A tool for policy makers and all who work towards net zero greenhouse gas emissions for their business, group or country
Launched at COP27, the Net Zero Guidelines tackle a major road block for a world where greenhouse gas emissions are reduced to the minimum and balanced by removals: the fragmented net zero governance landscape. Competing approaches and concepts for "Net Zero" sow confusion. The Guidelines provide a common reference for collective efforts, offering a global basis for harmonizing, understanding, and planning for net zero for actors at the state, regional, city and organizational level.
Free download
To support global climate action, ISO offers the Net Zero Guidelines for free download and online browsing:
A common understanding of “net zero”
The Net Zero Guidelines set a common path for:
- the definition of “net zero” and related terms (greenhouse gas removals, offsetting, value chain, etc), clarifying the differences in scope between direct emissions, indirect emissions from purchased energy, and other indirect emissions arising from an organization’s activities
- high-level principles for all actors who want to achieve climate neutrality,
- actionable guidance on getting there as soon as possible, by 2050 at the very latest, and
- transparent communication, credible claims, and consistent reporting on emissions, reductions and removals.
The Guidelines build on the momentum of existing voluntary initiatives and increase their impact. Globally accepted “net zero” claims are easier to compare, create an ambition loop, and can be scaled through better regulation.
Broad consensus built through an open process
More than 1,200 experts from over 100 countries contributed to make the Net Zero Guidelines an effective common reference for net zero guidance.
ISO’s International Workshop Agreement (IWA) process provided the perfect platform to facilitate broad and direct participation.
What is an ISO International Workshop Agreement?
In order to respond to urgent market requirements, International Workshop Agreements (IWAs) are prepared through a workshop mechanism outside of ISO committee structures, following a procedure that ensures the broadest range of relevant interested parties worldwide have the opportunity to participate, and are approved by consensus amongst the individual participants in the workshops. If there is an existing ISO committee whose scope covers the topic, the published International Workshop Agreement is automatically allocated to this committee for maintenance.
An International Workshop Agreement is reviewed three years after its publication and can be further processed to become a Publicly Available Specification, a Technical Specification or an International Standard, according to the market requirement. An International Workshop Agreement can exist for a maximum of six years, following which it is either withdrawn or converted into another ISO document.
Now available in six languages
In addition to the English, French, Japanese, Russian and Spanish versions available via iso.org, the following translations are available via ISO member websites:
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German: Leitlinien für Netto-Null, provided by DIN, the ISO member for Germany.
The Net Zero Guidelines (IWA 42:2022) were commissioned by Our 2050 World, a global collaboration to accelerate action towards net zero through standards. The collaboration includes ISO, the Race to Zero campaign and the UNFCCC’s Global Innovation Hub.
Netflix: A company example
Netflix’s climate targets and progress are in alignment with the core principles of the ISO Net Zero Guidelines, and its continued sustainability journey is therefore instructive for other companies to learn from.
Netflix’s climate goals align with the latest climate science and take immediate action to maintain a global 1.5°C pathway. In support of global net zero goals, the company also invests in instruments to protect nature and remove carbon from the atmosphere, proportional to their remaining emissions. Netflix’s strategy centres around driving near-term, ambitious action today, rather than deferring action to future years (despite systemic challenges to global decarbonization).
Although the exact enabling technologies, policies, and infrastructure that Netflix needs for absolute decarbonization don’t exist today, the company is transparent about its efforts to address current challenges. Namely, Netflix is engaged in driving demand and building collective action (e.g. through the Clean Mobile Power Initiative, Sustainable Aviation Buyers Alliance, and Business Alliance to Scale Climate Solutions, the Sustainable Production Alliance, and BAFTA’s Albert). Additionally, through its Sustainability Stories collection, Netflix is demonstrating how wide-ranging and entertaining stories that touch on sustainability topics can be.