Pharma’s Carbon Problem: Ambitious Targets, a Stubborn Reality

The life sciences industry emits more than the aviation sector. With net zero deadlines approaching and regulators tightening disclosure rules, the gap between promise and progress has never been more scrutinised.

The pharmaceutical industry has long positioned itself as a force for human good. Its products extend life, relieve suffering and prevent disease. Yet the sector carries an environmental burden that sits uncomfortably alongside that reputation. The healthcare industry contributes an estimated 4.4% of total global emissions annually, more than the automotive industry. That figure, cited repeatedly in industry and academic literature, has become something of a rallying call for those pushing life sciences companies to clean up their act. The trouble is that progress, by most measures, is falling well short of where it needs to be.

A Footprint That Keeps Growing

The scale of the problem is not disputed. Global pharmaceutical greenhouse gas emissions have increased by 77% since 1995, representing a near-doubling of the industry’s footprint over three decades, during a period of significant sustainability awareness and commitment. Rising demand for medicines, expanding global supply chains and energy-intensive manufacturing have all driven that trajectory upward, even as public commitments to decarbonisation have multiplied.

The pharma industry has been estimated to generate around 52 megatons of CO2 equivalent annually, with analysis suggesting it is far more emissions-intensive than the automotive sector. To put that in context, if healthcare were a country, its carbon footprint would place it among the world’s five largest emitters.

Most of the emissions sit in what the industry calls Scope 3: the indirect outputs generated across supply chains, by suppliers, logistics providers and contract manufacturers. Scope 3 emissions account for between 80% and 90% of the pharmaceutical sector’s total climate impact. This is the category hardest to control, hardest to measure and, critically, the one in which the least progress has been made.

The Supply Chain Problem

For pharmaceutical companies, emissions from active pharmaceutical ingredient (API) synthesis, raw material sourcing and outsourced manufacturing are often the largest source of carbon emissions. Scope 3 emissions can be difficult to manage because they occur outside the direct control of pharmaceutical companies.

This dependency on complex, globally dispersed supply chains creates a structural challenge. A company can decarbonise its own buildings, switch to renewable electricity and electrify its vehicle fleet, and still account for only a fraction of its true footprint. The bulk sits with the suppliers, and gaining reliable emissions data from hundreds of upstream partners, many operating across different regulatory regimes and reporting standards, remains a serious operational difficulty.

Achieving transparency and standardised reporting of Scope 3 emissions is a particular challenge for the bio/pharmaceutical industry, which has complex manufacturing and supply chains. Customers increasingly expect high-quality, comparable, auditable emission data. Emission data aligned with global frameworks such as the Greenhouse Gas Protocol and the Science-Based Targets initiative for suppliers has become a kind of licence to operate.

That pressure is being formalised through regulation. Scope 3 reporting under the Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive is already mandatory for many European companies, with further expansion expected through 2025 and 2026. Companies that have relied on rough spend-based estimates to approximate their supply chain footprint will need to shift to verifiable, activity-based data. That is a significant operational lift for most.

Ambition Versus Trajectory

The gap between stated ambition and actual trajectory is perhaps the most troubling aspect of the current picture. Many pharmaceutical companies have set ambitious, science-based decarbonisation goals, but only 20% of life sciences companies are on track to achieve net zero by 2050.

Individual companies tell a mixed story. AstraZeneca has reported it is on track to achieve a 98% reduction in operational emissions by 2026, and Sanofi has said it is on track to be carbon neutral by 2030. These are meaningful steps. But operational emissions, Scope 1 and 2 combined, represent a fraction of total impact.

GSK illustrates the challenge clearly. The London-based company has made some of the most ambitious climate commitments in the sector, yet by 2023, the last year for which it published full data, GSK’s emissions had fallen by only 12%, half the pace it needs to reach its 2030 target. Meanwhile, the Science-Based Targets initiative continues to validate company pledges, but validation of a target is not the same as delivery against it.

According to a 2024 Global Biopharma Sustainability Review, 69% of pharmaceutical leaders identify limited value chain collaboration as the primary barrier to sustainability progress. The problem, in other words, is not primarily a lack of technology or investment. It is a structural failure of coordination across interconnected commercial relationships.

Where Momentum Is Building

The picture is not entirely discouraging. Several practical levers are gaining traction.

The shift to lower-emission inhalers represents one of the more concrete examples of product-level change. Metered-dose inhalers contain hydrofluorocarbons, potent greenhouse gases. For GSK, a leader in respiratory medicine, 45% of all its emissions comes from metered-dose inhalers, and the company is developing a lower-emission propellant that could reduce inhaler greenhouse gas emissions by 90%. If that transition happens at scale across the sector, the impact would be significant.

