The additionality gap
The analytical tools available today are insufficient for helping decision-makers assess where their time, capital, and policy attention can have the biggest impact. For example, they register a dollar invested in a mature technology, already on a strong commercial path, and a dollar invested in a first-of-a-kind facility for a technology the world urgently needs as roughly equivalent. They do not distinguish a procurement decision that catalyzes a new market from one that participates in an existing one, nor a policy that unlocks a new trajectory from one that pours public dollars into a shift that is already underway. For both emerging and mature technologies, existing analytical tools ignore features of a given investment that will accelerate future deployment of that technology, including by opening up new sources of capital and supporting the build-out of necessary supply chains and infrastructure. And they do not capture important differences in decarbonization potential within a technology between regions. Attempts to resolve this are still consigned to retrospective or static analysis and are limited by the boundary of a single site, action, or company. And they take time from dedicated practitioners seeking to affect meaningful change with the capital they control.
The tools currently available to practitioners engaging on climate—scope-based accounting, TCFD, SBTi, and ESG ratings—each serve a specific and important purpose. They answer real questions about an organization’s emissions footprint and its exposure to climate-related risk, and they have meaningfully advanced both corporate transparency and the market’s ability to price climate factors. But they were not built to answer a different set of questions, which matter most for accelerating the transition:
- How important is a sector, technology, or geography to the future trajectory of global decarbonization?
- How transformational is a given action within a sector, technology, or geography, beyond direct emissions reductions?
- How much additional decarbonization does that action deliver, beyond what is already attracting capital based on the financial returns alone?
As scope-based accounting is increasingly stretched to serve an impact-assessment role it was not designed to fill, the metrics it produces systematically under-reward the actions most consequential for deep decarbonization: heavy industry, first-of-a-kind facilities, early-stage technology investment, market-creating procurement, supporting infrastructure investment, innovative financing structures, or catalytic public spending. Investments in an already rapidly scaling technology look indistinguishable from investments that unlock a nascent one.
The Transition Acceleration Framework (TAF)
Rhodium Group has partnered with CalSTRS and Generate Capital to develop the Transition Acceleration Framework (TAF) to help allocate capital to where it is needed most.
TAF provides quantitative answers to specific questions about where a marginal dollar, a marginal policy, or a marginal procurement decision will deliver the most decarbonization beyond the trajectory the world is already on. It is a forward-looking decision-support framework explicitly highlighting capital efficiency and additionality, built to close the additionality gap.