COP 26 – is the tech industry really being incentivised to tackle climate change? – Diginomica

COP 26 – is the tech industry really being incentivised to tackle climate change? – Diginomica

(Image by Pete Linforth from Pixabay )

The UNFCCC DEFRA Technology for Climate Action Conference forms part of the many events taking place at COP26 this week in Glasgow, as politicians, business leaders, scientists, activists and academics come together to try and form agreement on how best to tackle the climate crisis. 

Sitting in one room we had senior executives from the likes of Microsoft, ServiceNow, Cisco, Intel, CGI, and Atos, all sharing their ideas on how we can protect the future of the planet and humanity. I’m going to be doing a full write up next week of the CEO panels I sat in on, but I thought it may be useful to frame the event with some initial thoughts for how it was perceived as an attendee. 

I should preface this by saying that I am in no way a climate change expert, so I may fall short on the in-depth science. But what is clear is that drastic action is needed if we are collectively going to limit global warming to well below 2 degrees Celsius, as per the Paris Agreement. In fact, by many measures, the climate crisis is getting worse, not better (as was mentioned many times today). 

And to give credit to all the technology organizations today, every single one of them said that they are on track to achieve Net Zero carbon emissions by 2050. In fact, many of them were targeting 2030, or 2040 at the latest. 

Microsoft is going even further and has said that by 2050 it will remove from the environment all the carbon the company has emitted either directly or by electrical consumption since it was founded in 1975. 

And on stage, many of the CEOs and leaders of these technology organizations spoke passionately about the importance of this crisis and how they are working hard to carry out the necessary change. 

However, having had some off the record conversations, it seems that there are still frustrations about the speed at which change is happening and there are still questions left unanswered about the systemic shifts that are required to meaningfully move the needle. 

Things left unsaid

There were a few points that almost everyone in attendance were in agreement on today. For instance: the younger generations are angry and they want to see movement now; not focusing on sustainability and climate is bad for business; technology can enable some new operational models that could make a difference in the long run; and some competitive advantage could be gained from being a climate conscious business. 

However, a question that came up a couple of times that no one really gave a satisfactory answer to was: how does our current model of capitalism fit with climate responsibility? This was a stumbling block for many. 

Why? Because ultimately these companies are driven by growth and profit metrics. Sustainability and climate responsibility are clearly seen as important, but ultimately most of the companies on stage are measuring success by the returns that are delivered to shareholders and how the share price looks on a quarterly basis. 

From conversations I had outside of the mainstream panel, there was a quiet consensus that we need to perhaps rethink how we actually measure what a successful company looks like. 

This could have far reaching consequences, of course. If never ending …….

Source: https://diginomica.com/cop-26-tech-industry-really-being-incentivised-tackle-climate-change