The Net-Zero Asset Owner Alliance released the fifth version of its Target-Setting Protocol, introducing “transition targets” that allow investors to support high-emitting companies with credible decarbonization plans.
The alliance represents 87 institutional investors across 19 countries managing more than $9 trillion in assets aligned with the Paris Agreement.
The updated framework integrates transition metrics, stronger engagement requirements, and guidance on carbon removals while prioritizing real-economy emissions reductions.
Alliance Expands Framework To Focus On Real-Economy Transitions
Institutional investors representing more than $9 trillion in assets are sharpening their approach to climate alignment. The Net-Zero Asset Owner Alliance (NZAOA) has released the fifth iteration of its Target-Setting Protocol, introducing a new category of “transition targets” designed to steer capital toward companies that are actively decarbonizing.
The updated framework reflects a shift in emphasis. Instead of focusing solely on reducing portfolio emissions, the protocol places greater weight on how investors support emissions-intensive sectors as they move toward net-zero pathways.
The Net-Zero Asset Owner Alliance is introducing specific climate transition targets for the first time in its Target-Setting Protocol, the framework that guides institutional investors on the path to aligning their portfolios with the goal of net-zero emissions by 2050.
This evolution responds to a central challenge in climate finance. Many of the sectors responsible for the largest share of global emissions remain essential to the economy. Rather than abandoning those industries, investors increasingly aim to finance their transformation.
New Transition Targets For High-Emitting Sectors
The most significant addition in the new protocol is a transition target category that allows investors to measure the share of portfolio emissions linked to “transitioning assets.”
These assets typically include companies operating in carbon-intensive sectors that have established credible plans to decarbonize their operations.
“The Net-Zero Asset Owner Alliance updated its Target-Setting Protocol, introducing ‘transition targets’ that help investors support high-emission companies with credible decarbonization plans.”
The new indicators allow asset owners to track exposure to companies in heavy-emitting industries that are pursuing measurable net-zero strategies. The goal is not simply to reduce exposure to carbon-intensive sectors but to direct capital toward firms capable of transforming them.
“The new targets allow investors to support emissions-intensive companies committed to credible decarbonization pathways.”
To qualify as a transition asset, companies must meet a range of criteria designed to ensure their strategies are aligned with climate science.
Credible Transition Plans Become Central
Under the updated framework, investors must assess whether companies have credible transition plans before classifying them as transition assets.
The protocol outlines several criteria for determining credibility. These include alignment with the Paris Agreement, the adoption of science-based climate targets with clear timelines, and integration of those targets into corporate policies and operational planning.
The framework also requires transparency in climate reporting and progress monitoring, allowing investors to track whether companies are delivering on their commitments.
These standards are intended to provide asset owners with clearer guidance on directing capital toward companies that are genuinely transitioning rather than relying on distant or unsupported climate pledges.
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Four Target Categories Guide Investor Action
The revised protocol expands the alliance’s target-setting architecture into four categories.
These include Engagement Targets, Sector or Transition Targets, Climate Solutions Investment Targets, and Sub-portfolio Emissions Targets.
Members must set targets in at least three of the four areas. Engagement targets are mandatory and emphasize active dialogue with companies, asset managers, and sectors to accelerate decarbonization strategies.
The structure reflects a growing consensus among institutional investors that engagement, rather than divestment alone, plays a critical role in shifting corporate behavior.
“The framework expands climate targets across portfolios, engagement, sector transitions, and climate solutions.”
By combining portfolio metrics with engagement and investment targets, the alliance aims to link financial strategy with real-economy outcomes.
Carbon Removals Integrated With Caution
The updated protocol also incorporates a more defined role for carbon removals in investor strategies.
Signatories are encouraged to support the financing of carbon removal technologies and contribute to the development of well-regulated carbon markets. At the same time, the alliance maintains strict guardrails.
The framework continues to prioritize emissions reductions over offsets and restricts the use of carbon removals to meet portfolio targets before 2030.
This approach reflects growing scrutiny of voluntary carbon markets and concerns that premature reliance on removals could delay necessary decarbonization across industries.
Implications For Global Climate Finance
Founded in 2019 under the auspices of the United Nations, the Net-Zero Asset Owner Alliance brings together 87 institutional investors from 19 countries committed to aligning their portfolios with net-zero emissions by 2050.
Collectively managing more than $9 trillion in assets, alliance members play a significant role in shaping how global capital markets respond to climate risk.
By introducing transition targets, the alliance is signaling that the next phase of climate finance will focus less on portfolio optics and more on the transformation of real-world industries.
For corporate leaders and investors, the message is increasingly clear. Access to capital will depend not only on climate commitments but on credible, measurable plans to decarbonize the sectors that underpin the global economy.
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