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 May 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 May 2025
Insufficient Progress

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

Source: Energy Institute and World Bank, 2024

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 May 2025
Code Red

16.1 million hectares of permanent tree cover loss

Source: Global Forest Watch, 2025

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 June 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.

DECARBONIZATION TRENDS FOR 2025: Nat Bullard’s annual presentation is a soup-to-nuts overview of global decarbonization trends. Bullard’s deck numbers two hundred slides, but three of them in particular caught our attention.

  1. Aerosols: Tiny airborne particles with a huge impact on climate. They come in various forms, from wildfire smoke and sea spray to everyday air pollution. The light-colored varieties, including sulfur dioxide, reflect sunlight and have a cooling effect. Slide 20 of Nat’s presentation highlights the role these aerosols have played in mitigating warming over the past 150 years. Since 1850, global mean temperatures have risen by 1.3 degrees Celsius; without aerosols, the increase would have verged on two degrees Celsius.

    Net, net: While aerosol pollution is detrimental to human health, it also helps to cool the planet. In fact, it more than counters the warming impact of methane (.28 degrees C).  As aerosol emissions ebb, cutting greenhouse gases is even more important.    

  1. Industry: As we outline in Objective 5, Clean Up Industry, the transition to a net-zero economy will demand vastly more production of green building materials (aluminum, cement, steel), and green fuels (ammonia, shipping fuel, and aviation fuel). Drawing on data from the Mission Possible Partnership’s Global Project Tracker, Bullard’s slide 143 provides a progress update on green industrial projects.

    Net, net: Sustainable aviation fuel, driven by government mandates in the EU and by readily available technology, is currently leading this sector. Clean aluminum and ammonia facilities are also operational, with more in development. While commercial-scale clean cement and steel plants are not yet up and running, numerous projects in the pipeline have already secured a final investment decision (FID) (AKA funding) or are under construction. We need increased government support, corporate offtake, and financing for these facilities.

  1. AI Energy Needs: Northern Virginia is at the epicenter of rising electricity demand from data centers and AI.

    Net, net: As shown on slide 174 of Nat’s presentation, demand from data centers in Virginia has surged by 9x over the past 11 years and is projected to rise another 5x by 2045. The state’s grid is primarily powered by natural gas (54 percent), and nuclear energy (31 percent), with renewables (11 percent) and coal and petroleum accounting for the remainder. Virginia illustrates the need for a massive expansion of energy supply to keep up with demand from AI and data centers. Further scaling of renewables is a prime candidate to help meet that need.  

You can also listen to Nat discuss the deck on the Catalyst Podcast here.

OKRs in the News

🚗 1.0 – Electrify Transportation

  • Hyundai Juices Up Three-Wheeled EVs: Hyundai and TVS Motor unveiled electric rickshaw concepts that are custom-built for India’s tough roads and volatile climate. Priced at around $3,500 U.S., they feature a height-adjustable chassis for monsoons, water-resistant interiors, heat-reducing roof paint, and reinforced structures for pothole resilience. The rapidly expanding market for two- and three-wheeler EVs is displacing over a million barrels of oil each day (Hyundai).

  • Battery Boon: Growth in the global battery industry has exploded, with global battery sales for EVs rising 25 percent, to nearly 18 million units, and grid-connected batteries growing by 55 percent year-over-year. Driven by Chinese overcapacity and industrial policy shifts, battery prices dropped to a record low of $115/kWh. The downside: Due to higher interest rates and geopolitical tensions, investment has slowed (Volta Foundation).

💡 2.0 – Decarbonize the Grid

  • EU Solar Shines: Solar power overtook coal in the EU for the first time in 2024, rising 22 percent year-over-year to account for 11 percent of the power mix. (Coal, meanwhile, fell to 10 percent.) Wind and solar have driven big fossil fuel reductions, cutting EU power sector emissions to less than half their 2007 peak and avoiding €59 billion in fossil fuel imports since 2019. To meet 2030 targets, however, the transition must accelerate (Ember Energy).

  • Power Struggle: A new article in The Economist laments that less than three percent of all power crosses a border. The article argues that a connectivity boost in the world’s grids could lessen the need for redundant backup plants, allow electricity to flow from low-cost to high-cost regions, and make renewable energy investments more viable by preventing excess power from going to waste. Greater interconnection also strengthens energy reliability, allowing countries to import power when domestic supply is low (The Economist).

