An Action Plan for Solving Our Climate Crisis Now

1.0
Electrify Transportation
Reduce 8 gigatons of transportation emissions to 2 gigatons by 2050.
1.1
Price

Achieve global price parity between EVs and gas-powered vehicles by top emitters by 2030.

Updated April 2025
Insufficient Progress

$55,694 (average EV) vs. $45,264 (average full-size car) in the U.S.

Source: Kelley Blue Book, 2024

1.2
Cars

Increase EV sales to 50% of all new car sales by 2030, 95% by 2040.

Updated April 2025
Insufficient Progress

EV share of car sales was 24.0% in 2024

(BEVs and PHEVs)

Source: BloombergNEF, 2025

1.3
Buses

Electrify all new buses by 2030.

Updated April 2025
Failing

27.2% of new bus purchases were electric in 2023

Source: BloombergNEF, 2023

1.4
Trucks

Increase sales of zero-emissions medium and heavy trucks to 30% of all new truck sales by 2030; 95% by 2045.

Updated April 2025
Failing

Electric share of global truck sales was 0.9% in 2023

(BEVs, FCVs, and PHEVs)

Source: BloombergNEF, 2023

1.5
Miles ↓ 5 Gt

Increase miles driven by electric vehicles (two- and three-wheelers, cars, buses, and trucks) to 50% of the global total by 2040, 95% by 2050.

Updated April 2025
Insufficient Progress

EV global share of miles driven across road vehicles in 2023: 6.3%

(BEVs, FCVs, and PHEVs)

Source: BloombergNEF, 2024

1.6
Planes ↓ 0.3 Gt

Increase low-carbon fuel for aviation to 40% by 2040.

Updated April 2025
Failing

0.3% of fuel use is low-carbon

Source: BloombergNEF, 2025

1.7
Maritime ↓ 0.6 Gt

Deploy low-carbon fuel for 5% of maritime shipping by 2030; zero out emissions for the shipping industry by 2050.

Updated April 2025
Failing

Zero percent of new ships are low-carbon

Source: Global Martime Forum, 2024

2.0
Decarbonize the Grid
Reduce 24 gigatons of global electricity and heating emissions to 3 gigatons by 2050.
2.1
Zero Emissions ↓ 16.5 Gt

Tap emissions-free sources to generate 50% of electricity worldwide by 2026, 90% by 2035.*

Updated April 2025
Insufficient Progress

39% of electricity came from emissions free sources in 2023

Source: Energy Institute, 2024

2.2
Solar & Wind

Make the cost of solar and wind lower than fossil fuels by 2025.

Updated April 2025
Achieved

On average Solar PV is $37 per MWh cheaper than fossil fuels

Source: BloombergNEF, 2025

2.3
Storage

Reduce the cost of short-duration electricity storage to less than $50 per kWh by 2028 and the cost of long-duration electricity storage (up to 30 days) below $10 per kWh by 2030.

Updated April 2025
Insufficient Progress

Short-duration storage: $165 per kWh

Long-duration storage: Limited Data

Source: BloombergNEF, 2024

2.4
Coal & Gas

Stop the build-out of new coal and gas plants immediately; retire or zero out emissions from existing plants by 2040.*

Updated April 2025
Code Red

Now in operation globally: 6,538 coal-fired plants and 7,986 gas plants

Source: Global Energy Monitor, 2025

 

2.5
Methane Emissions ↓ 3 Gt

Reduce flaring and eliminate leaks and venting from coal, oil, and gas sites by 2030.

Updated April 2025
Code Red

3 gigatons of methane emissions from the energy sector in 2023 (CO2 equivalent)

2.6
Heating & Cooking ↓ 1.5 Gt

Cut fossil fuels for heating and cooking in half by 2040.*

Updated April 2025
Failing

In 2022, building heating generated 2.5 Gt of emissions and over 7 billion people used fossil fuels for cooking

2.7
Cleaner Economy

Triple the ratio of GDP to fossil fuel consumption.

Updated April 2025
Insufficient Progress

Global average: $252 of GDP per Exajoule of Fossil Fuel Consumption

3.0
Fix Food
Reduce 9 gigatons of agricultural emissions to 2 gigatons by 2050.
3.1
Farm Soils ↓ 2 Gt

Improve soil health by increasing carbon content in topsoils to a minimum of 3% by 2035.

