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ESRS disclosure: ESRS E1 \ DR E1-1 \ Paragraph 16 c
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- Provide a detailed account of your organization's significant operational and capital expenditures necessary for the execution of your climate change mitigation transition plan, as outlined in Disclosure Requirement E1-1. This should include an explanation and quantification of investments and funding, referencing the key performance indicators of taxonomy-aligned capital expenditures, and, where applicable, the capital expenditure plans disclosed in accordance with Commission Delegated Regulation (EU) 2021/2178.
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Question Id: E1-1_04
In 2024, the capital expenditure, including R&D and tooling, related to the development of our electric vehicles amounted to approximately €236 million. Given that we plan to develop our new business plan in 2025, the total expenditure for the next years is under review.
Report Date: 4Q2024Relevance: 60%
- Does the undertaking's process for identifying and assessing material climate-related impacts, risks, and opportunities include an explanation of whether and how the identification of climate-related hazards and the assessment of exposure and sensitivity are informed by high emissions climate scenarios, such as those based on IPCC SSP5-8.5, relevant regional climate projections, or NGFS climate scenarios with high physical risk like "Hot house world" or "Too little, too late"?
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Question Id: E1.IRO-1_07
More specifically, for physical risks, the Representative Concentration Pathways (RCP) correspond to defined emissions and global warming levels. Each RCP scenario is modeled by the scientific community in terms of physical impacts. In particular, we have considered the RCP 8.5, RCP 4.5 and RCP 2.6 scenarios:
- The RCP8.5 scenario is the most extreme of the business-as-usual scenarios. It forecasts an increase above 4°C by 2100. This scenario can translate into reality if the world adopts no mitigation policy. High economic and population growth rates (SSP5) favor this scenario. This scenario triggers most of the climate “points of non-return” and hence, its consequences are difficult to model;
- The RCP4.5 scenario is the most probable given current pledges by countries. It forecasts an increase in temperature between 2 to 3°C by the end of the century, well above the limits of Paris 2015 and Kyoto Protocol. Pledges as of October 2022 lead to an increase of 2.5°C by 2100, as calculated by the United Nations; and
- The RCP2.6 scenario is a Paris/Kyoto one and foresees emissions approximately at the same levels of today (below 1.5°C by 2100 ).
Each climate scenario is characterized by different levels of greenhouse gas concentrations. Specifically, we considered a pessimistic scenario (RCP 8.5), an intermediate scenario (RCP 4.5) and a more optimistic scenario (RCP 2.6) to assess the various situations we might face.
Report Date: 4Q2024Relevance: 85%