Net Zero Industry Tracker 2024
Page 5 of 156 · WEF_Net_Zero_Industry_Tracker_2024.pdf
The Net Zero Industry Tracker highlights the key
steps that the industries must take to further
progress towards their respective emission
reduction goals across five key dimensions of the
readiness framework – technology, infrastructure,
demand, capital and policy. Each dimension has a
readiness score based on a set of metrics.
Technology readiness scores have improved
this year due to improved economics and
adoption; however, nearly half of the required
emissions reductions need to be achieved
through technologies that are not commercially
viable. The adoption of methane abatement,
electric transport and industrial processes, and
energy efficiency technologies has increased.
However, deep emission reduction in hard-
to-abate sectors relies heavily on disruptive
technologies that are not economically viable today.
Investments in R&D need to be ramped up in
carbon capture, utilization and storage (CCUS),
new production pathways for materials, and
hydrogen and its derivatives.
Infrastructure development has been slow;
the sectors covered in this report are forecast
to represent nearly 70% and 55% of the total
hydrogen and CCUS capacity required by 2050,
respectively. While infrastructure development for
low-carbon power has been encouraging, hydrogen
and CCUS infrastructure currently address less
than 1% of sector requirements. Clean power,
hydrogen and CCUS infrastructure need to be
developed faster in countries with large heavy
industry and heavy transport sectors.
Demand readiness scores have shown limited
progress due to the conditions not being met for
scaling demand for low-emission products. Major
barriers for scaling clean demand include high green
premiums, lack of clarity on customer willingness to
pay the premium, and limited industry-wide adoption
of carbon threshold standards for green products.
Current estimates suggest a 40-70% increase in the price of net-zero base material products.
Standardized carbon thresholds need industry-
wide adoption, and businesses need to enhance
product-level reporting.
Capital readiness scores have remained
stagnant due to lack of material flow of capital
to decarbonize the sectors in scope, driven
by the challenge of generating returns on
clean investments. This report estimates that the
$30 trillion additional capital required by 2030 across
the sectors in scope is split 43% ($13 trillion) directly
by these sectors and 57% ($17 trillion) for clean
energy infrastructure. The sectors must generate
returns to raise investments on energy transition
initiatives, which represent an 80% increase in
investment relative to today’s levels. Sectors
should increase investments in retrofitting
existing assets and building new climate-
compatible assets, while energy suppliers
need to build the enabling infrastructure.
Policy support has been fragmented and
lacking cross-regional collaboration. As of
2024, there are 75 carbon-pricing instruments
in operation worldwide, covering 24% of global
emissions.6 However, increased protectionism
through tariffs on green products add an
incremental cost on green premiums. Moreover,
there are insufficient incentive-based policies to
drive focus on low-emission production. Policy-
makers should create stronger incentives
that align with the goals of hard-to-abate
sectors, energy suppliers and consumers.
The sectors in this report face a gridlock as
businesses, policy-makers, consumers, energy
suppliers and financiers hesitate, each waiting for
others to commit to investments and measures
that can significantly reduce emissions. Hence, there
is a need to shift from a point-solutions approach
to a system-wide, partnership-based approach, to
simultaneously solve several problems, align supply
and demand, and overcome cost and risk hurdles.
Net-Zero Industry Tracker: 2024 Edition
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