Robeco logo

Disclaimer

This page is intended for US prospects, clients and investors only and includes information about the capabilities, staffing and history of Robeco Institutional Asset Management US, Inc. (RIAM US) and its participating affiliates, which may include information on strategies not available in the US. US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) regulations are applicable only to clients, prospects and investors of RIAM US. Robeco BV, Robeco HK and Robeco SH are considered a “participating affiliate” of RIAM US and some of their employees are “associated persons” of RIAM US as per relevant SEC no-action guidance. Employees identified as access persons or associated persons of RIAM US perform activities directly or indirectly related to the investment advisory services provided by RIAM US. In those situations, these individuals are deemed to be acting on behalf of RIAM, a US SEC registered investment adviser. RIAM US’s SEC registration should not be viewed as an endorsement or approval of RIAM US by the SEC. RIAM US maintains its offices at 230 Park Avenue, New York, NY 10169.

By clicking I Agree, I confirm that I have read and understood the above.

I Disagree

Climate Action Tracker

The Climate Action Tracker is an independent scientific body that tracks decarbonization initiatives by governments and measures them against the goals of the Paris Agreement. This seeks to limit the rise in global temperatures to well below 2°C above pre-industrial levels, and to pursue efforts to keep the rise to 1.5°C by the end of this century.


The tracker is a collaboration between two German organisations, Climate Analytics and New Climate Institute, that was founded in 2009 and is based in Berlin. It tracks data from 36 countries plus the EU, covering about 80% of global greenhouse gas emissions and about 70% of the world’s population.

The tracker quantifies and evaluates climate change mitigation commitments, and then assesses whether countries are on track to meeting them. It aggregates country action to the global level, determining the likely temperature increase by the end of the century. The tracker also develops sectoral analysis to illustrate required pathways for meeting the global temperature goals.

Returns that benefit the world we live in

The national actions that are tracked are:

  • The effect that the policies a government has implemented or enacted will have on national emissions up until 2030 and beyond

  • The impact of pledges, targets and Nationally Determined Contributions on emissions over this time period

  • Whether a government is doing its ‘fair share’ of emissions reductions compared with the efforts of others towards meeting the Paris goals

From this data, the tracker calculates the gap between the pledges made now and the work that is needed to meet the goals, and the consequences for global warming if there is a shortfall. This uses the Model for the Assessment of Greenhouse Gas Induced Climate Change (MAGICC), developed by the US National Center for Atmospheric Research and the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research.

See also:

Climate clocks
Climate change
Paris Agreement


Related insights