Schmelzender Eisberg im Wasser als Symbol für die Klimastrategie
17.04.2024

Step by step to Net Zero: how to develop a climate strategy for your company

The climate strategy for your company is imminent. But how to start – and where? Read this article to find out how to develop a suitable strategy for targeted decarbonization step by step!

Sustainability has become more of a focus for society, politics and business in recent years.
With the Paris Climate Agreement, the European Green Deal and its various implementation strategies such as CBAM, the EU Climate Change Act, CSRD or CSDDD, there is a whole range of targets, goals and guidelines, including for climate protection.
Nevertheless, there are warnings that the current course is not enough and that we will crack the 1.5° mark sooner than feared.
So is it better to bury our heads in the sand because it won’t help anyway?
No – it is now all the more important that everyone gets involved.
Companies in particular have a responsibility here.
But how and where to start?
Here is a step-by-step guide to developing a decarbonization strategy for your company!

1. recognize the challenge: Tackling the climate strategy with the right motivation

55% of the German managers surveyed in a Capgemini study stated that In the next ten years, climate change will pose the greatest challenges for the business model.
Climate change is no longer just around the corner – it already has both feet in the hallway.
For the first companies, it has even arrived in the living room and is smashing the fine china in the display case.
This is because climate change has long since had an impact on the first supply chains and business models.
So the challenge is clear: develop strategies and plans to reduce your own company’s emissions. At VERSO, we think it’s important not only to recognize the challenge – but also to find the right motivation to get started in a focused way and to persevere.
So here’s a question for you: What is your motivation behind developing a climate strategy? Perhaps for you it’s the traditional regulatory pressure.
For example, because you are obliged by the CSRD to disclose your climate strategy.
But perhaps the matter is also close to your heart regardless of the law – because you can see the advantages of a climate strategy or because you want to future-proof your company.
You may also want to arm yourself against rising costs due to CBAM and EU emissions trading, meet the growing demand for sustainable products or strengthen your employer branding.
Whatever it is, a clear motivation brings commitment throughout the company and ensures that your decarbonization plan is not just based on dry numbers.

2. create a CO₂ balance sheet or GHG balance sheet: The basis of your climate strategy

But it doesn’t work entirely without dry figures.
Once the commitment has been clarified, the second step is to lay the foundations for your decarbonization strategy.
This first requires an inventory in the form of a carbon footprint.
The Greenhouse Gas Protocol(GHG Protocol) provides you with guidance.
This is the most widely used standard for balancing greenhouse gas emissions.
Important when determining your emissions: Go really in-depth and get as much data as possible – from as many sources as possible!
How is your company structured?
What sources of emissions are there in your company?
Which of these sources are real emissions hotspots?
How many emissions are generated each year?
Work your way through your processes, products and activities step by step – right through to Scope 3.
Because even if it is easier to collect data for Scope 1 and Scope 2, Scope 3 emissions from the upstream and downstream value chain account for up to 80% of a company’s total emissions!
Tools such as our Climate Hub and Supply Chain Hub make it easier for you to record all climate data accurately and clearly.

Überblick zu den einzelnen Scopes: Scope 1 umfasst direkte Emissionen eines Unternehmens, Scope 2 umfasst indirekte Emissionen eines Unternehmens und Scope 3 umfasst alle Emissionen, die in der Wertschöpfungskette eines Unternehmens entstehen.

By the way: If you want to know even more precisely, you can balance all of your company’s greenhouse gas emissions.
In addition to CO₂, a complete GHG balance sheet includes six other gases with greenhouse gas potential – including methane and nitrous oxide, for example.

