Addressing the "Winner-Takes-All" Character of Sustainability Taxonomies: Towards a Scorecard Approach
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.47852/bonviewGLCE42021912Keywords:
taxonomies, sustainability, ESG, scorecard approach, net zero, transitionAbstract
Sustainability classification systems (or "taxonomies"), of which the EU environmental taxonomy is the most important, often result in a binary approach whereby best-in-class economic activities are qualified as sustainable, while all other activities are grouped together into a catch-all category irrespective of their contribution to, or potential for, contributing to and/or furthering the transition towards a sustainable economy.
Such binary approaches are misleading and likely to result in under-investment in both activities crucial for the transition to net zero and innovation with the potential to support and facilitate such a pro-environment transition. Making taxonomies easy to apply, consistent, open to innovation and comprehensive at the same time is imperative if the world’s economies are to achieve net zero, even when this dilutes technical precision in the process.
We argue in favour of expanding classification systems to include (information on) transition and potential transition activities, and present a scorecard approach to meet that very objective.
Received: 23 October 2023 | Revised: 4 April 2024 | Accepted: 12 April 2024
Conflicts of Interest
Dirk Andreas Zetzsche is an editorial board member for Green and Low-Carbon Economy, and was not involved in the editorial review or the decision to publish this article. The authors declare that they have no conflicts of interest to this work.
Data Availability Statement
Data sharing not applicable – no new data generated.
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