1 and 2) and emissions generated by the Company’s value chain (Scope 3).]
b) If possible, align our interim targets with halving emissions every decade (which equates to at least a 7 percent* year on year emissions reduction).
* [The ‘Carbon Law’; and J. Rockström et al., A roadmap for rapid decarbonisation, Science 355.6331, 1269-1271 (2017).]
Additional resources:
4. Set a net zero target to be achieved by 2050.
a) Consider if the target date is feasible but ambitious.
b) How ambitious does the Company want to be? How rapidly do we want to decarbonise?
c) Establish a set of targets and deadlines for meeting short, medium and long term targets.
d) Obtain stakeholder buy-in for the net-zero targets set.
e) Define the sources of emissions that will come within scope of the Company’s net-zero target (to include direct and indirect sources of scope 1, 2 and 3 emissions)
5. Develop a plan to achieve emissions-reduction targets and operationalise the plan (see section C below).
a) The 1.5°C Business Playbook provides guidelines to set a climate strategy.
b) See also the SME Climate Hub Toolkit.
6. Develop a strategy to remove emissions the Company cannot immediately reduce (residual emissions).
a) Quantify the Company’s residual emissions.
b) Consider the viability of using offsets to reduce residual emissions.
c) Purchase offset credits through verified providers to ensure quality and accountability.
d) Prioritise offsetting projects that remove emissions (rather than avoid or reduce others’ emissions and aim to remove carbon from the atmosphere through long lived storage with low risk of reversal over millennia).
e) Consider the implications of including the implications of offsets purchased by the Company on a just transition, global equity and wider social and ecological goals.
Additional resources:
7. Decide whether to sign up to Race to Zero
Signing up to Race to Zero requires the Company to:
a) pledge to reach net zero as soon as possible (by 2050 at latest) in line with efforts to limit warming to 1.5C and set an interim target to achieve in the next decade, which reflects maximum effort towards or beyond 50 percent emissions reduction by 2030;
b) within 12 months of joining Race to Zero, develop a plan of short- to medium-term actions to achieve interim and longer-term pledges;
c) proceed with immediate action toward achieving targets; and
d) publish (at least annually) the Company’s progress against its interim and long-term targets, as well as the actions being taken. Companies that join through the SME Climate Hub can access a simplified reporting process appropriate to SMEs.
8. Monitor, evaluate and report on the Company’s net-zero journey
a) Establish a robust monitoring system to quantify GHG emissions and assess how the business is performing against its targets (see ‘measurement’ above).
b) Consider whether to have the Company’s performance against its targets and Company emissions reductions audited by an independent third party.
c) Be aware of innovation, legal, regulatory, technical or political developments that may help the Company achieve its targets more quickly.
C. Implement targets?
9. Start with areas of the business within the Company’s control. See the Net Zero Toolkit website and UK Business Climate Hub for tools and resources to assist with planning (from minimising waste, to talking to suppliers, setting targets and building a strategy).
10. Evaluate the current position of the business, practical action we can take now and its financial impact. Consider changes that might be needed in the longer term (for example, product design, technological shifts, changes to suppliers, growth strategies).
a) Electricity suppliers
b) Non-renewable fuel use
c) Zero emission vehicle fleet
d) Other avoidable GHG emissions
e) Start or continue planning the reconfiguration of the business in light of the climate crisis, to cover medium- to long-term mitigation of the risks identified, and focusing on business resilience, financial gains and losses in particular.
11. Encourage others to begin or continue their journey to net zero.
a) Supply chain:
b) Investments:
c) Lobbying and campaigning:
d) Employee (and contractor) engagement
12. Implement and communicate Company strategy internally and externally.
We need to avoid greenwashing - that is, marketing our net-zero initiatives in a manner that is not supported by evidence. It is important to get buy-in at all levels of the Company to deliver meaningful change.
Consider the following:
a) How will we embed our net-zero targets into our corporate strategy?
b) Do we need to amend our constitutional documents to embed climate into the purpose and articles of the Company, for example our articles of association?
c) Should the board consider the environmental impact of its decisions as a standard consideration in all executive decision making?
d) Are there internal or external policies we can introduce to help us meet our net-zero targets (net-zero aligned procurement policies, terms and conditions for suppliers in our supply chain, clauses we want to include as standard in our contracts)?
e) How best to share our climate ambition, objectives and targets with internal and external stakeholders.
f) Stakeholder management best practice and how the Company can optimise stakeholder buy-in.
g) What public disclosures should we make about our climate ambition and performance against our net-zero objectives and targets? How should we communicate these, to whom and how often?
h) How will our transparency on climate affect customer loyalty and brand image?
i) Can we partner with our clients to encourage them to also take climate positive action to decarbonise and set their own net-zero targets on their journey to a net-zero future?
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