BCGとWEFの共同プロジェクト: CEO 気候リーダーズ
BCGとWEFの共同レポートでは、企業がネットゼロへの挑戦をビジネスチャンスに変えることで、どのようにして競争上の優位性を獲得できるか検討しています。
By Neeraj Aggarwal, Marc Schmidt, Andrey Berdichevskiy, Artak Mikaelyan, and Mai Vu
Home to more than half of the world’s population, Asia accounts for more than half of global primary energy consumption. Given its robust economic growth over the past three decades, Asia is also now the leading contributor of annual global greenhouse gas emissions with a 51% share. Asia’s pivotal role in global supply chains puts it at the center of a complex web of interregional embedded emissions.
As a result, Asia—the most vital engine of global economic growth and the region most vulnerable to the impacts of unchecked emissions growth—is at the heart of the climate crisis. But businesses in Asia also have the greatest opportunity to lead on climate and transform their business for competitive advantage.
The world is already struggling to align with the necessary changes to achieve the critical 1.5°C Paris agreement pathway—a fact laid bare in the recent IPCC (Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change) Sixth Assessment
Heading off such scenarios requires accelerated action in Asia. The region must deliver more than half of the emissions reductions needed to achieve the International Energy Agency’s (IEA) Net Zero Emissions by 2050
The economic and business opportunity for Asia in driving to net zero is commensurate with the challenge.
Asia is projected to unlock 43% ($4.3 trillion) of the $10.1 trillion revenue opportunity available by 2030 from activities like the expansion of renewable power, energy efficiency in buildings, transportation and agriculture, and greater circularity in producing industries. The story of job growth is equally compelling, with more than half (58%) of the 395 million jobs required to service those opportunities situated in Asia.
Companies have an essential role in realizing this opportunity and tackling overarching climate risks. Like the nuanced challenges faced by nations across the region, there is no sufficient single response. Corporations will need to define and implement both adaptation and mitigation strategies while also taking steps to support a just energy transition.
To achieve this companies can adopt an approach based on best practices in the short-, medium-, and long-term:
Certainly many companies in Asia and elsewhere are just beginning this journey. But we see a number of forward-looking Asian companies that are already driving tangible climate outcomes across key industries, including real estate, energy, transport, and agriculture.
Unmitigated climate change is the biggest threat of our generation. Corporate inaction on climate has a negative business impact. Conversely, timely corporate climate action will yield tremendous growth opportunities. Asian corporate leaders can make bold changes—for the good of their business and the world.
This article is a summary of a longer report published by the World Economic Forum in collaboration with Boston Consulting Group and SAP. The full report can be downloaded here.
Alumnus
Alumna
Related Content
Read more insights from BCG’s teams of experts.
BCGとWEFの共同レポートでは、企業がネットゼロへの挑戦をビジネスチャンスに変えることで、どのようにして競争上の優位性を獲得できるか検討しています。
BCG has committed to reach net-zero climate impact by 2030 and then become climate positive—removing more carbon from the atmosphere than we emit each year.
今こそ、グローバルな気候変動対策を行動に移す時 BCGはクライアントが気候・サステナビリティへの取り組みの道程を加速し、新たな機会をとらえて競争優位性を築けるよう支援します。