Orsted
ESRS disclosure: ESRS E1 \ DR E1-1 \ Paragraph 16 e
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- Provide a detailed explanation of any objectives or plans related to capital expenditures (CapEx), capital expenditure plans (CapEx plans), and operational expenditures (OpEx) that your undertaking has formulated to align its economic activities, including revenues, CapEx, and OpEx, with the criteria set forth in Commission Delegated Regulation 2021/2139, as required under Disclosure Requirement E1-1 concerning the transition plan for climate change mitigation.
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Question Id: E1-1_08
Capital alignment with climate goals: Since the entry into force of the EU Climate Delegated Act, 99% of Ørsted’s capital expenditures (CAPEX) have been allocated to activities classified as sustainable. For 2024, these expenditures include DKK 37,867 million for the deployment of offshore and onshore wind capacity, DKK 6,097 million for the deployment of solar PV and energy storage technologies, and DKK 2,836 million for hydrogen, carbon capture and storage, and bioenergy activities.
Report Date: 4Q2024Relevance: 85%
- Provide a detailed explanation of the time horizons applied in your resilience analysis, ensuring alignment with the climate and business scenarios used to determine material physical and transition risks, as well as in setting GHG emissions reduction targets. This disclosure should correspond to the requirements outlined in paragraphs AR 11 to AR 12 and should be consistent with the information reported under Disclosure Requirement E1-4.
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Question Id: E1.SBM-3_05
For the purposes of meeting financial materiality assessment requirements, we have also considered the following time horizons: short term (covering the current reporting year and the next year), medium term (from the end of the short-term period to five years), and long term (more than five years). Applying these horizons did not lead to any changes in the results of the assessment. It is important to note that, in the context of climate change, these time horizons are relatively short term and may not fully reflect the scale of risks that develop over extended periods.
Our physical climate risk assessment analyses data based on the remaining operational lifetimes of our assets, which extend up to 35 years. This period is considered medium term in climate projections, as significant climate changes are not typically observed in the short term. The long-term horizon, defined as 2060 onwards, is not applicable under our current methodology, as all existing assets are scheduled for decommissioning before that time.
Report Date: 4Q2024Relevance: 85%