Global business leaders back faster electrification shift

June 21, 2026 11:02 PM EDT

FILE PHOTO: High-voltage power lines and electricity pylons are pictured close to the motorway A24 near Luettow-Valluhn, Germany January 31, 2025. REUTERS/Annegret Hilse/File Photo

By Simon Jessop

LONDON, June 22 (Reuters) - ‌MORE THAN 100 ​COMPANIES ​INCLUDING NESTLE, UBER URGE GOVERNMENTS TO MAKE ELECTRIFICATION CENTRAL TO ECONOMIC STRATEGY

Companies including Nestle and Ikea on Monday urged governments to make electrification central ‌to their economic strategies, to help reduce exposure to volatile fossil ⁠fuel costs and bolster energy security.

In an open statement seen by Reuters and backed by 112 businesses ‌from sectors including industrials, consumer goods ‌and healthcare, they said exposure to fossil fuel-driven price shocks undermined competitiveness.

The group, with combined annual revenues of about $1.5 trillion, also included Iberdrola, Volvo Cars and ​Uber, Mahindra Group, Nikon Corporation, and Levi Strauss.

"Continued reliance on volatile fuel markets exposes economies to disruptions that drive price spikes, destabilise supply chains and delay investment," ⁠said the statement, coordinated by the We Mean Business Coalition and the Global Renewables Alliance.

However, making the shift would ​depend heavily on clear and predictable government policy and reforms, including improving electricity market design, investing in grids and speeding up permitting, ​it added.

As many governments and companies reassess their ‌energy strategies in response to price spikes, most recently those linked to the Iran conflict, the statement said volatility can translate into "persistent ⁠uncertainty", higher operating costs and weaker competitiveness.

The intervention comes at the start of London Climate Action Week, with more than 75,000 people expected to attend 1,000-plus events, including leading policymakers, investors ⁠and company executives.

It also aligns with a push by Turkey, the hosts of the COP31 climate talks ​in November, for countries to agree a global target for electricity to supply 35% of the world's energy demand by 2035.

Many of the technologies required to electrify key sectors such as transport, ‌buildings and industry are already commercially available, and would help to lower overall energy demand, the statement said.

"To reach the required ‌scale, the transition to electrification notably needs to be accelerated through predictable and enabling policy ⁠frameworks," said Kim Hellström, Senior Sustainability ‌Climate Manager at retailer H&M.

A ​poll released last week said 90% of business leaders expected their operations to be electrified within a decade.

(Reporting by Simon Jessop; Editing by ‌Kirsten Donovan)



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