Key Takeaways
- SBTi’s Corporate Net-Zero Standard Version 2.0, released in June 2026, is the most significant revision of the framework since its 2021 debut.
- The headline changes—a best-efforts framework, greater Scope 3 flexibility, tighter links between targets and governance, and a stronger emphasis on implementation and continuous improvement—all point in a single direction.
- That direction is the one practitioners have understood for years: setting a target was never the hard part. Delivering against it is.
- Companies with validated targets do not need to resubmit under Version 2.0. The work is decarbonization and demonstrable progress, not re-validation.
- For companies still weighing science-based targets, Version 2.0 reinforces an important reality: Success depends far more on the quality of your decarbonization plan than on the ambition of your target.
The Challenge Evolves: SBTi Released Version 2.0
The Science Based Targets initiative (SBTi) released Version 2.0 of its Corporate Net-Zero Standard on June 11, 2026, the first full revision since the Standard launched in 2021.
The technical changes have drawn most of the attention, and understandably so. Version 2.0 introduces a best-efforts framework, new approaches to Scope 3, sharper expectations around governance and transition planning, and a more structured treatment of carbon removals and ongoing emissions responsibility.
After 15 years spent quantifying emissions, setting targets, and building the pathways to hit them, I’d argue the more important story sits underneath the technical detail.
Over the past decade, companies have become very good at making commitments. More than 11,000 companies and financial institutions have validated science-based targets, with thousands more committed to doing so. The underlying aim has not changed: aligning corporate emissions reductions with a 1.5°C pathway, consistent with the Paris Agreement. The scale of adoption is genuinely remarkable.
Achieving those targets is a fundamentally harder problem—and the one that actually determines whether any of this matters.
The question facing companies now is not whether to set a target, but how to reduce emissions in practice: through initiatives that are technically viable, operationally realistic, and financially defensible. The difficulty is doing all three at once, inside real capital-planning cycles, against competing priorities, while navigating the countless variables that influence implementation.
The destination has not changed. What Version 2.0 changes is where the effort is directed.
What Changed in SBTi’s Corporate Net-Zero Standard Version 2.0?
A few updates stand out.
First, the best-efforts framework. Version 2.0 acknowledges what everyone doing this work already knew: Companies do not control every variable in their own decarbonization. Firms are still expected to set ambitious targets, deploy the levers available to them, and show progress. But the Standard now treats implementation and transparency as the measure of credibility, rather than reducing target achievement to a binary pass or fail. It would be easy to read “best-efforts” as a softening of sorts, but it is not. It is a maturation of the framework to match how decarbonization actually unfolds, while shifting the burden onto demonstrable effort and disclosure.
Second, real flexibility on Scope 3. Companies now have more workable pathways to address value-chain emissions, such as supplier and customer alignment, activity-pool and category-specific approaches, and a more honest treatment of emissions they can influence but not command. Anyone who has built a Scope 3 inventory understands why this matters: Influencing thousands of suppliers and customers is a categorically different problem than cutting your own energy use.
Third, a sharper focus on near-term accountability—through periodic (five-year) review cycles, annual progress reporting, and end-of-cycle assessments. Long-term ambition still matters, but the Standard now places more weight on measurable progress in the near term than on distant commitments.
Version 2.0 also formalizes separate Scope 1 and Scope 2 targets, tightens expectations around governance and transition planning, and—for larger companies—moves assurance from good practice toward requirement. Taken together, the changes push in one direction: toward the realities companies face when they move from ambition to implementation.
Setting a Target vs. Delivering on It
The most important theme in SBTi’s Corporate Net-Zero Standard Version 2.0 is the recognition that a target, however ambitious, is only a starting point.
Emissions reductions are achieved through operational, procurement, capital, and change-management decisions made across a business. In practice, this includes energy efficiency, equipment upgrades, facility optimization, fuel switching, electrification, renewable procurement, supplier engagement, process improvements, and so on. Targets set direction and create accountability. Decisions and implementation determine whether the target is met.
