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An imaginary company that can actually sequester carbon as part of their operations (net negative CO2 emissions) is not correctly scored by the tool. There are many problems:
The concept of setting a reduction target for something we want to maximize is non-sensical
A negative budget causes the tool to give a default score, quite the opposite of a "good" score
Even when we allow the concept of a negative reduction ambition and a negative budget, the overshoot ratio of production/budget creates a positive rather than a negative temperature score
It would be great to have the first tool to score sequestration companies (and figure out what benchmark applies to them, if any--probably none). The right answer may be to report them not as a sector contributor, but show the absolute temperature score they might contribute (which will be very, very small, even when they process Gigatons).
An imaginary company that can actually sequester carbon as part of their operations (net negative CO2 emissions) is not correctly scored by the tool. There are many problems:
It would be great to have the first tool to score sequestration companies (and figure out what benchmark applies to them, if any--probably none). The right answer may be to report them not as a sector contributor, but show the absolute temperature score they might contribute (which will be very, very small, even when they process Gigatons).
@LeylaJavadova @joriscram
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