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Corporate Climate Goals Face Credibility Gap as Emissions Remain Stagnant

While 84% of S&P 500 companies publicly committed to ambitious climate targets by 2025, a stark reality has emerged: most are failing to reduce their greenhouse gas output. New data reveals that for the majority of these firms, emissions have remained flat or increased since 2021 despite high-profile pledges.

Bio & NewsJuly 15, 2026605 reads0

The latest report from The Conference Board and ESGAUGE highlights a deepening divide between corporate rhetoric and operational results. Among companies with Scope 1 targets—covering direct emissions from manufacturing and transport—58% have shown no meaningful progress. The situation is even more complex regarding Scope 3 emissions, which encompass the broader value chain; 62% of firms with relevant targets report that these indirect emissions remain unchanged or are rising.

Confidence among internal sustainability leaders is waning as 2030 deadlines approach. Only 24% of polled executives express full belief that their organizations will hit stated goals, while 59% report low or mixed confidence. Financial constraints are the primary driver of this uncertainty. More than half of executives point to capital allocation, return on investment, and rising costs as the main factors forcing them to reconsider their timelines. As Andrew Jones, the report’s author, noted, corporations are moving into a difficult phase where recalibration is becoming a necessary, if uncomfortable, assessment of technical and economic reality rather than a simple abandonment of environmental ambition.

Competing business priorities, particularly the surge in investments toward artificial intelligence and infrastructure, have complicated the path to decarbonization. While Scope 2 emissions related to purchased electricity show slightly better progress, overall momentum is stalling. Executives now face a mounting challenge to demonstrate measurable impact, as regulatory requirements and technological hurdles begin to collide with the rigid constraints of corporate balance sheets.

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