Updated April 2025
Limited Data

Limited Data

3.2
Fertilizers ↓ 0.5 Gt

Stop overuse of nitrogen-based fertilizers and develop cleaner alternatives to cut emissions in half by 2050.

Updated April 2025
Failing

The world uses 65.4 kilograms per hectare of nitrogen-based fertilizers

Source: Food and Agriculture Organization and Our World in Data, 2024

3.3
Cows ↓ 3 Gt

Cut emissions from beef and dairy consumption by 25% by 2030, 50% by 2050.

Updated April 2025
Code Red

3.3 gigatons of emissions from beef and dairy in 2022

3.4
Rice ↓ 0.5 Gt

Reduce methane and nitrous oxide from rice farming by 50% by 2050.

Updated April 2025
Failing

1.1 gigaton of CO2e resulting from rice production

Source: Our World in Data, 2024

3.5
Food Waste ↓ 1 Gt

Cut food waste to 10% by 2050.

Updated April 2025
Failing

31% of food in the US is wasted

Source: ReFed, 2024

4.0
Protect Nature
Go from 6 gigatons of emissions to -1 gigatons by 2050.
4.1
Forests ↓ 6 Gt

Achieve net zero deforestation by 2030; end logging and other destructive practices in primary forests.

Updated April 2025
Code Red

19.3 million hectares of permanent tree cover loss

Source: Global Forest Watch, 2024

4.2
Oceans ↓ 1 Gt

Protect 30% of oceans by 2030, 50% by 2050.

Updated April 2025
Failing

8.4% of the earth’s oceans are protected

Source: Protected Planet, 2024

4.3
Lands

Expand protected lands to 30% by 2030, 50% by 2050.

Updated April 2025
Insufficient Progress

17.6% of the world’s lands are protected

Source: Protected Planet, 2024

5.0
Clean Up Industry
Reduce 12 gigatons of industrial emissions to 4 gigatons by 2050.
5.1
Steel ↓ 3 Gt

Reduce emissions from steel production 50% by 2030, 90% by 2040.

Updated April 2025
Code Red

3.4 gigatons of emissions from steel production (CO2 equivalent)

Source: Climate TRACE, 2025

5.2
Cement ↓ 2 Gt

Reduce emissions from cement production 25% by 2030, 90% by 2040.

Updated April 2025
Code Red

3 gigatons of emissions from cement production (CO2 equivalent)

Source: UNEP, 2024

5.3
Other Industries ↓ 3 Gt

Reduce emissions from other industrial sources (primarily plastics, chemicals, paper, aluminum, glass, and apparel) 60% by 2050.

Updated April 2025
Code Red

5.1 gigatons emitted from other industries (CO2 equivalent)

Source: Climate TRACE, 2025

6.0
Remove Carbon
Remove 10 gigatons of carbon dioxide per year from the atmosphere.
6.1
Nature-Based Removal ↓ 5 Gt

Increase carbon removal by at least 3 gigatons per year by 2030 and 5 gigatons by 2040.

Updated April 2025
Code Red

0.05 gigatons of nature-based carbon removal being tracked

Source: Climate Focus, 2025

6.2
Engineered Removal ↓ 5 Gt

Remove at least 1 gigaton per year by 2030 and 5 gigatons by 2050.

Updated April 2025
Code Red

Currently, 0.0006 gigatons are being removed annually

Source: CDR.fyi, 2024

7.1
Net Zero Pledges

The five top emitters’ heads of state say their countries will reach net zero by 2050.*

Updated May 2025
Insufficient Progress

China: 2060

U.S.: No Current Target*

EU: 2050

India: 2070

Russia: 2060

7.2
Action Plans

The five top emitters are on track to cut emissions in half by 2030.

Updated April 2025
Code Red

2030 trajectory (Policies and action against fair share):

China: <3°C

US: <3°C

EU: <3°C

India: <3°C

Russia: 4°C

 

Source: Climate Action Tracker, 2024

7.3
Carbon Price

National prices on greenhouse gases are set at a minimum of $75 per ton, rising 5% annually.