3. set targets for the decarbonization strategy

The status quo is ticked off.
Now the journey can begin.
But – where are we actually going?
The next step is to set clear climate targets for your company.
Preferably in SMARTform, of course:

  • Specific
  • Measurable
  • Ambitious
  • Realistic
  • Scheduled

Be sure to involve your company’s stakeholders here – because setting targets over the heads of employees, which they ultimately have to implement, can quickly backfire.
Here is a short checklist for the goals of your climate strategy:

  • Our climate targets are science-based (support is provided, for example, by the SBTi sector guidelines)
  • Our climate targets support the 1.5° target of the Paris Climate Agreement
  • We have set a baseline year to benchmark our progress
  • We have agreed a clear timeframe for our climate targets

When planning your reduction targets, also differentiate between:

  • Long-term climate targets that go hand in hand with far-reaching structural changes in your company
  • Short-term climate targets with which your company can achieve initial success quickly
  • Absolute climate targets; i.e. quantitative targets to be achieved by time X
  • Relative climate targets; i.e. the CO₂ reduction depends on key figures such as the number of employees or production figures

4. plan measures to implement the climate strategy

You are aware of your company’s emissions and climate hotspots and have set yourself clear decarbonization targets. Unfortunately, targets alone do not slow down climate change.
So in step 4, it’s time to plan your strategy so that you can take action.
Here are four tips from our side:

  1. Involve important stakeholders here again in order to find as many approaches and levers as possible.
  2. External consultants are also worth considering – they can help you uncover hidden potential for reducing emissions.
  3. Make sure that the measures are feasible.
    No one is helped if you develop ambitious goals and radical measures that are unfortunately not compatible with reality.
  4. Get a picture of the maturity levels of your stakeholders.
    An example: In order to achieve the climate targets in the supply chain, suppliers should produce 100% with renewable energies.
    Supplier A has had sustainability on its agenda for a long time and fulfills this requirement with ease.
    Supplier B has not had much to do with sustainability so far, but wants to make the switch – your company can help here with training or support.

Is your procurement ready for ESG requirements?

Prepare yourself optimally for all new requirements with this checklist!

5. reduce emissions

If planned correctly, your climate strategy should work like a cycle: After the initial assessment with objectives and action planning, there is a “working phase” in which you let your measures take effect and pursue your goals.
After a year, you take stock and adjust your strategy to make it even more efficient.
The rule here is: good things take time.
If the decarbonization strategy is to have a real impact, it can run for ten years or longer in large companies with extensive processes and supply chains!

6. offset unavoidable emissions

Let’s be honest – CO₂ compensation is a controversial topic.
Some are in favor of it, others see it as greenwashing.
In principle, offsetting should really only be an option if you have fully exhausted all potential for reducing emissions.
If you decide to offset unavoidable emissions as part of your climate strategy, we would like to give you an important tip: Make use of reputable offsetting projects that

  1. are tailored to your company and
  2. whose effect is measurable.

The voluntary carbon market is not yet regulated by the state and is rather opaque.
Instead of legally binding criteria for validating carbon offsetting, there are only a number of private standards and registers with different quality criteria.
The result: major differences in quality within the climate protection projects on which the so-called CO₂ credits are based.
So take a close look.
In particular, Deutsche Umwelthilfe (DUH) has already successfully (and publicly!) sued several times against compensation through forest projects and reforestation, for example because the estimated forest area could not compensate for the amount of CO₂ emitted or the project did not run long enough to keep up with the lifetime of CO₂ in the atmosphere.

7. optimize climate strategy – and communicate with pleasure!

We briefly touched on this a moment ago: The decarbonization strategy is not a one-off project.
Once it gets rolling, it will run for many, many years.
After all, we still have a long way to go with climate change.
And a lot can happen in those years.
Check progress regularly.
What is going according to plan, where is there a hitch, where is nothing happening at all?
Check whether you will achieve your goals within the agreed time frame.
Talk to your stakeholders about where there is still potential. And please evaluate honestly whether your current strategy is actually of any use to the stakeholder on whom everything ultimately depends: nature! Last but not least: mistakes are part of the process – just like celebrating successes.
Communicate your progress, but also openly admit where you may have misjudged.
Show what your company wants to achieve and where you want to make improvements. Transparency, honesty and commitment are the drivers of sustainable transformation!

Let’s find your way towards Net Zero

Alongside sustainability reporting, planning and implementing the climate strategy is one of the most time-consuming tasks.
Thousands of data points and emission factors from the entire value chain are included in the calculation of the carbon footprint.
Many of these are not directly available to you and must first be obtained.
If you want to carry out the calculation correctly (i.e. in line with international standards such as the GHG Protocol), you need insight and perseverance.
And then there are doubts like: Do our climate targets even make sense?
Are our measures having any effect?
Can I communicate this and that milestone for our product now, or will I be accused of greenwashing?

