Net Zero Strategy

Net Zero Roadmap for Enterprises

December 10, 2025 CarbonSync Team 9 min read
Net Zero Roadmap for Enterprises

Net zero has become one of the most common commitments in corporate sustainability — and one of the most inconsistently defined. The gap between a company that has set a credible, science-aligned net-zero target and one that has simply announced an aspiration is significant. This article provides a practical roadmap for enterprises that want to build a net-zero programme that meets the rigour demanded by the Science Based Targets initiative (SBTi), the CSRD, and institutional investors.

What Net Zero Actually Means

The SBTi Corporate Net-Zero Standard, published in 2021 and updated since, provides the most widely accepted corporate definition. Under this standard, net zero means reducing absolute Scope 1, 2, and 3 emissions by at least 90 percent from a base year, consistent with limiting global warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius, and addressing any residual emissions (up to 10 percent) through permanent carbon removal.

This is fundamentally different from "carbon neutral," which typically allows offsets to compensate for current emissions without requiring reductions. Net zero under SBTi requires actual, deep operational decarbonisation over a multi-decade trajectory, with near-term milestones (typically 5-10 years) and a long-term target aligned with 2050 or sooner.

The 90% rule: You cannot claim SBTi-aligned net zero by purchasing offsets. At least 90 percent of your emissions must be eliminated through operational changes before any residual compensation is applied. The remaining 10 percent must be addressed through permanent carbon removal, not avoidance offsets.

Phase 1: Establish the Baseline

A net-zero roadmap cannot be built without a complete, credible GHG inventory. Before setting targets, enterprises must know their current emissions position across all three scopes.

1

Set Organisational Boundaries

Define which legal entities, facilities, and joint ventures are included. Choose between the operational control, financial control, or equity share consolidation approaches under the GHG Protocol, and apply consistently.

2

Complete Scope 1 and 2 Inventory

Collect activity data for all direct combustion, process emissions, fugitive emissions, and purchased energy across all included facilities. Apply location-based and market-based methods for Scope 2.

3

Screen Scope 3 Categories

Conduct a materiality screening across all 15 Scope 3 categories. Identify which are relevant and estimate order-of-magnitude figures using spend-based proxies to determine where primary data collection is needed.

4

Select and Lock the Base Year

Choose a base year with complete, representative data (not a COVID anomaly year). Document the base year inventory in a way that supports future restatement if organisational boundaries change significantly.

Phase 2: Set Science-Based Targets

Once the baseline is established, the next step is setting targets aligned with climate science. The SBTi offers two pathways for near-term targets and a single standard for long-term (net-zero) targets.

Near-Term Targets (5-10 Years)

Near-term targets must be consistent with limiting warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius. The SBTi accepts two methods for determining the required reduction rate:

For Scope 3, near-term targets must cover at least 67 percent of total Scope 3 emissions. If Scope 3 is more than 40 percent of total Scope 1+2+3 emissions (which it usually is), a Scope 3 target is mandatory.

Long-Term Net-Zero Target

The long-term target must commit to reducing all Scope 1, 2, and 3 emissions by at least 90 percent by no later than 2050, relative to the base year. The target must specify the base year, the target year, and the percentage reduction committed. A small number of hard-to-abate residual emissions may remain, addressed through permanent removal.

Phase 3: Build the Decarbonisation Plan

Target-setting is only valuable if it is backed by a credible plan. The decarbonisation plan maps specific actions to the emissions reductions required to meet near-term targets, with accountability owners and milestones.

Scope 1 and 2 Levers

Scope 3 Levers

Phase 4: Implement Measurement and Governance

A net-zero programme must be governed and tracked with the same rigour as financial performance. The governance elements include:

Phase 5: Report and Disclose

Net-zero programmes are only credible if they are disclosed transparently. The main disclosure channels for enterprise net-zero reporting are:

Common Roadmap Mistakes

Enterprises that struggle with net-zero programmes typically make one or more of these errors:

The Technology Foundation

Executing a net-zero roadmap at enterprise scale requires a carbon data platform that can maintain the GHG inventory across multiple years, track progress against targets, manage Scope 3 supplier data collection, and generate the disclosure outputs required for CDP, CSRD, and investor requests. Attempting to manage this workflow in spreadsheets becomes unworkable at the scale and frequency required for annual disclosure under CSRD. The platform is the infrastructure that makes the programme sustainable over a multi-decade commitment.

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