Updated April 2025
Insufficient Progress

Global average price: $36 per ton

24% of global emissions are covered by a carbon pricing mechanism

 

7.4
Subsidies

Eliminate direct subsidies to fossil fuel companies.

Updated April 2025
Failing

$1.3 trillion in explicit fossil fuel subsidies globally

7.5
Methane

The top five emitters pledge to control flaring, prohibit venting, and mandate prompt capping of methane leaks.

Updated April 2025
Code Red

The top five emitters take the Global Methane Pledge

China – No pledge

US – Pledge

EU – Pledge

India – No pledge

Russia – No pledge

Source: Global Methane Pledge, 2024

7.6
Refrigerants

The top five emitters commit to phasing out hydrofluorocarbons (HFCs).

Updated April 2025
On Track

All five major emitters have ratified the Kigali amendment

8.1
Voters

The climate crisis becomes a top-three issue.

Updated April 2025
Failing

Climate ranked ninth globally out of eighteen top issues

Source: Ipsos, 2025

8.2
Government

A majority of key government officials support the drive to net zero.

Updated April 2025
Limited Data

Limited Data

8.3
Business

100% of Fortune Global 500 companies commit to reach net zero by 2050.

Updated April 2025
Failing

15.0% of Fortune Global 500 Companies have a net zero commitment

Source: Speed & Scale, 2025

Data is pulled from Fortune Global 500 websites to track emissions targets of each corporation

8.4
Education

The world achieves universal education through ninth grade by 2040.

Updated April 2025
Failing

74.7% of students complete education through a ninth-grade level

Source: World Bank, 2024

8.5
Health

The world eliminates pollution-linked mortality by 2040.

Updated April 2025
Insufficient Progress

1.9 years (global average loss of life due to air pollution)

Source: Air Quality Life Index (AQLI), 2025

8.6
Jobs

The global clean energy transition creates 65 million new jobs by 2040.

Updated April 2025
Insufficient Progress

16.2 million people employed in clean energy jobs

9.1
Batteries

10,000 GWh of batteries are produced annually at less than $80 per kWh by 2035.

Updated April 2025
On Track

Production: 3,786 per GWh

Price: $115 per kWh 

Source: BloombergNEF, 2024

9.2
Electricity

The cost of zero-emissions baseload power drops to $0.02 per kWh by 2030.

Updated April 2025
On Track

$0.03 per kWh for utility-scale onshore wind

$0.04 per kWh for utility-scale solar PV

9.3
Green Hydrogen

The cost of producing hydrogen from zero-emissions sources drops to $2 per kg by 2030, $1 per kg by 2040.

Updated April 2025
Failing

$4-$12 per kg, not currently produced at scale

Source: BloombergNEF, 2024

9.4
Carbon Removal

Cost of engineered carbon dioxide removal falls to $100 per ton by 2030, $50 per ton by 2040.

Updated April 2025
Insufficient Progress

Weighted average of $316 per ton of carbon removed through DACCS, not at scale

Source: CDR.fyi, 2025

9.5
Carbon-Neutral Fuels

Cost of synthetic fuel drops to $2.50 per gallon for jet fuel and $3.50 for gasoline by 2035.

Updated April 2025
Failing

Jet Fuel: $2.38 (Traditional) vs. $5.95 (Sustainable)

Vehicle Fuel: $3.24 (Diesel) vs. $3.96 (Biodiesel)

Source: International Air Transport Association, BloombergNEF, and Alternative Fuels Data Center, 2024

Diesel and Biodiesel are U.S. prices

10.1
Financial Incentives

Global government support and incentives for clean energy expand to $600 billion per year.

Updated April 2025
Limited Data

Limited Data

10.2
Government R&D

Public investment in sustainability research and development increases to $120 billion per year.

Updated April 2025
Insufficient Progress

Low carbon R&D globally: $29.4 billion

10.3
Venture Capital

Private investment into cleantech startups totals $50 billion per year.

Updated April 2025
Insufficient Progress

$32.1 billion invested in climate tech startups

Source: BloombergNEF, 2025

10.4
Project Financing

Clean energy project financing rises to $1 trillion per year.

Updated April 2025
Achieved

Clean energy financing is at an all-time high, hitting $1.3 trillion

Source: BloombergNEF, 2025

10.5
Philanthropy

Philanthropic dollars for tackling emissions grow to $30 billion per year.

