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Press Releases

CDP Korea Committee Selects 'Climate Leadership' Companies

2025-04-30 Views 12

CDP Korea Committee Selects 'Climate Leadership' Companies

 

- CDP Korea Committee Announces 'Climate Leadership' Companies

- Hyundai Motor, Hyundai Wia, LG Uplus, LG Innotek, Hanwha Aerospace, and Hanwha Named to '2024 Carbon Management Honors Club'

- 25 Korean Companies Achieve Climate Change A-List; 11 Recognized in Water Security

- Key Challenges Explored at Conference: "Climate Action, the Key to Sustainability and Economic Growth"

 

The CDP Korea Committee today announced the results of its annual corporate climate performance evaluation. Hyundai Motor, Hyundai Wia, LG Uplus, LG Innotek, Hanwha Aerospace, and Hanwha have been named to the 2024 Carbon Management Honors Club based on a comprehensive analysis of their CDP climate disclosures and management performance. In addition, Shinhan Financial Group, Hyundai Engineering & Construction, and Samsung Electro-Mechanics were inducted into the Hall of Fame in recognition of sustained excellence in climate action over multiple years.

The CDP Korea Committee (Chairman: Ji-in Jang) hosted the "2024 CDP Report Launch and Climate Change & Water Management Excellence Awards Ceremony" at the Fairmont Hotel in Yeouido, Seoul, where it unveiled the climate leadership achievements of Korean corporates.


CDP is a global initiative, led by international financial investors, that requests environmental management disclosures—covering climate change, water security, forests, and biodiversity—from major listed and unlisted companies worldwide. Based on the global assessment results, the CDP Korea Awards recognizes outstanding companies domestically, and this year marks the 17th consecutive ceremony. The CDP Korea Committee administers multiple award categories, including the Carbon Management Honors Club, Sector Honors, and Special Awards.

This year, 42 companies were recognized for excellence in climate change response, and 14 companies in water management.

ㅣCDP Assessment Continues to Evolve in Alignment with International Disclosure Standards

A key change in this year's CDP evaluation was the introduction of Essential Criteria. Under the new framework, companies can no longer achieve the highest rating through scores alone—they must fulfill mandatory requirements including substantive climate risk management and the implementation of emissions reduction targets. This reflects CDP's ongoing effort to align its assessment framework with global disclosure standards such as ISSB and TNFD.

More than 24,000 companies worldwide responded to CDP this year. In South Korea, the number of investor-requested respondents grew significantly: companies responding in the climate change category increased 74% year-on-year (211 to 368), while responses in the water security category surged 192% (78 to 228). These figures underscore rising market and investor expectations around sustainability, as well as growing corporate awareness of the importance of environmental disclosure.


In the climate change category, 25 Korean companies received an A rating, including KB Financial Group, Shinhan Financial Group, Hana Financial Group, Hyundai Motor, Hyundai Wia, and LG Uplus. In the water security category, 11 companies earned an A rating, including Hyundai Motor, Samsung Electronics, Amorepacific, SK Chemicals, and Pulmuone.

Sherry Madera, CEO of CDP, stated: "Companies that disclose through CDP demonstrate up to a 7–10% reduction in direct emissions within two years. The role CDP plays in driving transparent disclosure—especially amid complex and compounding climate crises—has never been more important."

Ji-in Jang, Chairman of the CDP Korea Committee, emphasized: "Given Korea's industrial structure—which is heavily weighted toward manufacturing and export dependency—it is imperative that sustainability be internalized rapidly. Considering that the Trump administration's anti-ESG policies could function as trade barriers from an 'America First' standpoint, Korean companies and financial institutions must disclose climate information with the highest degree of transparency."

 

ㅣConference: Key Challenges in Strengthening Climate Leadership and Advancing the Sustainability Transition

Following the awards ceremony, a conference titled "Climate Action, the Key to Sustainability and Economic Growth" featured presentations and panel discussions by domestic and international experts on climate change response and sustainability transition.

Keynote speaker John Byrne, Chairman of the American Council on Renewable Energy (ACORE), criticized the anti-science climate policies of the Trump 2.0 administration, noting: "Climate change is confirmed scientific fact. According to NOAA, disaster costs in the United States have doubled every decade since 1995 due to the rapid escalation of extreme weather events." He further highlighted that despite federal rollbacks, more than 38 U.S. states continue to drive the energy transition through voluntary policies such as net metering and Renewable Portfolio Standards (RPS), underscoring the critical importance of state and local policy leadership.

Jose Ordonez, CDP Head of Asia-Pacific, delivered a keynote on data-driven sustainability transition, stating: "Data by itself is nothing. What matters is how you use it—it has to translate into real action." He identified four key actions common among leading companies: developing climate transition plans aligned with the 1.5°C target, setting internal carbon prices, linking executive compensation to environmental performance, and driving emissions reductions across the value chain. He also cited examples of companies collectively saving USD 33 billion through supply chain emissions reductions, reinforcing that sustainability and operational efficiency can go hand in hand. CDP data further showed that investments in adaptation and resilience generate returns of USD 2 to 19 for every dollar invested, demonstrating the direct link between sustainability action and financial performance.

Additional presentations were delivered by Yun-jae Jeon, Deputy General Manager of KB Financial Group, on the company's sustainability strategy, and by Prof. Jeong Jun-hee of Daegu University, on the measurement and disclosure of physical climate risks.

The conference concluded with a panel discussion on "Challenges and Tasks for Sustainability Disclosure," moderated by Chun-seung Yang, Standing Vice Chairman of the CDP Korea Committee. Panelists included Dr. Song Hong-seon of the Korea Capital Market Institute, Bang Cheol-han of the Korea Meteorological Industry Technology Agency, Lee Woong-hee of the Korea Accounting Standards Board, Jeon Yun-jae of KB Financial Group, and Kim Tae-han, Senior Researcher at the CDP Korea Committee. Key topics included corporate response strategies for mandatory ESG disclosure, enhanced climate risk reporting, and the linkage between sustainability and financial performance. Participants reached a consensus that ensuring data transparency is essential not only for corporate risk management but also for securing competitiveness in global markets.

The CDP Korea Committee also released its 2024 CDP Korea Report, titled "CDP: Evolving as a Platform for Climate Leadership." The report is available on the official website of the Korea Sustainability Investing Forum (KoSIF). (End)

 

View the report

Inquiries: cdp@kosif.org