Sustainability

Sustainability

Climate Protection

Living large. CO2 in chemistry.

Chemistry is one of the most energy-intensive industries. We need to use a lot of energy to turn crude oil and natural gas into basic chemicals. These are then processed by other manufacturers and industries into products for consumers.

As a result, our CO2 footprint is quite large. That doesn't sound good at first. But we use energy sources very wisely. Many of our materials have been designed so that they can be processed at lower temperatures, for example, and are more durable and more efficient. People who use our products often end up using less energy. That's good for the CO2 balance and ensures that we are better prepared for the major climate challenges of the future. 

20 million compounds: Carbon is the most versatile chemical element and can form a huge number of stable, complex molecules. No other element is as diverse. It is the very basis of our lives: cells, proteins, DNA. Carbon is also the basis for plastics, solvents, paints, and much more. Chemistry without carbon is impossible. How does decarbonization work? We always need carbon in chemistry. But if it is not fossil-based but bio-based or recycled, it helps us become climate neutral.

How does it work? Let's look at three topics from our everyday lives: 

How BASF plans to reduce its CO2 emissions

Industry accounts for a significant proportion of CO2 emissions. Although we at BASF have already done a lot to reduce emissions, further ideas and methods are required. We see three major levers for this: 1, the use of green energy, 2. alternative raw materials in production and 3. the intelligent coupling of production processes.

We are embarking on the path to green transformation together with our markets and our customers. The BASF Verbund benefits us greatly in this regard with its high level of integration of value chains. 
Dr. Markus Kamieth, Chairman of the Board of Executive Directors (CEO) of BASF SE

Markus Kamieth, CEO

Green energy

Renewable raw materials in production

Intelligently linking production processes

Products with a proven lower CO₂ footprint

We have been publishing our CO2 footprint since 2008. According to this, we have already reduced our emissions by 4.9 million tons of CO2 per year since 2018. Many of our customers want to offer sustainable products to consumers – and above all, they want to be able to prove they do.

How our customers benefit

But how can we prove to our customers the reduced CO₂ emissions when selling our products? The answer is SCOTT:

With our Strategic CO2 Transparency Tool, or SCOTT for short, we calculate the CO2 footprint of our products (Product Carbon Footprint, or PCF for short) for over 40.000 products at over 230 locations. From cradle to gate. We also use this in the innovation process. This allows us to immediately calculate how changes in production processes affect the PCF – and thus develop more environmentally friendly products more quickly.

In a nutshell: Sustainability at BASF
Why does the world need BASF?