The Net-Zero Transition: What it would cost, what it could bring

The research report analyzes the economic and societal adjustments required for a net-zero transition by 2050, focusing on shifts in demand, capital allocation, costs, and jobs.

(Generated with the help of GPT-4)

Quick Facts
Report location: source
Language: English
Publisher: McKinsey
Publication date: January 1, 2022
Authors: Annabel Farr, Daniel Pacthod, Danielle Imperato, Dickon Pinner, Hamid Samandari, Humayun TArtificial Intelligence, Humayun Tai, Johanneke Tummers, Jonathan Woetzel, Mekala Krishnan, Sophie Underwood, Sven Smit, Tomas Nauclér, Weige Wu
Time horizon: 2050
Geographic focus: Global, United States, China, European Union, Japan, United Kingdom, India, Sub-Saharan Africa, Latin America, Russia, Ukraine, Commonwealth Of Independent States, Middle East, North Africa, Australia, Canada, New Zealand, Belgium, Denmark, Finland, France, Greece, Ireland, Israel, Netherlands, Portugal, Singapore, Spain, Switzerland.
Page count: 224

Methods

The research method involved analyzing the Network for Greening the Financial System (NGFS) Net Zero 2050 scenario, assessing sectoral and geographic impacts, and defining country archetypes based on transition exposure. The analysis considered direct and indirect jobs, GDP, and capital stock in exposed sectors, as well as opportunities and physical risks.

(Generated with the help of GPT-4)

Key Insights

The net-zero transition would involve significant economic transformation, with shifts in demand for goods and services, increased capital spending on physical assets, changes in production costs, and reallocation of labor. This transition would affect sectors and geographies unevenly and could lead to asset stranding and job dislocations, necessitating coordinated action and support for vulnerable stakeholders.

(Generated with the help of GPT-4)

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Last modified: 2024/04/17 17:35 by elizabethherfel