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What is the difference between Carbon Neutral vs Net Zero?

We know the language surrounding sustainability and climate action can seem complicated. A recent Fleishmann Hillard study showed that there is high confusion surrounding a majority of environment based claims. 

One of the main issues is that several similar terms are often used interchangeably, including carbon neutral vs net zero vs climate neutral, despite the distinct differences between the three concepts.

Here, we explain exactly what they mean and how they differ to help you better understand sustainability terminology and decide which language to use when setting targets for your business.

Note that you may still find differences in how other organisations define these terms (which causes the confusion in the first place!), but we’ve taken what we believe to be the most common and widely acknowledged definitions from industry experts.

Here’s a handy guide that summarises what you’re about to read:

Carbon neutral

To understand the difference between carbon neutral vs net zero, we must first look at the individual definitions of these terms.

The term carbon neutral describes an existing state when a company is compensating for all of its CO2 emissions. To achieve carbon neutrality, a business will calculate its carbon footprint, reduce their emissions where possible,  and purchase carbon credits and offsets that support projects removing or avoiding carbon. In doing this, the business compensates for its carbon emissions while using the baseline measurement to start reducing emissions. 

A carbon-neutral certification with the support of carbon credits represents immediate action that can be taken in the short term while businesses start to reduce emissions. It can often follow on directly from a business measuring their footprint as they implement reduction initiatives. These reduction actions can require significant investment and technological updates, so they continue on a  long-term.

Trace helps companies to measure, reduce, and offset their emissions by supporting businesses in creating actionable, targeted emissions reduction strategies. Once this step has been taken Trace awards a ‘carbon neutral’ badge that includes scope 3 emissions from a businesses supply chain. 

Check out this article for more information on carbon neutrality for businesses and how to become carbon neutral with Trace.

Net zero

The term net zero is used when talking about the future state of a business that is achieved through ambitious and specific reduction initiatives. Net zero refers to the end-state a business achieves when it has successfully reduced all avoidable greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions and is only using carbon credits to compensate for unavoidable emissions. At this point, the company is contributing zero incremental or additional GHG emissions to the atmosphere and can be said to produce net-zero emissions. The Science Based Targets initiative describes net zero for the private sector as the point at which 90 – 95% of a business’s value chain emissions have been eliminated. 

Net zero is a long-term strategy that requires a business to decarbonise its operations through efficiency, renewable energy, electrification, supply chain management, and any other relevant means. Improvements will need to be made in all operational areas from buildings and machinery to suppliers and waste disposal systems. The reduction strategies an organisation implements will rely heavily on what initially drove the baseline emissions.

Carbon neutral vs net zero

So, what is the difference between net zero vs carbon neutral?

For a start, carbon neutral refers only to carbon emissions, whereas net-zero is concerned with all greenhouse gases, including methane and nitrous oxide. Carbon credits can play a role in reaching both targets. However, it plays a more central role in achieving carbon neutrality and must only play a minor role in reaching net zero.

The main difference between the meaning of carbon neutral vs net zero is the timeframe and how the target is reached. Carbon neutrality is a short-term state that most companies can achieve almost immediately by measuring their current emissions, implementing meaningful reduction initiatives, and purchasing carbon credits to balance those emissions from their measurement. 

In comparison, net zero is a long-term goal achieved only when a company has set ambitious targets over a specified time frame to take all available action to reduce the majority of its emissions. Carbon credits are only utilised for the small remainder of unavoidable emissions. Often carbon neutrality is used as part of an organisation’s journey to net-zero.