  • China’s Carbon Crunch: China’s carbon emissions rose 0.8 percent in 2024 as surging energy demand outpaced record clean power installations. Demand for fossil fuels rose early in the year due both to rising consumption and a sharp drop in hydropower from prolonged drought. Even so, emissions fell below 2023 levels over the last 10 months of the year, signaling potential progress toward peaking emissions before Beijing’s 2030 target (CREA).

  • Coal Hard Truths: Hitting a record high in 2023, coal remained the largest single source of CO2 emissions despite global decarbonization efforts, with the IEA predicting an additional one percent increase in 2024. Stepchange’s inaugural podcast explores coal’s historic role in powering the steam engine and shaping economic superpowers, as well as its dark legacy of child labor, deadly mining conditions, urban pollution disasters, and a lasting impact on climate and labor movements (Stepchange).

🐄 3.0 – Fix Food

  • Milking the System: Journalist Jack Shafer criticizes the dairy industry’s rent-seeking push for H.R. 1462, a federal law to prohibit plant-based drinks from using the label “milk,” as a move to stifle competition and hoard market share rather than innovate. He argues the industry’s move mirrors past tactics and blocks the growth of more sustainable food choices. Alt-milks generally have a lower carbon footprint than dairy (Washington Post).

  • Rice to the Climate Challenge: Scientists have developed a new strain of rice that emits up to 70 percent less methane. The breakthrough addresses a leading source of global agricultural emissions, which in total contribute 12 percent of human-generated methane. Using traditional cultivation methods, the researchers identified key root compounds—low fumarate and high ethanol profiles—that reduce methane-producing microbes in soil (GEN).

🌳 4.0 – Protect Nature

  • Rats Run Wild: Rat populations are exploding in major cities worldwide, with climate change as a key driver. Warmer temperatures extend breeding seasons and food availability in places like Washington, D.C., which has the fastest-growing rat population in the U.S. Without stronger prevention strategies, experts warn, the problem will only get worse in a warming world (CNN).

  • Climate Costs Hit Home: As rising insurance costs and extreme weather risks drive homeowners from vulnerable areas, climate change will lower U.S. home values by nearly $1.5 trillion in 2055. Some regions, including Ocean County in New Jersey and Fresno County in California, are projected to see falling populations. Others, notably Houston and Miami, will likely continue to grow despite higher insurance premiums, as people relocate to relatively safer areas nearby rather than abandoning entire regions (WSJ).

🧱 5.0 – Clean Up Industry

  • Turning Up the Heat (Pump): Over a 12-month period ending in September 2024, ultra-efficient, emissions-cutting heat pumps outsold gas furnaces by 28 percent in the U.S. Altogether, 3.8 million heat pump units were sold, 55 percent of them electric water heaters. The growing market share for these technologies will play a crucial role in our campaign to reach net zero (RMI).

  • Latest AI Forecast: RAND’s latest forecast projects that AI data centers could require up to 68 GW of additional power by 2027 and 327 GW by 2030, nearly quadrupling global data center power demand in 2022​. This accelerating growth raises concerns over grid capacity, decarbonization efforts, and U.S. competitiveness. Power constraints could push AI infrastructure abroad, potentially weakening U.S. national security and increasing the country’s reliance on fossil fuels​ (RAND).

🧹 6.0 – Remove Carbon

  • Breath of Fresh Funding: Arizona State University has secured more than $11 million to develop a Southwest Regional Direct Air Capture Hub, which aims to remove one million metric tons of CO2 annually. Spanning Arizona, New Mexico, and Utah, the project will use solar and wind energy to power carbon removal technologies while fostering local job growth and economic development​ (Arizona State University).

    Lego Builds a Greener Future: Lego is committing $2.7M U.S. toward high-quality carbon removal projects. The company is partnering with Climate Impact Partners and ClimateFi to invest in biochar, enhanced rock weathering, and reforestation initiatives. These efforts aim to catapult the carbon removal industry while restoring over a million acres of forest in the Lower Mississippi Valley (The Toy Book).