Green chemistry is also gaining ground in manufacturing. The ACS Green Chemistry Institute Pharmaceutical Roundtable has drawn together major companies to share methods for reducing waste and cutting energy use in active pharmaceutical ingredient synthesis. The industry has adopted green chemistry principles in the production of life-saving medications, ensuring that manufacturing processes are both commercially viable and have minimal environmental impact.

Supply chain collaboration programmes, such as the Energize initiative involving GSK, Novartis and Schneider Electric, are attempting to help pharmaceutical suppliers transition to renewable energy by providing technical education and removing market barriers. Tools that integrate procurement, logistics and supplier information are helping teams identify emissions hotspots and direct investment to areas of highest impact, with the goal of moving sustainability data out of annual cycles and into real-time decision-making.

Why This Matters Beyond the Environment

There is a certain irony in an industry dedicated to human health being a significant driver of the conditions that worsen it. Climate change drives heat-related illness, worsens air quality, expands the geographic range of infectious diseases and places acute strain on health systems. In addition to carbon emissions, pharmaceutical and healthcare organisations are increasingly exposed to the physical impacts of climate change, including extreme temperatures, flood risks and water scarcity, threats that can disrupt both manufacturing sites and patient care.

Regulatory and commercial pressure is also intensifying. Institutional investors are tightening ESG requirements. Procurement decisions by large public health systems, including the NHS, increasingly factor in supplier sustainability credentials. Companies that fail to make credible progress on emissions face reputational, regulatory and eventually financial consequences that are only likely to grow.

The 2030 Reckoning

The period between now and 2030 is critical. Many of the sector’s headline commitments, including pledges to halve operational emissions and achieve carbon neutrality for direct operations, have 2030 as a target date. With four years remaining, the current rate of progress leaves a substantial deficit in most organisations.

A clear theme has emerged from industry gatherings: collaboration is the catalyst. When manufacturers, CDMOs, suppliers, regulators and health systems work in step, change happens faster and at far greater scale. The rapid transition to lower-GWP inhalers has demonstrated what coordinated effort across a supply chain can deliver, not over decades, but within years.

The life sciences industry has an unparalleled capacity to solve complex problems when the incentives and the structures align. The science of decarbonisation is not the bottleneck. The will, the coordination and the accountability mechanisms are. Whether the sector can close the gap between its commitments and its carbon trajectory before the 2030 reckoning arrives is one of the defining questions now facing its leadership.

Sources include Drug Discovery Trends, Frontiers in Immunology, DCAT Value Chain Insights, Pharma Source Global, Life Science Integrates, PSCI and the Pharmaceutical Supply Chain Initiative.

Author

Leave A Comment

Shabna Raja

Advisory Partner,
Life Sciences Week
+44 (0) 121 227 4156
info@lifesciencesweek.co.uk

Bio

Shabna Raja is a senior leader in enterprise transformation within Life Sciences, with over 20 years’ experience spanning pharma, consumer health and large-scale digital programmes.

She specialises in bridging strategy and execution – helping organisations translate AI, data and digital innovation into tangible business outcomes. Her work focuses on complex transformation
initiatives across commercial, data and operating model domains within regulated environments.

Shabna spent seven years at GSK, where she played a key role in transformation programmes, including as part of the Consumer Health joint venture with Pfizer — one of the most significant integrations in the sector. This experience provided her with deep expertise in  organisational change, integration and operating model evolution at global scale.

More recently, she has spent over three years working closely with Haleon through a strategic
services partnership, leading enterprise client engagement and managing a multi-million-pound account while supporting transformation across a newly independent global organisation.

Her experience spans the end-to-end life sciences value chain, including R&D, commercial, supply chain and patient engagement, giving her a holistic perspective on how technology and transformation can unlock value across the industry.

Amjad Khan

Executive Partner,
Life Sciences Week
+44 (0) 121 227 4156
info@lifesciencesweek.co.uk

Bio

Amjad Khan is a UK-based entrepreneur, AI strategist, and senior technology leader with over 15 years of experience at Pfizer, where he held multiple leadership roles across digital strategy and transformation. As Global Digital Client Partner, he was responsible for digital strategy and execution across Global Business Units covering Vaccines, Hospital, and Medical Affairs. Most notably, he led the commercial launch for the Covid franchise transforming and accelerating the model for how new medicines are brought to market.

Following his tenure at Pfizer, Amjad channelled his expertise into building at the frontier of AI. His work spans AI leadership, stakeholder engagement, and agile delivery helping organisations adopt
and scale emerging  technologies to drive meaningful outcomes.