Most projects require capital up front and return their value later as lower operating costs, as well as (sometimes) less obvious benefits in operational resilience and energy security, to name a couple. In many organizations, the capital cost and the operational savings sit in different budgets entirely—a classic split-incentive problem, and one that has nothing to do with sustainability and everything to do with how the business is structured. Solving it is often less about engineering than about who owns the budget line.
No two companies decarbonize the same way. Most draw from the same finite set of levers; what differs is the marginal abatement cost and emissions value of each one, which varies by industry, asset lifecycles, energy profile, growth plans, and value-chain structure, among other factors. A lever that is decisive for one company is marginal for another. Version 2.0 does not remove that complexity but it acknowledges it, and that acknowledgment may be the most consequential thing about the update.
The Business Case for Decarbonization
A point that gets lost in the implementation conversation is co-benefits. Many of the actions that reduce emissions are good business on their own terms.
The same levers noted above—efficiency, optimization, electrification, on-site generation, supplier engagement—routinely lower operating costs, improve energy security, and strengthen resilience while cutting emissions. As energy price volatility, load growth, grid constraints, and extreme weather intensify, those co-benefits should stop being incidental and start being rationale for project approval and funding.
The framing follows the audience, but the heart of the message remains the same. A facility optimization project reduces emissions, lowers utility spend, and improves performance; on-site solar advances a climate goal and cuts grid dependence; an equipment upgrade improves efficiency, output, and resilience at once. Whether a company frames the work as sustainability, resilience, cost, or risk, the underlying actions tend to serve all of them. That is why Version 2.0’s emphasis on implementation matters: it moves the conversation onto the operational and financial decisions that actually determine the outcome.
What Companies Should Do Now
So, what should you actually do about SBTi Version 2.0?
- If you already have validated targets: Your targets remain valid through their current cycle; there is no requirement to resubmit under Version 2.0. Direct the effort toward implementation, progress tracking, and preparing for your next review and renewal.
- If you have committed but are not yet validated: Get familiar with Version 2.0 and the transition timeline. Version 2.0 becomes effective February 1, 2027; companies can submit under either Version 1.3.1 or Version 2.0 through January 31, 2028, after which Version 2.0 is mandatory. Depending on timing, you may still validate under the current framework—but whichever version you use, put as much rigor into the implementation plan as into the target itself. Validation is a milestone, not the finish line.
| Date | Effect |
|---|---|
| February 1, 2027 | Version 2.0 becomes effective |
| January 31, 2028 | Latest date by which companies can submit under Version 1.3.1 (or Version 2.0) |
| February 1, 2028 | Version 2.0 become mandatory |
- If you are still considering targets: Version 2.0 makes the point explicit: Evaluate target-setting and decarbonization planning together. The companies that succeed know not only what they intend to achieve, but how—ambition grounded in a pathway they can actually execute.
The Bottom Line on SBTi Version 2.0
SBTi’s Corporate Net-Zero Standard Version 2.0 introduces real technical change, but the larger story is not the methodology. It is that the framework has caught up to what practitioners have long understood: Companies do not control every variable, supply chains are complex, technologies evolve, capital cycles take time, and progress is rarely linear. Version 2.0 makes room for that reality while holding the line on accountability, transparency, and continuous improvement.
There is a timing signal worth noting, too. Version 2.0’s demand for demonstrable, evidence-backed progress arrives at the same moment assurance is shifting from a differentiator to an expectation—driven both by the Standard and by regulation such as California’s SB253. In my view, those two trends are going to compound: The pressure to show progress and the pressure to have that progress independently verified are about to become the same pressure.
The goal—meaningful emissions reductions aligned with climate science—has not changed. What is different is the honesty about the journey. Targets set direction; implementation delivers results. SBTi Version 2.0 reflects a more mature understanding of corporate climate action—success is defined not by the ambition of the commitment, but by the ability to turn that commitment into measurable progress.