Carbon mitigation, targeting, and reporting are still part of the decarbonization calculus—but no longer the only focus. New methodologies and markets can create avenues to turn an organization’s carbon commitments into sources of value.
How can finance lead the way?
As a physical factor in addressing the global environment, decarbonization sits comfortably among other familiar imperatives: don’t litter, don’t pollute, don’t destroy. Traditionally, we accept the moral and social value of these principles even if there’s a cost to carrying them out.
As global markets for carbon credits and voluntary offsets have become larger and more standardized, they’ve begun to offer ways to turn a need into a profit. Demand for carbon credits and carbon monetization may grow to 15 times its current level by 2030, and 100 times by 2050. Voluntary offset transactions that totaled about $320 million in 2019 may approach $200 billion in 2050.1
Trading on carbon isn’t the only way to find value. Consumers reward companies that pursue decarbonization in their processes and products and may pay a price premium if the actions and benefits are clear.
This means the audience for an organization’s carbon strategy will go beyond government regulators and climate monitors to investors and other stakeholders as it becomes a bottom-line P&L factor. This casts the CFO in a lead role, giving them an opening to identify decarbonization opportunities, apply a cost/benefit calculus, and lead internal efforts to monetize the most feasible decarbonization policies.
Decarbonization remains something your organization ought to do. Depending on your industry and regulatory environment, it may be something you have to do. Now, it can also be something you pursue not only out of concern for the planet, but also to realize tangible benefits.
Today’s CFO is not only an operator, but also a steward and catalyst for evolution. Their past role in approving funding for sustainability work elsewhere in the organization is changing—now finance is where that work can live. And the critical levers are ones the function already touches.
Operational changes to take carbon out of the business might involve restructuring contracts, changing supply or distribution chains, or taking a fresh look at the real estate portfolio. Inputs, outputs, and benefits—home turf for the finance operation. Remember, a company’s carbon footprint involves more than the offsets. It can also include insets that prevent some emissions from happening in the first place.
What role can carbon offsets play? Piecemeal transactions may provide value, but a large-scale carbon monetization strategy requires looking across the enterprise. What changes are consistent with overall strategy? What working groups, such as a sustainability command center, can define and carry out decarbonization measures? What contract structures can deliver the value made possible? Carbon doesn’t “trade” the way other commodities do; it may behave more like a repo, without standard definitions of basis risk.
Finance can also help identify and develop value sources adjacent to existing operations. For example, a company that operates a fleet may switch to electric vehicles, then build a new business offering around its power generation and recharging infrastructure.
Setting carbon goals and tracking progress against them remains a must-do, especially with new global and US reporting standards in effect and the potential requirement to report Scope 3 emissions from external value-chain partners.
But the metrics of decarbonization also contribute to the carbon monetization “plus side”. Realizing value through tradeoffs and credits is intrinsically quantitative and may require new tools. The same applies to how companies express carbon progress to consumers clearly and credibly—and to charting the “green premium” in revenue that companies can realize.
One way to prioritize your path to carbon monetization is degrees of urgency: what you must do, what you can benefit most by doing, and everything in between.
Some core requirements surrounding decarbonization are clear, current, and mandatory. Those are the moves you need to make to survive. Less urgent but more promising are the approaches that can set you on the path to monetization—to drive toward making carbon a source of value. Finally, an organization should reach for aspirational strategies that allow it not merely to keep up but to thrive in doing so.
The finance organization can meet the baseline to survive by ensuring that you comply with current regulations, through accurate internal and external reporting completed in a timely manner. At this level, your priority should be the most pressing or highest value decarbonization opportunities. Become knowledgeable about renewable energy tax credits to make sure money is not being left on the table. Begin to engage stakeholders across the organization more broadly, looking for ways to integrate decarbonization opportunities into other in-flight projects and programs. The goal is to build momentum and generate quick gains to offset the perceived “pain” of transformation.
Finance has the power to drive results by helping the organization understand what initiatives have greater importance and by devising and measuring progress. Instead of focusing on granular pluses and minuses, look more broadly across the enterprise to see the big picture. Directly address the challenges and opportunities of a program that’s going to span multiple horizons and require sustainable funding and ongoing executive support. Look outside the organization at industry stakeholders. In many industries, making meaningful progress on the organization’s monetization journey requires partnering with other companies or organizations in their industry.
Finance can thrive by instituting new processes and talent that move the organization steadily toward its sustainability goals and opportunities, even amidst sustained disruption. In this phase, Finance helps the organization transform its business by monetizing decarbonization. Thriving means thinking big—embrace an innovation mindset, think long term, turn internally focused opportunities into external ones, and think beyond immediate stakeholders to your broader community and to nontraditional stakeholders. By helping lead the charge to monetize and productize your organization’s decarbonization efforts, you can justify charging a “green premium” and make decarbonizing an essential part of your organization’s brand.
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