Your overview of the new Green Claims Directive

New obligations for all those who advertise with terms such as “climate neutral”: The Anti-Greenwashing Directive sets barriers.
What you should know now.

The first climate strategy in particular is a real challenge.
VERSO helps you to get started – and to implement your decarbonization plan safely in the long term.
Interested?
Then take a look at how we can support you with your climate strategy:

* This information is summarized editorial content and should not be construed as legal advice. VERSO accepts no liability.

Subscribe to our newsletter!

Sign up and receive regular news about:

  • Pragmatic all-in-one solution for ESG reporting, climate and supply chain management
  • Individual advice from the VERSO experts
  • Developed with expertise from 12+ years of sustainability management
  • Trusted by 250+ customers

Get to know the software!

LKW-Fahrer als Symbolbild für die Lieferkette
04.03.2024

Decarbonizing the supply chain: How companies achieve their climate targets along the supply chain

Around 80% of total emissions are generated along the supply chain – the path to Net Zero therefore also requires clear climate targets for the supply chain. But targets alone are not everything. Read here to find out how to implement them.

In recent years, numerous companies have clearly felt that their supply chains are susceptible to crises.
As a result, more and more companies have committed themselves to a sustainable transformation of their business model.
The push for sustainable business practices also soon came “from the very top”: with the European Green Deal, the EU has set the ambitious target of climate neutrality by 2050.

Transparency beyond one’s own nose

One of the pillars of the Green Deal is the CSRD, which obliges companies to report on sustainability.
This means that companies must disclose detailed data on the status quo, their goals and their sustainability measures.
With the ESRS, a set of rules has been introduced specifically to request this data.
However, seamless sustainability reports require one thing above all: 100% transparency.
And far beyond the boundaries of the company itself.
The LkSG, EUDR and CBAM alone demand supply chain transparency from companies.
In addition, the ESRS E1 standard (“Climate Protection and Climate Change”) in particular requires clear targets and strategic planning for all emissions associated with your company – right through to Scope 3.

Überblick zu den einzelnen Scopes: Scope 1 umfasst direkte Emissionen eines Unternehmens, Scope 2 umfasst indirekte Emissionen eines Unternehmens und Scope 3 umfasst alle Emissionen, die in der Wertschöpfungskette eines Unternehmens entstehen.

With an average of 80% of total emissions, the majority of a company’s emissions are generated along the supply chain.
Scope 3 emissions have the greatest impact on the carbon footprint.

The ESRS at a glance

With the new CSRD reporting obligation, the EU is also introducing uniform European standards for comparable sustainability reports – the ESRS.
Get an overview in the factsheet!

Your company therefore needs clear answers on the status of emissions along the supply chain – and how you can decarbonize your supply chain in a targeted manner. Do your suppliers keep an eye on their emissions, or do they not care? Can they provide you with data on this? And if not, do they at least intend to provide the necessary data in the future? Can you persuade them to work with your company to drive sustainability forward? Questions upon questions. Let’s take a look at how you can get answers.

4 steps to decarbonize your supply chain

Step 1: Estimate Scope 3 emissions

Get an overview of your suppliers and compile a list of expenditure and product groups. You can use this to estimate supplier emissions. If you lack precise data, you can initially fall back on average data for the sector. Make the distribution more precise as soon as you have primary data from the suppliers.

Step 2: Identify Scope 3 hotspots and assess suppliers’ climate maturity

Then categorize your suppliers according to their level of climate maturity. Supply chain tools such as the VERSO Supply Chain Hub make this possible via direct inquiries.

  • No maturity level available: Decarbonization strategy or measures are completely lacking.
  • Low level of maturity: Initial steps have been taken to reduce CO2, but no systematic approach yet.
  • Advanced maturity level: Concrete reduction measures are being implemented, but are not yet anchored in the business processes.
  • High degree of maturity: The supplier systematically implements decarbonization, reduction measures are firmly integrated into the corporate strategy.
  • Very high level of maturity: Sustainability has long been on the agenda.
    With innovative approaches and high standards, the supplier is leading the way as a prime example.

