World Economic Forum
At a Glance
- The MENA region is uniquely vulnerable to climate change, given the region’s already high temperatures, and yet some of its economies generate among the highest emissions per capita in the world.
- The top 20 state-owned enterprises (SOEs) by emissions in the MENA region have emissions equivalent to the entire country of Canada, which give them the heft and scale to rapidly accelerate sustainability action in the region.
- Those SOEs already outperform regional peers on many measures of corporate climate action, but they must accelerate their activity and set an example for other companies if the region is to meet its ambitious climate targets.
This article originally appeared on the World Economic Forum.
Middle Eastern and North African countries are often criticized in discussions of climate change for the outsize emissions generated by the energy sectors. Such arguments ignore the fact that region’s oil and gas producers are meeting a demand for energy that is global. The consequences of rising temperatures will also hit the MENA region harder than most others, as growing desertification, dropping water-tables, and increasing heat waves threaten habitability across the region.
A better way of framing the discussion would be to point out that any solution to climate change must run through the Middle East. And here the green shoots are visible. As the ambitious net zero commitments by Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates (UAE), Oman, and Bahrain attest, governments across the region are beginning to embrace climate change action. With Egypt and the UAE hosting consecutive COP summits, the region is becoming a center of global climate discourse.
Crucial to meeting regional governments’ emission reduction ambitions are MENA’s SOEs, which account for a significant share of the region’s economic activity. Taken alone, the top 20 SOEs by emissions in the MENA region have emissions equivalent to the entire country of Canada—but that means they also have the scale to accelerate sustainability action in the region by themselves. There are signs that they are doing exactly that.
SOE Leadership
In a previous blog post for the World Economic Forum, Bain & Company investigated the corporate climate commitments of 200 public and private MENA companies that represent 80% of their countries’ stock market capitalization and the largest firms in hard-to-abate sectors such as energy and steel. The findings highlighted the areas of improvement. MENA companies, for example, lag peers in other global regions on setting net zero targets, making disclosures to the Carbon Disclosure Project (CDP) and having Science-Based Target initiative (SBTi)-approved targets.
We have since deepened our research to focus on the 20 largest MENA state-owned emitters that disclose their scope 1 and scope 2 emissions. These are companies of huge scale such as energy giant Aramco; Emirates, a global top 10 airline; and Saudi Electricity Company, which is among the world’s top 10 power companies by generation capacity.
Given their size, many of these companies constitute a sizable chunk of national GDP. This gives them an outsized influence on the direction of corporate sustainability action in the region for two reasons. First, raw numbers: A decisive drop in emissions from any one of these companies will have a notable impact on emissions from the region as a whole. Second, stature: Many of these SOEs are national champions, and often other companies look to them for leadership and will follow their example. As such, MENA SOEs offer a crucial lens through which to assess the progress of companies in the region on climate change and sustainability.
When we looked at the climate commitments of this subset of companies, we found that MENA SOEs are ahead of other businesses in the region (see Figure 1). Among MENA SOEs:
- All SOEs are actively pursuing on emissions reduction measures, and 44% are working on toxic emissions (NOx, SOx).
- More than 70% have initiatives for reducing water consumption/wastewater management, and 67% have initiatives on circularity/waste reduction.
- Thirty percent have initiatives on nature-based solutions.
These are starkly higher than the broader business community in the region as represented by our analysis of largest 200+ companies of the region.
Government Ambitions
In the last two years, we have witnessed significant momentum toward setting national decarbonization targets in the region. Now, nearly 60% of region’s emissions are covered by net zero ambition representing (based on the nine largest economies of the region), and state-owned companies will be essential to meeting those targets given their size and stature.
Several SOEs in the regions have already made eye-catching investments in sustainability initiatives. Saudi Aramco, for example, is investing in one of the world’s largest carbon capture and storage plants, while the UAE’s Masdar is involved in building the world’s largest concentrated solar power (CSP) plant.
In our subset of the largest 20 SOE emitters, nearly 90% have plans for renewable energy, and more than 80% have adopted energy efficiency measures. Perhaps most interestingly, 50% of them have started working on new pathways such as clean hydrogen, carbon capture, utilization, and storage (CCUS), and carbon capture and storage (CCS), and 30% have plans for sustainable aviation fuel.
When it comes to reporting and disclosures, however, MENA SOEs can still be much more ambitious (see Figure 2). Only 30% of this group has adopted a net zero target, 20% have set a roadmap for it, and none have aligned the roadmap with SBTi. Similarly, only 5% have institutionalized CDP disclosures.
A Catalyst for Other Companies
Governments can play a part in setting ambitions, and increasingly in the MENA region, they are. However, it is companies that actually undertake most economic activity—and as such, the private sector will need to bear the responsibility of delivering sustainability action. In the MENA region, the 20 largest SOEs are taking a lead in some areas but must accelerate their actions with regard to consistent emission measurement, disclosures, and target setting. Going forward, they can help smaller private and public companies in the region make rapid progress too, by:
- Working with suppliers to raise ambition and action. Given their huge procurement budgets and large supplier bases, SOEs can significantly influence behavior among other firms in the region. Mandating ESG weightage in procurement, for example, would incentivize suppliers to measure emissions, make disclosures, and formulate reduction plans.
- Setting an example with net zero commitments. SOEs should close the gaps that still exist with international peers on net zero commitments and align the roadmap with global best practices (e.g., CDP and SBTi) to set a truly good example for other companies in the region.
- Raising awareness among consumers. SOEs provide many basic services such as electricity and water to MENA consumers, and as such have significant leverage to change behavior among populations that have some of the highest rates of per capita energy usage in the world.
- Sharing best practices to bridge the capability gap on sustainability reporting. Large SOEs can share knowledge with other companies in the region on methodologies, frameworks, and best practices to promote emissions measurement, disclosures, and target setting. As they procure more services from international environmental reporting consultants, they can also encourage them to set up offices and offer their services in the region.
- Partner with governments on policy making. SOEs can work together with MENA governments to help them phase in reporting requirements for listed and even private companies, as capabilities and familiarities with frameworks grow within the region’s business community.
World Economic Forum, in its partnership with Bain & Company, is working with stakeholders in the MENA region, including large SOEs, to support such change as part of the WEF’s Leaders for a Sustainable MENA (LSM) initiative. Together we are building a coalition of climate-conscious and change-hungry partners who want to combat climate change and bring climate adaptation to the forefront. As the world moves toward COP 28, LSM aims to create a platform of dialogue where cross-border public-private partnerships can grow to deliver a net zero transition for the MENA region.