Updated April 2025
Insufficient Progress

Less than 2% (between $9 billion and $16 billion) of philanthropic giving is dedicated to climate change mitigation

Welcome to Zeroing In by Speed & Scale, where we cut through the noise to deliver a data-driven update on progress toward net zero.

CARBON REMOVAL GUIDANCE NEEDED: Who’s buying carbon removal—and are they buying the right amount? Skeptics may look at carbon removal purchasing as a distraction from the primary task of emissions cuts, but the fact remains that it’s an essential ingredient for getting the world to net zero emissions by 2050. Some corporations are already purchasing carbon removal, helping to kickstart a nascent industry. But most companies have yet to do so and are without guidance on just how much of it should be bought, when, and what kind of removal is most effective. Speed & Scale offers a POV on what needs to happen to ensure the world can remove its leftover emissions in time. Read it here.

Big Picture

*Microsoft and Orsted received support from the Danish government for a mammoth 2.7M ton project.

Dive deeper into Speed & Scale

OKRs in the News

🚗 1.0 – Electrify Transportation

  • No, EV Sales are Not Slowing: Data from Bloomberg NEF shows that EV sales were up 47 percent year-over-year and are projected to be up another 32 percent in 2024.  

  • Foreign Manufacturer’s Super Bowl: While the U.S.’s “big three” automakers bailed on EV ads during the Super Bowl, four foreign manufacturers filled the gap with ad spots on their EV efforts.

💡 2.0 – Decarbonize the Grid

  • Record-Breaking Solar Power: Texas set records for solar power, which now accounts for 36 percent of the electricity on the state’s power grid. Renewable energy is helping Texas weather storms more effectively.

  • Record-Breaking Oil Payout: The oil industry’s record $114 billion cash return to investors in 2023 was 76 percent higher than the average payout during its heyday from 2011 to 2014.

  • Orsted’s New Strategic Plan: The offshore wind company’s update to shareholders will make the case that supply chain issues and soaring costs are now contained, laying the basis for a comeback after a very tough year in 2023.

  • M&A Wave in Shale: Diamondback Energy Inc. agreed to buy fellow Permian Basin driller Endeavor Energy Resources LP for $26 billion. The consolidation marks another mega-deal in the long-fragmented shale industry.

  • China Building Coal Plants With “Off Switches”: Renewables are getting cheaper and China’s fossil fuel emissions are set to peak within the next few years. But China is still building coal plants that will run about half the time. They’re turned on or ramped up as needed.

🐄 3.0 – Fix Food

  • Better-Tasting, (Mostly) Plant-Based Foods: Some food startup companies are using meat production byproducts, including animal fat, to make their predominantly plant-based products taste better.

🌳 4.0 – Protect Nature

  • Protecting Coral Reefs: The U.S. Government Accountability Office calls for better budget and accounting practices to conserve our coral reefs.

  • Climate Corp Update: We’re seeing Biden’s American Climate Corp initiative in action. The United States Department of Agriculture is launching the Working Lands Climate Corps to train at least 100 future conservation and climate leaders in climate-smart agriculture.

  • Regenerative Agriculture Gaining More $upport: The global regenerative agriculture market is anticipated to grow from $6 billion to over $24 billion over the next 10 years. This is largely due to rising public sector investments that incentivize this type of farming.

🧱 5.0 – Clean Up Industry

  • Promise of Hydrogen: Hydrogen may be our best bet for decarbonizing heavy industry and long-haul transportation, and China is leading the charge. Most of the hydrogen it makes today comes from fossil fuels, but the country has big plans to scale up green hydrogen production and use the fuel to slash emissions from steel and chemical production.

  • Renewable Cement: A new project that pairs state-of-the-art solar panels with cutting-edge energy management technology may unlock emissions cuts in the cement industry.

  • Cup Craze Backfires: In theory, reusable cups should be better for the environment. But people are buying so many of them as collectibles that it’s actually worse.

  • Electrifying Industry: An electrical revolution is coming to heavy industry, The Economist reports. Cement manufacturers are turning to alternate modes of production, relying on electrolysis or “heat batteries” to decarbonize the industry.

