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The UN-convened Net-Zero Asset Owner Alliance (NZAOA) has released a new paper emphasising the critical role of top-down regulatory mandates in overcoming data and disclosure challenges related to Scope 3 emissions.
As regulations on these emissions evolve worldwide, with the Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive (CSRD) in the European Union and emerging regulatory frameworks in Japan and California, the NZAOA’s new paper highlights the growing urgency for standardising disclosure and the need for policymakers to act decisively.
The report finds barriers to tackling these emissions—which account for three-quarters of most companies’ total emissions—persist. For asset owners, the barriers include limited data quality, inconsistent accounting frameworks, and double-counting risks, which make it challenging to integrate these emissions into portfolio steering and overall climate strategy.
The paper sets out actionable advice for asset owners, enabling them to make meaningful progress, while driving public discourse and pushing for regulatory change. For efficient action, the NZAOA recommends corporates to focus in the first instance on their two most significant categories, which would allow them to cover on average 81 per cent of the overall Scope 3 emissions intensity in each sector.
Based on in-depth sectoral analysis, the five steps for asset owners that can be adopted immediately, include: