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NewslettersCEO Daily

Not a single Fortune Global 500 company made a new net zero commitment last year

By
Nicholas Gordon
Nicholas Gordon
and
Alan Murray
Alan Murray
Down Arrow Button Icon
By
Nicholas Gordon
Nicholas Gordon
and
Alan Murray
Alan Murray
Down Arrow Button Icon
September 19, 2023, 8:55 AM ET
Only 66% of Fortune Global 500 companies have a net zero pledge as of 2022—the exact same level as the year before.
Only 66% of Fortune Global 500 companies have a net zero pledge as of 2022—the exact same level as the year before.Getty Images

Good morning.

It’s Climate Week in New York, which means the city has become a parking lot for gas-fueled limos ferrying executives and diplomats to an endless series of breakfasts, lunches, and dinners featuring earnest conversations about how to fix the climate.

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There are also a lot of reports coming out, including one this morning from Climate Impact Partners, assessing business efforts to address the challenge. And it’s not good news. After an explosion of commitments to net zero in 2020 and 2021, business momentum stalled. According to the report, there were no new commitments made in the last year, stalling the percentage of Fortune Global 500 companies that have made significant climate commitments at 66%. Here’s what Sheri Hickok, CEO of Climate Impact Partners, told me in previewing the report:

“The backlash (against ESG) is having an effect…The uncertainty—whether due to lack of clarity around SEC reporting, around the expense, around how you link these actions to the company’s bottom line—is causing everybody to pause.”

Still, the actions of the last few years have been significant and lasting. The report shows 76% of the Fortune Global 500 now report on annual emissions, with 55% of them even reporting on the vexing Scope 3 emissions (emissions from suppliers and customers). And the 66% of companies that have made a “meaningful commitment”—which this report defines as a target of 2030 or sooner—saw their emissions decline 7%, compared to a 3% increase among companies without a 2030 target. The UN says annual emissions reductions of 8% will be needed throughout the decade to meet its goal of limiting global warming to 1.5 degrees centigrade. “We don’t have time for a pause,” Hickok says. You can read the full report here.

Separately, the folks at Deloitte, who sponsor this newsletter, have a new report out showing the importance of women’s sports in developing business leaders. Some 85% of surveyed women who played sports say the skills they learned were important to success in their professional careers. (Deloitte also sponsors the WNBA.)

Other news below.


Alan Murray
@alansmurray

alan.murray@fortune.com

TOP NEWS

Functional footwear

German sandal maker Birkenstock thinks a “breakthrough of modern feminism” will be a consumer trend in its favor. The company, which filed for a U.S. IPO last week, is telling investors that once consumers switch to its “functional apparel and footwear,” they won’t go back to less comfortable shoes. Analysts think Birkenstock can hit a valuation as high as $8.7 billion, as the IPO market comes back to life after Arm’s blockbuster debut. Fortune

Prosus’s CEO steps down

Bob van Dijk is stepping down as CEO of South African tech company Naspers and its Netherlands-based affiliate, Prosus. Naspers was an early investor in Chinese tech giant Tencent, and the company has struggled to manage what's now a valuable stake. Prosus, which owns the Tencent stake, has a market capitalization of $82 billion—less than the value of its 26% stake in Tencent, worth $98 billion. The Wall Street Journal 

Locked profits

Around $18 billion in profits earned by overseas companies in Russia last year are now stuck in the country, according to figures compiled by the Kyiv School of Economics. Companies from “unfriendly” countries—a category that includes the U.S., the U.K., and the EU—can’t transfer their earnings out of the country without permission from the Russian government, after Moscow imposed a ban last year in retaliation for Western sanctions. Financial Times

AROUND THE WATERCOOLER

VSCO appoints new CEO as social media app looks to help ‘creators to make some money’ by Paolo Confino

House poor is back: ‘the new normal for the foreseeable future’ by Sydney Lake 

Commentary: The U.S.-China trade war is counterproductive–and the Huawei P60’s chip is just one of its many unforeseen ramifications by Ben Harburg

Billionaire investor Ray Dalio says the AI transformation could create a 3-day workweek. We’re ‘going through a time warp’ by Chloe Taylor 

‘Competitive is a code word for race to the bottom’: UAW boss says Big 3 can pay up after earning a quarter of a trillion in profits over the past decade by Christiaan Hetzner

‘Second worst short-haul airline’ in Europe refuses to refund family $200 because they claim fliers ‘unchecked’ themselves before boarding by Prarthana Prakash

This edition of CEO Daily was curated by Nicholas Gordon. 

This is the web version of CEO Daily, a newsletter of must-read insights from Fortune CEO Alan Murray. Sign up to get it delivered free to your inbox.

About the Authors
Nicholas Gordon
By Nicholas GordonAsia Editor
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Nicholas Gordon is an Asia editor based in Hong Kong, where he helps to drive Fortune’s coverage of Asian business and economics news.

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Alan Murray
By Alan Murray
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