Samsung Electronics Likely to Announce Carbon Neutrality Road Map This Week | Be Korea-savvy

Samsung Electronics Likely to Announce Carbon Neutrality Road Map This Week


This file photo taken June 3, 2021, shows the corporate logo of Samsung Group at its office building in Seoul. (Yonhap)

This file photo taken June 3, 2021, shows the corporate logo of Samsung Group at its office building in Seoul. (Yonhap)

SEOUL, Sep. 12 (Korea Bizwire)Samsung Electronics Co. is expected to announce its road map this week to achieve carbon neutrality by 2050, sources said Monday, as the tech behemoth bolsters its net zero transition in line with the global industrywide trend.

The company is also likely to declare a plan to join the RE100, a global corporate initiative designed to shift energy use to renewable sources as a way to respond to climate change and other environmental issues, according to industry sources familiar with the matter.

Samsung, South Korea’s richest conglomerate, remains the only one among the country’s top four business enterprises, which include SK, Hyundai and LG, that has yet to roll out carbon neutrality plans.

Han Jong-hee, vice chairman of Samsung Electronics, hinted at the potential announcement at the IFA 2022 consumer electronics show in Germany earlier this month as he told reporters that the company will announce sustainability plans that “can be put into practice with clear goals to achieve.”

According to the sources, Samsung is expected to outline its plans on how to reduce greenhouse gas emitted directly from its production, known as the “Scope 1 emissions,” and on ways to cut the emissions from indirect sources, such as electricity and air conditioning equipment, known as the “Scope 2 emissions.”

Samsung has already achieved 100 percent renewable energy use in its major foreign production sites, including in the United States, Europe and China, but it has remained cautious about joining the RE100, citing its low renewable energy use in the domestic operations.

Its operations in Latin America and Southwest Asia are expected to achieve the 100 percent level soon, according to the company. The corresponding ratios in Brazil and Mexico stand at 94 percent and 71 percent, respectively.

(Yonhap)

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