Blog
Embedding sustainability with carbon intelligence
5-MINUTE READ
October 17, 2023
Blog
5-MINUTE READ
October 17, 2023
Ankit is an engineer for an upstream energy company that runs operations for hundreds of small oil and gas wells across the US Midwest. He’s convinced the world must act fast to mitigate climate change, but he also understands the transition needs to be profitable for it to be successful.
Ankit’s firm, like 34% of the 2,000 largest companies globally1, has set ambitious net zero emissions targets—in his company’s case by 2050. Ankit knows how many greenhouse gases his wells produce each year, but he doesn’t know how many are being produced today. That’s not because the data isn’t technically available. In fact, Ankit has deployed ground-level sensors across his wells and, combined with advanced analytics, these have led to double-digit productivity improvements. These tools could be used to calculate near-real-time carbon performance as well. But, currently, there is no business case to extend these capabilities to carbon emissions.
Pressures are looming, however. Regulations that will make emissions costly are coming, and Ankit knows that his company’s group-wide targets will be allocated to his asset base soon. Ankit would like to optimize his assets for carbon, just as he does for throughput, quality and operating expenditures. He’s run the numbers and is preparing to pitch to his managers about why and how they should treat carbon emissions data and insights just like any other financial or operational metric.
Many middle managers around the world face similar situations to Ankit’s. They all know ‘what gets measured gets managed’—from revenues and costs to employees, production and customers. But, until recently, businesses have had few incentives to measure their emissions, let alone reduce them.
That’s changing. Reasons to manage emissions are now coming from all fronts: carbon markets, taxes and tariffs, reporting and other climate-related regulations are expanding; investors and employees are pressuring businesses for more aggressive climate action and transparency; interest rates and insurance premiums are being linked to carbon performance; customers are demanding low-carbon products and services and verified transparency on their performance; and disruptors leveraging new technologies and business models are out there to grab market share from those that fail to respond. These forces are making carbon emissions expensive and risky for businesses, but also a potential lever for new value.
To meet these challenges and seize the opportunities, businesses need to become ‘carbon intelligent’. Carbon intelligence is a set of capabilities that enables organizations to control, improve and drive value creation by embedding carbon—and broader sustainability—data and intelligence into decision-making across the core businesses.
Carbon intelligent businesses understand that this is a new kind of business intelligence. And just like financial and operational intelligence, it must be actively managed. Accenture is helping companies become carbon intelligent by focusing on:
To embed carbon intelligence into the core of any business, a degree of rewiring is required. Just as businesses need to be wired to understand costs and to become truly digital and data-driven businesses—from the lowest level through to the general ledger—to be carbon intelligent, they will need to understand and integrate carbon data from the lowest level through to a new ‘green’ ledger.
This rewiring won’t happen overnight. It’s a journey that evolves over three overlapping phases:
While organizations in phase 1 work to get their emissions reporting under control, they should be looking ahead to determine the use cases of phase 2 that will add value to the bottom line and working across the enterprise to establish data, technology and process roadmaps with a vision for how the different components will come together in phase 3.
An integrated energy company set ambitious targets to reduce its carbon emissions. Accenture helped it focus on industrial plants, starting with one refinery. We designed and implemented a solution to process real-time data from existing sensors and tags, limiting up-front investments and impacts to operations. The company can now analyze energy and emissions performance and optimize them in real-time. After the successful first deployment, the solution has been rolled out to other refineries. New capabilities will be added in the future including advanced analytics, predictive modeling, and scenario simulations, and can be deployed beyond refineries to power generation and petrochemical plants.
To start on the journey, there are short-term actions to get going as well as medium and longer-term actions to embed the carbon intelligence capabilities into a comprehensive net zero transition journey for the business.
Short-term actions for the first 3-6 months include:
Medium (6-18 months) and longer-term (2-3 years) actions include:
By becoming carbon intelligent, organizations will become better positioned to seize the opportunities, manage the risks and ultimately be more resilient to the rapidly evolving transitional impacts of climate change, such as carbon regulations and evolving commodity markets.
By 2026, in a pathway that is compatible with achieving net zero emissions, the value of permits issued by national and regional emission trading systems could potentially exceed US$1 trillion.2 Moreover, the market for energy commodities that are differentiated based on their carbon footprint is projected to reach trillions of dollars by 2030, driven by price premiums. This significant growth is expected to be observed across crucial commodities like crude oil, natural gas, and marine fuels.
As net zero becomes a global journey, individuals like Ankit, along with many middle managers, are just starting to embark on this path. They will be among the first movers enabling their businesses to treat carbon emissions like money—to the benefit of those organizations and our planet.
This blog is part of a series discussing how leaders can embed sustainability into different aspects of their organizations to create value and impact. The other topics are: