Germany aims to be climate-neutral by 2045, and the European Union by 2050. For many companies, this means that they are obliged to create a transformation plan stating how they intend to reduce their greenhouse-gas emissions. This presents companies with a number of immediate challenges: First of all, they need to ascertain precisely what emissions are being generated along the entire value chain, as realistic targets and suitable climate-protection measures can only be defined once the status quo has been determined.
In order to achieve this, the individual climate-protection measures must be evaluated and prioritized. “The most efficient and economical measures should be implemented first,” advises Michael Rentschler from the Sustainability Modeling and Analytics research team at the Fraunhofer Institute for Manufacturing Engineering and Automation IPA. Together with his colleagues from the Fraunhofer Institute for Production Systems and Design Technology IPK and the Fraunhofer Institute for Surface Engineering and Thin Films IST, he has developed a dynamic and scenario-based method with which companies can evaluate their climate-protection measures in accordance with ecological and economic criteria in order to determine the most efficient options.