🧹 6.0 – Remove Carbon

  • Novel Government Guidance: The Council of the European Union and the European Parliament have agreed to establish an EU carbon removals certification framework. This guidance is intended to accelerate deployment of high-quality carbon removal and soil emissions reduction activities.

  • Promising Signs for Carbon Removal: CDR.fyi’s end-of-year report contains some important insights. Overall carbon removal purchases grew to 4.5 megatons, up from 0.6 megatons in 2022—a step in the right direction, but not nearly where we need to be. Actual carbon removed has doubled, to 125,000 tons.

  • World’s Biggest Carbon Removal Facility: With Bill Gates’ support, a startup is gearing up to kickstart operations this week for what might just become the largest carbon removal facility on the planet. The approach? Move fast and sell cheap, with a sales price of $100 per ton. By the end of this year, the plant is projected to remove 15,000 metric tons of carbon dioxide from the atmosphere.

OKR Highlight

OKR Highlight: 6.0 Remove Carbon


To enable carbon removal technology to be scaled, the Speed & Scale team urges voluntary standards setters to give companies more clarity on how much removal to purchase. Our plan’s target for engineered carbon removal is to remove one gigaton of CO2—one billion tons—per year by 2030, then three billion tons by 2040 and five billion tons by 2050. How can we get there?


For our answer, check out this blog on the Speed & Scale website.

🏛️ 7.0 – Win Politics and Policy

  • Natural Gas Permit Freeze: President Biden put a temporary pause on permit approvals for new liquid natural gas (LNG) export facilities while the Department of Energy reviews the issue. The U.S. has sharply expanded LNG exports over the last few years, and questions abound. Does exporting more LNG harm or help the environment? What will happen to domestic electricity and heating prices if we export more LNG? Will the European Union have enough LNG without higher levels of U.S. exports?

  • EU’s IRA: The EU passes the Net-Zero Industry Act, which aims to boost industrial deployment of net-zero technologies needed to achieve their climate goals. The idea is to leverage the strength of a vast single market to reinforce Europe’s leadership in industrial green technologies.

  • Podesta Replaces Kerry: POLITICO reports that John Podesta has been tapped to replace John Kerry as Biden’s climate envoy. The veteran Democratic strategist has a long history in climate politics, both at home and on the international stage.

  • Peak Emissions for China?: China is rapidly expanding its use of renewable energy, to the point that international climate monitors predict the country’s greenhouse gas emissions will peak earlier than expected, possibly as soon as this year.

  • GDP and GHG Should Cut Ties: Through most of modern economic history, economic growth has been closely tied to a rise in greenhouse gas emissions. But the IEA reports that this relationship is changing.

  • New Carbon Rules for China: New rules give China’s ecological environment department responsibility for managing the country’s carbon emissions trading scheme, including a crackdown on false information.

🏃 8.0 – Turn Movements into Action

  • Norway Criticizes ExxonMobil Suit: Norway, which boasts the world’s biggest sovereign wealth fund, has sharply criticized ExxonMobil for suing two shareholders who pushed the fossil fuel giant to set more aggressive emissions reduction targets.

9.0 – Innovate

  • Gold Hydrogen: With a boost in funding from the U.S. Department of Energy and interest from several climate tech startups, underground drilling just might be a way to scale hydrogen production.

  • Climate Emissions Disclosure Pressure: Software startups that help companies track and reduce their greenhouse gas pollution are raising serious cash. Watershed has raised $100 million in its Series C fundraising, bringing its valuation to $1.8 billion and reflecting the growing movement around carbon disclosure.

💰 10.0 – Invest

  • Go Green: A new investment fund, Brookfield, raises $10 billion for clean energy deployment despite recent challenges facing these projects and rising anti-ESG sentiment in the financial services industry.

  • Climate Tech Investing: Despite the obstacles of high interest rates and rising costs, climate tech venture investment stayed relatively steady, totaling $51 billion in 2023.

  • Investing in Developing Nations: While emerging economies suffer the most from the climate crisis, they lack funding for renewable energy solutions because investors are wary of the risks. A new public-private partnership, The Green Guarantee Company, aims to help fix that problem by guaranteeing climate-linked loans. The GGC recently launched with $100 million in funding.


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