Confidence in UK鈥檚 net-zero goals drops amid policy, investment barriers, EIC says
Energy industry confidence in reaching global net-zero targets is fading as policy instability, financial uncertainty and slow project approvals continue to hinder progress, according to Net Zero Jeopardy Report II by the Energy Industries Council鈥檚 (EIC).
Only 16% of senior energy executives interviewed now believe the world can achieve net zero by 2050, down from 45% last year. The report, based on interviews with EIC member companies mostly based in the UK, points to growing concerns over the lack of clear regulatory frameworks, underinvestment in clean technologies and delays in bringing projects to the final investment decision (FID) stage.
鈥淭he energy industry is facing real challenges in turning pledges into projects,鈥 said Stuart Broadley, EIC CEO. 鈥淏usiness leaders are not seeing the level of policy certainty or investment required to deliver net-zero ambitions.鈥
鈥淚n the UK, if the government is serious about achieving its interim targets, it needs to listen closely to what the supply chain is saying. The message isn鈥檛 a very happy one. We need a lot of immediate reforms that speed up licensing processing and cut other red tape, ensure consistent policy and regulation, have the right financial incentives.鈥
Confidence in interim net-zero targets is even lower. Only 14% of respondents believe their country will meet 2030 climate goals, down from 16% in last year鈥檚 report. Globally, 5% believe interim targets will be met, compared to 11% a year ago.
鈥淭he data leaves no room for optimism鈥攃onfidence in net-zero targets is collapsing across the energy sector,鈥 said Mahmoud Habboush, author of the Net Zero Jeopardy II report. 鈥淚ndustry leaders are not merely expressing frustration, they are passionately warning about fundamental barriers, including unstable policy, weak investment appetite, and slow project approvals. And these barriers, if left without tackling, will no doubt derail the energy transition.鈥