Indicators for this are, for example, the origin of raw materials, energy and resource efficiency, the use of renewable energies in production and transportation or verified (!) CO2 compensation projects. Another plus point would be, for example, the voluntary provision of a sustainability report. You now know how high the emissions load per supplier/product is and how seriously your suppliers are already taking the issue of sustainability. This gives you an overview of which suppliers need special attention and support when you later implement the strategy to achieve your decarbonization goals.

Step 3: Set climate targets, onboard suppliers

Set clear, science-based climate targets for your supply chain that are in line with the results of climate research and support the Paris Climate Agreement (limiting global warming to 1.5 °C). You can find industry-specific assistance from the Science Based Targets Initiative (SBTi), for example. The next step is the actual decarbonization of the supply chain. The SBTi recommends the following approach:

  1. Communication
  2. Cooperation
  3. Support
  4. Monitoring
  5. Reinforcement

Inform your suppliers about your climate targets for the supply chain and motivate them to cooperate. Our tip: Increase the chance of good cooperation by involving your suppliers in the target setting from the outset.

Net Zero is teamwork!

Step 4: Implement climate strategy

In the long term, you will only achieve your climate targets in the supply chain if you remain in close contact and support your suppliers in implementing the targets. This could look like this, for example:

  • Enforce specific measures – Walmart has supported its suppliers in switching to renewable energy, for example, which helped the Group achieve its supply chain emissions targets 6 years ahead of schedule.
  • Support with knowledge or resources – for example, you can increase
    Increase your suppliers’ sustainability expertise and therefore their level of climate maturity through training.
  • Stimulate competition among suppliers – by 2024, 92% of companies will require ESG data from their suppliers, according to a BDC study; over the next 5 years, they will also increase the number of criteria on which suppliers must report.

Also help your suppliers to optimize processes or even break completely new ground. Continuously monitor progress and make climate targets a fixed item on the agenda of your supplier meetings. After all, genuine sustainability requires transparency and honesty. But it also needs consistency. So make sure your suppliers understand this: Those who don’t participate will be kicked out sooner or later. Suppliers with a low level of maturity in particular will not be able to make the switch overnight. Nevertheless, they should show a long-term willingness to make production and transportation sustainable. After all, this will not only help the climate – but also the company’s own resilience.

How can I achieve the climate targets for my supply chain as easily as possible?

The more complex your supply chain is, the more difficult it is to collect all the necessary data, determine the status quo and monitor progress.
In discussions with our supply chain consultants, it becomes clear time and again that a lack of resources and incomplete data floating around make life difficult for procurement.
So how do you achieve your climate targets in the supply chain as simply and automatically as possible?

With the right tools! The combination of VERSO Climate Hub and VERSO Supply Chain Hub helps you to strategically manage your climate targets according to SBTi or ESRS:

  • The VERSO Climate Hub simplifies the calculation of your carbon footprint, taking into account the individual scopes.
  • With the VERSO Supply Chain Hub, you can automatically query the climate protection maturity level of your suppliers and obtain specific carbon footprints. These in turn help you to refine your climate strategy in the Climate Hub and make savings transparent.
  • You can then use the reporting function to create qualified reports in accordance with GRI/CSRD for the CDP or SBTi in no time at all.
Übersicht: So gelingt die Lieferketten-Dekarbonisierung mit den Tools von VERSO. VERSO deckt die Scope-3-Priorisierung, die Klimadatenerfassung, die Maßnahmen und das Klimareporting für die Lieferkette ab.

Please write to us. Together we will find a solution to help your company achieve its Net Zero goals!

* This information is summarized editorial content and should not be construed as legal advice. VERSO accepts no liability.

Subscribe to our newsletter!

Register now to arrange a free demo appointment and get to know our solutions at first hand.

  • Pragmatic all-in-one solution for ESG reporting, climate and supply chain management
  • Individual advice from the VERSO experts
  • Developed with expertise from 12+ years of sustainability management
  • Trusted by 250+ customers

Get to know the software!