Our research found that 5,099 constituents (58%) of the MSCI ACWI Investible Market Index (IMI) had an active climate target. Our analysis showed that emissions-reduction trends for Scope 1 and 2 emissions lagged stated emissions-reduction targets across all sectors for fiscal years (FY) 2017 through 2022.[1] Emissions rose for companies in the materials and energy sectors during this period and while companies in the utilities sector reduced emissions at the highest rate, they still lagged their stated targets on average.
Emissions-reduction progress lagged companies' own targets
Recently, the lack of progress on emissions reduction and the climate-target backtracking by companies such as Shell plc and Air New Zealand Ltd. have raised questions about the credibility of corporate commitment to decarbonization.[2, 3] Given the recency of targets (75% of targets were declared in FY 2020 or later), the long time frames (85% of targets apply to FYs 2030-40) and business disruptions during the COVID-19 pandemic, assessing decarbonization intent by solely looking at emissions trends may not provide a complete picture and investors may need to consider other factors.
Show us the money — capex data may provide a clearer picture
Despite investor concerns, setting targets is an important step toward reducing emissions and can be followed by various strategies, such as allocating capital resources to new infrastructure and technologies that drive emissions reductions. The transition, however, especially in high-intensity sectors, takes time and immediate emissions reductions may not occur. Capex allocations may, therefore, provide an important and more accurate signal in the interim to assess progress.
Using two datasets, we compared companies with and without climate targets to assess their capex plans. First, using the data available in the MSCI EU Sustainable Finance Package, we analyzed the reported percentage of capex for activities aligned with the “climate-change mitigation” objective of the EU Taxonomy for 753 EU-domiciled companies that were constituents of the MSCI ACWI IMI.[4] Aligned capex includes areas such as renewable-energy infrastructure, energy-efficiency improvements and development of low-carbon transportation. Across sectors with high emissions intensity, we found that companies with climate targets allocated a higher portion of their capex to aligned activities, compared to sector peers without such targets. Utilities companies with targets, on average, allocated 68.5% of capex to activities aligned with climate-change mitigation compared to 30.5% among peers without a target. While the differences were less stark in other high-intensity sectors, we did observe more capex allocation toward aligned activities for companies with an active target.
Capex allocation toward climate-change mitigation
Capex for renewable-power generation was higher for utilities with targets
The second dataset we used enabled us to compare thermal and renewable-power-generation capex for both EU and non-EU-domiciled utilities companies. For disclosed capex plans (FY 2020 and later), utilities companies with a climate target allocated more capital toward renewable-power generation compared to peers without a target. Among the 51 utilities with a target that were constituents of the MSCI ACWI IMI, the average capex allocation toward renewable-power generation was 28%, against an average of 18% among the 43 utilities without targets. Companies in the sub-industries of independent power producers and energy traders and multi-utilities allocated the most capex to renewable power, although we observed a clear distinction in capex allocation within those multi-utilities companies that had a target versus those that did not.
Utilities’ capex allocation toward renewable and thermal power
At the regional level, we noted similar trends for issuers based in EMEA and the Americas. Companies in these regions with one or more targets invested greater amounts in renewable-power generation and less in thermal-power generation compared to peers without targets. Companies based in Asia Pacific, however, showed the opposite trend: those with a target had allocated more capex to thermal and less to renewable power.
Looking ahead
Our analysis shows that setting emissions-reduction targets is associated with higher capex allocation toward low-carbon activities. Investors may benefit from incorporating this information into their assessment of a company’s intention to decarbonize. Transition-focused investors can use capex information as a tool for engagement and investment, supporting both managed phaseouts and low-carbon technology investments.
Data availability is limited, however, because voluntary and granular capex-data disclosures are not widespread. Active investor engagement can effectively encourage companies to provide more-detailed capex information alongside emissions data and other climate-related metrics.