Dr. Richard Fallon | Business Consultant | WM Life Sciences

Dr. Richard Fallon

Co Founder, Life Sciences Week 
+44 (0) 121 227 4156
info@lifesciencesweek.co.uk

Bio

Dr Richard Fallon is an entrepreneur and ecosystem builder who connects industry leaders, investors and public-sector stakeholders to accelerate collaboration and commercial growth.

As the Founder of the Technology Supply Chain and co-founder of the Innovation Awards, he has spent more than two decades convening influential networks that help emerging businesses find capital, strategic partners and new routes to market.

Richard’s work spans leadership and consultancy across major organisations, alongside building membership and partnership platforms that bring universities, industry and investors into the same room – and turn conversations into practical outcomes.

With his focus on life sciences, Richard supports organisations and people driving breakthroughs in healthcare, biotechnology, medical technology and advanced research. He is passionate about creating the conditions for transformative ideas to move from concept to real-world impact – by connecting innovators with the funding, expertise and opportunities they need to scale.

Through Life Sciences Week, Richard is championing the UK’s world-class life sciences community and helping position it at the forefront of innovation, investment and patient outcomes.

Paul Cadman | Executive Chairman | WM Life Sciences

Prof Paul Cadman

CEO of One Thousand Trades Group & Co-founder of Life Sciences Week,
Life Sciences Week
+44 (0) 121 227 4156
info@lifesciencesweek.co.uk

Bio

Prof. Paul Cadman is a nationally and internationally recognised, award-winning inclusive leader and “knowledge broker”, known for bringing people, ideas and organisations together to turn ambition into deliverable outcomes.

His experience spans Research, Technology, Manufacturing, Consultancy and Membership Organisations – giving him a rare ability to translate between sectors, priorities and professional cultures in a way that builds trust and unlocks progress.

Across his career, Paul has helped take concepts from inception through to scale, including initiatives that have generated £100m+ in turnover. He combines strategic thinking with an extensive network, supporting organisations to drive organic growth, forge partnerships and deliver meaningful business transformation. He is particularly valued for his ability to connect the right stakeholders at the right time, and create the conditions for collaboration to become action.

Through Life Sciences Week, Paul helps convene the communities shaping innovation – bringing together research, industry and investment to strengthen relationships, spotlight opportunity, and accelerate real-world impact.

Amy Deakin | Chief of Staff | WM Life Sciences

Amy Deakin

Event Managing Director,
Life Sciences Week
+44 (0) 121 227 4156
info@lifesciencesweek.co.uk

Bio

Amy Deakin is a Birmingham-based leader specialising in building partnerships and fostering innovation in the life sciences sector. With a degree in Sport and Exercise Science, Amy brings a grounded understanding of human health and performance to her work and a strong interest in the developments shaping healthcare today.

Amy is Managing Director of Life Sciences Week, part of the One Thousand Trades Group, and also serves as Director of One Thousand Trades Events. In these roles, she convenes researchers, clinicians and industry leaders to strengthen collaboration, unlock new partnerships and help accelerate real-world innovation across the life sciences ecosystem.

Her career spans both commercial and third-sector environments. She began in automotive design, delivering projects for Volkswagen, McLaren, Bentley and Jaguar Land Rover, before moving into the third sector with Acorns Children’s Hospice. She later joined Western Union, working as a Partnerships Manager for international payments

An avid netballer, Amy is a committed advocate for health and wellbeing – bringing energy, clarity and connection to everything she builds, and actively involved as a participant in health related research studies.

    Award Category Voting

    Here's a list of all categories you can vote for. Simply click each category to cast your vote. Voting in each category is not mandatory, so please feel free to click just the category that interests you.

    Day you've not voted in, will be denoted with an ❌

    If you're having issues submitting the form, please ensure all the category boxes are closed and try again.

    Recognising pioneering research, technology, or therapies that are transforming healthcare and biotechnology.

    No VoteProf. Alex RichterBlack Space TechnologyAston Vision Sciences

    Celebrating an emerging leader making significant contributions to the field through research, innovation, or leadership.

    Recognising pioneering research, technology, or therapies that are transforming healthcare and biotechnology.

    No VoteShashank Chaganty – VichagLeah Vanono - PBS InnovationsKloe Avon- KZ Organics

    Honouring successful cross-sector partnerships driving advancements in life sciences, from academia to industry.

    No VoteProf Liam Grover- WMHTIAJudith Stewart- Health Innovation West MidlandsAdam McGuinness - Plug and Play

    Awarding an individual or organisation for exceptional long-term impact on the industry.

    No VoteDavid KidneyMedilink MidlandsUniversity of Birmingham

    Highlighting innovations in treatments, diagnostics, or healthcare delivery that have significantly improved patient outcomes.

    No VoteJean-Louis Duprey - Linear DiagnosticsSian Dunning - MD-TECKarim Vissangy - HoloMedix

    Your Details