Submitted by hazal.bastimur on August 9, 2021
New research from the Science Based Targets initiative (SBTi), a body enabling businesses to set ambitious emissions reduction targets, reveals that none of the G7’s leading stock indexes are currently aligned with a 1.5°C or 2°C pathway and calls on the largest listed G7 companies to urgently increase climate action.
- No major G7 stock indexes are currently on a 2°C pathway or the 1.5°C pathway that is so urgently needed. Four of the seven indexes, including the FTSE 100 and S&P 500, are on dangerous temperature pathways of 3°C or above.
 - G7 indexes with a higher share of emissions covered by science-based targets (SBTs) result in lower overall temperature ratings. 71% of Germany’s DAX 30 companies’ emissions are covered by SBTs, resulting in the lowest index temperature rating of 2.2°C, while less than 1% of Canada’s SPTSX 60 companies are covered by SBTs, resulting in the joint-highest temperature rating of 3.1°C.
 
| 
 Index  | 
 CAC 40  | 
 DAX 30  | 
 NIKKEI 225  | 
 FTSE 100  | 
 S&P 500  | 
 FTSE MIB  | 
 SPTSX 60  | 
| 
 Country  | 
 France  | 
 Germany  | 
 Japan  | 
 UK  | 
 USA  | 
 Italy  | 
 Canada  | 
| 
 Temperature  | 
 2.7°C  | 
 2.2°C  | 
 3.0°C  | 
 3.1°C  | 
 3.0°C  | 
 2.7°C  | 
 3.1°C  | 
| 
 % Index emissions covered by SBTs  | 
 41%  | 
 71%  | 
 12%  | 
 7%  | 
 16%  | 
 41%  | 
 <1%  | 
- Companies with science-based targets are already cutting emissions at scale - and today’s research calls on all businesses to take immediate action to align with a 1.5°C pathway.
 
In the lead up to the G7 Summit, the analysis shows that the G7 countries’ leading indexes are on an average temperature pathway of 2.95°C, according to their constituents’ current corporate climate ambitions. Stock indexes, composed of stocks of the most significant companies listed on a country’s largest exchange, are vital benchmarks to understand market trends. Notably, fossil fuels are a key contributor to the emissions of all seven indexes, making up 70% of Canada’s SPTSX 60 3.1°C temperature rating and almost 50% of Italy’s FTSE MIB 2.7°C rating.
The full report, ‘Taking the Temperature: Assessing and scaling-up climate ambition in the G7 business sector’ can be accessed here.
        