🏛️ 7.0 – Win Politics And Policy

  • Power Shift: President Donald Trump’s plan to roll back clean energy incentives threatens 800,000 new U.S. jobs and nearly a thousand factories and could further increase China’s dominance in solar, EVs, and batteries. With $2 trillion in projected economic gains at stake, President Trump’s move to reverse course risks higher energy costs and a weakened U.S. manufacturing sector (New York Times).

  • Climate of Doubt: Global opposition to climate policies has doubled over the last 35 years, according to researchers, with 548 counter-climate organizations now active in 51 countries. Once driven by fossil fuel interests, these groups now position their resistance around cultural identity and government overreach (PLOS One).

  • No Rush to Drill: While President Trump’s pro-fossil fuel policies are catnip for oil companies, executives say they won’t expand drilling unless prices rise significantly. Instead, the industry will prioritize profitability and infrastructure expansion, with a focus on long-term permitting reforms for pipelines over short-term production surges (New York Times).

🏃 8.0 – Turn Movements Into Action

  • Davos Doubles Down: With President Donald Trump pulling the U.S. out of the Paris Agreement (again), world leaders at Davos are vowing to push forward on climate commitments, with EU officials and corporate executives reaffirming their long-term sustainability goals. Global business and political leaders are insisting the clean energy transition is “unstoppable”—with or without U.S. federal support (New York Times).

  • Climate Goals Falling Short: The 2025 CDP Corporate Health Check finds that only 10 percent of major companies are meaningfully integrating sustainability into their business models, with just 1 percent reaching the highest level of climate action. While transparency has improved—79 percent disclose some Scope 3 emissions—barely one third of companies are on track to meet their own emissions targets (CDP).


Media Spotlight: First-Ever Super Bowl Ad on Climate Action

The first-ever Super Bowl ad on climate action made history—and people took notice. Recognizing a powerful message about the future we’re leaving our children, the New York Times ranked this ScienceMoms and Potential Energy spot #8 out of 42 commercial spots. The ad is a stark reminder that the climate crisis isn’t some distant threat—it’s happening now, shaping the world today’s kids will inherit.

⚡ 9.0 – Innovate!

  • AI’s Next Wave: Chinese startup DeepSeek’s breakthrough in AI efficiency has led some to predict a decline in energy demand. But history suggests the opposite: Cheaper, more powerful AI will drive energy consumption higher than ever. As AI scales beyond current constraints, the future of power grid emissions hinges on whether clean energy can keep pace with data center demands—or if fossil fuels will fill the gap (Climate Money).

  • EAST to Beast: China’s Experimental Advanced Superconducting Tokamak (EAST) set a new world record by sustaining high-confinement plasma for nearly 18 minutes, a major step toward viable fusion power. This breakthrough strengthens global fusion research, supporting future reactors like ITER and China’s Fusion Engineering Test Reactor in the quest for limitless clean energy (Phys.org).

💰 10.0 – Invest!

  • Big Banks, Tiny Climate Gains: Despite small improvements, global banks remain far off track in shifting their financing toward clean energy. The ratio of low-carbon to fossil fuel financing stands at 0.89-to-1, far below the 4-to-1 ratio needed by 2030 to get on track to net zero. While BNP Paribas leads the pack with a ratio of better than 3-to-1, U.S. giants JPMorgan and Citigroup continue to heavily finance fossil fuels (Bloomberg).

  • Bloomberg Steps Up for Paris Agreement: With the U.S. leaving the Paris Agreement for a second time, Michael Bloomberg and Bloomberg Philanthropies will fill the funding and reporting gaps left behind. Through America Is All In, a coalition of cities, states, and businesses, Bloomberg aims to drive climate leadership regardless of federal inaction (Bloomberg Philanthropies).

OKR Highlight

Venture capital and private equity have been crucial in scaling climate solutions, but 2024 has seen a 38 percent drop in climate-tech funding, falling to $32 billion, according to BNEF.

This marks a major pullback from the momentum built in recent years. Speed & Scale’s KR 10.3 calls for an annual $50 billion invested in climate tech startups. The milestone was reached ahead of schedule when funding peaked at $59 billion in 2021 and then sustained high levels through 2023.

For more, follow Speed & Scale on LinkedIn and X.

Share this email with a friend by forwarding it!







This email was sent to << Test Email Address >>
why did I get this?    unsubscribe from this list    update subscription preferences
Speed & Scale · 2750 Sand Hill Rd · Menlo Park, CA 94025-7020 · USA