SBTi’s new Corporate Net-Zero Standard Version 2.0 is a more practical, implementation-focused update to the earlier standard (Version 1.3, referred to here as the earlier standard). It keeps the same core direction of travel towards net zero by 2050 or sooner, but adds stronger requirements on governance, transition planning, progress checks and how companies can credibly use market instruments.
For most companies, the main message is simple: the earlier standard was mainly about setting targets, while Version 2.0 is much more about proving how those targets will be delivered and tracked over time.
SBTi Standard Main changes
What companies should do
- Confirm whether the business is likely to fall into Category A or Category B under Version 2.0, because this affects scope 3, assurance and disclosure expectations.
- Upgrade the greenhouse gas inventory so it is complete, recent and assurance-ready, especially if the company is large.
- Build or refresh a transition plan that links targets to procurement, capital expenditure, operations and supplier engagement, because this is now central rather than optional.
- Reassess scope 3 using a relevance lens, not only the old percentage coverage logic, particularly for major upstream and downstream emissions sources.
- Review electricity procurement and market instruments against the new integrity rules, especially if the company relies heavily on certificates or contractual instruments.
- Set up annual progress reporting and governance oversight so the company is ready for end-of-cycle assessment under the new model.
By when
Version 2.0 was released in June 2026 and is scheduled to take effect for target validations from 1 February 2027. SBTi says Version 1 will remain open for setting targets until the end of 2027, which gives companies a transition window rather than an immediate hard stop.
In practice, companies already working towards 2030 targets can usually continue with the earlier standard for the current cycle, but should prepare to use Version 2.0 for the next target cycle, especially for 2030-2035 planning. The best near-term move is to start aligning governance, transition plans, inventory quality and scope 3 analysis now, even if the next formal submission still uses the earlier standard.


