Blog

Science Based Targets (SBTi) explained: how to set and submit credible climate targets

Reduce and Report

Climate 101

Blog

Science Based Targets (SBTi) explained: how to set and submit credible climate targets

Reduce and Report

Climate 101

SBTI target setting
SBTI target setting
David Rothera

Head of Decarbonisation Partnerships

Edited: 19 Feb 2026

15 min read

SBTI target setting

The Science Based Targets initiative (SBTi) is the leading global framework for setting corporate climate targets that are aligned with climate science and the goals of the Paris Agreement

If your organisation is considering setting science-based targets, or is being asked about them by investors, customers, or regulators, this guide explains what SBTi is, how science-based targets work, and the practical steps involved in setting and submitting them.

This article is for any business that wants to set climate targets that stand up to scrutiny.

What is the Science Based Targets initiative (SBTi)?

Science-Based Targets initiative is a global partnership that helps businesses set greenhouse gas reduction targets in line with the goals of the Paris Agreement.

SBTi is backed by organisations including:

  • CDP

  • UN Global Compact

  • World Resources Institute (WRI)

  • WWF

Its role is not to measure emissions for companies, but to validate whether a company’s climate targets are consistent with limiting global warming to 1.5°C.

Science-Based Targets initiative is a global partnership that helps businesses set greenhouse gas reduction targets in line with the goals of the Paris Agreement.

SBTi is backed by organisations including:

  • CDP

  • UN Global Compact

  • World Resources Institute (WRI)

  • WWF

Its role is not to measure emissions for companies, but to validate whether a company’s climate targets are consistent with limiting global warming to 1.5°C.

What are science-based targets?

Science-based targets are emissions reduction targets that:

  • Are grounded in climate science

  • Align with a 1.5°C pathway

  • Cover relevant emissions scopes

Unlike generic sustainability goals, science-based targets follow defined methodologies and thresholds. This makes them comparable, credible, and increasingly expected.

In practice, science-based targets answer a simple question:

Is this company reducing emissions fast enough to do its fair share?

Science-based targets are emissions reduction targets that:

  • Are grounded in climate science

  • Align with a 1.5°C pathway

  • Cover relevant emissions scopes

Unlike generic sustainability goals, science-based targets follow defined methodologies and thresholds. This makes them comparable, credible, and increasingly expected.

In practice, science-based targets answer a simple question:

Is this company reducing emissions fast enough to do its fair share?

How science-based targets fit within a credible climate strategy

Science-based targets sit within the Reduce pillar of Ecologi’s 3Rs framework: Reduce, Restore, Report.

At its core, the 3Rs Framework serves as both an operational roadmap and a communications tool. It is designed to ensure that everyone within a business can understand the essential elements of climate action.

The three pillars represent interdependent stages of a complete strategy:

Reduce

  • Measure your Scope 1, 2 and 3 emissions.

  • Set short-term and long-term science-aligned emissions reduction targets.

  • Act to achieve the reduction targets.

Restore

  • Develop an Oxford Principles-aligned strategy for Beyond Value Chain Mitigation.

  • Compensate for unavoidable emissions through funding verified carbon avoidance and removal credits.

  • Contribute to global climate goals by funding broader restoration projects, including nature-based restoration.

Report

  • State your GHG inventory and reduction plans transparently.

  • Communicate your climate commitment to stakeholders.

  • Advocate for wider sector action.

The Science Based Targets initiative validates whether your emissions reduction targets align with climate science. It does not measure your emissions for you, and it does not define how you approach restoration, climate finance, or stakeholder reporting.

For that reason, SBTi validation should be treated as a critical milestone within the Reduce pillar, not the entire climate strategy.

Ecologi's 3Rs framework

Science-based targets sit within the Reduce pillar of Ecologi’s 3Rs framework: Reduce, Restore, Report.

At its core, the 3Rs Framework serves as both an operational roadmap and a communications tool. It is designed to ensure that everyone within a business can understand the essential elements of climate action.

The three pillars represent interdependent stages of a complete strategy:

Reduce

  • Measure your Scope 1, 2 and 3 emissions.

  • Set short-term and long-term science-aligned emissions reduction targets.

  • Act to achieve the reduction targets.

Restore

  • Develop an Oxford Principles-aligned strategy for Beyond Value Chain Mitigation.

  • Compensate for unavoidable emissions through funding verified carbon avoidance and removal credits.

  • Contribute to global climate goals by funding broader restoration projects, including nature-based restoration.

Report

  • State your GHG inventory and reduction plans transparently.

  • Communicate your climate commitment to stakeholders.

  • Advocate for wider sector action.

The Science Based Targets initiative validates whether your emissions reduction targets align with climate science. It does not measure your emissions for you, and it does not define how you approach restoration, climate finance, or stakeholder reporting.

For that reason, SBTi validation should be treated as a critical milestone within the Reduce pillar, not the entire climate strategy.

Ecologi's 3Rs framework

Who should set SBTi targets?

Setting SBTi targets is voluntary, but expectations are shifting.

SBTi targets are increasingly expected for:

  • Large and mid-sized businesses

  • Companies with complex supply chains

  • Organisations making net-zero or climate leadership claims

  • Businesses responding to investor or procurement pressure

Even where not mandated by law, SBTi alignment is often treated as a signal of credibility.

Your net-zero pathway

Setting SBTi targets is voluntary, but expectations are shifting.

SBTi targets are increasingly expected for:

  • Large and mid-sized businesses

  • Companies with complex supply chains

  • Organisations making net-zero or climate leadership claims

  • Businesses responding to investor or procurement pressure

Even where not mandated by law, SBTi alignment is often treated as a signal of credibility.

Your net-zero pathway

How to set a science-based target (step by step)

This is the core process most organisations follow.

1. Measure your carbon emissions baseline

You must calculate a robust baseline covering:

  • Scope 1 emissions

  • Scope 2 emissions

  • Scope 3 emissions (where required)

Accuracy at this stage is critical; weak baselines undermine the entire submission.

Read more about how to measure and manage your carbon footprint in our article, here.

2. Choose your target boundary and ambition

Setting a science-based target requires clear decisions about which emissions are included and how ambitious the target needs to be.

SBTi requires companies to:

  • Set near-term targets aligned with a 1.5°C pathway

  • Define coverage thresholds across emissions scopes

  • Meet minimum ambition levels based on sector and emissions profile

Under the Reduce pillar of Ecologi’s 3Rs framework, science-based targets should be designed to drive meaningful emissions reductions across the value chain, not just meet minimum criteria.

In practice, this means:

  • Scope 1 and Scope 2 emissions must always be included and typically require absolute reductions

  • Scope 3 emissions must be included where they represent a significant share of total emissions, which is the case for most businesses

  • Target boundaries should reflect the full emissions profile, rather than focusing only on areas that are easiest to measure or reduce

SBTi sets minimum coverage thresholds to prevent selective targets that overstate progress while excluding material sources of emissions.

In practice, setting credible targets requires more than selecting percentages from an SBTi tool.

Organisations should:

  • Select a representative baseline year with robust data coverage

  • Develop a business-as-usual emissions trajectory reflecting expected growth

  • Model the gap between projected emissions and a 1.5°C-aligned reduction pathway

  • Identify priority reduction levers across operations and the value chain

  • Assess operational and financial feasibility of each intervention

This modelling step is critical. Without it, targets risk being technically compliant but operationally unrealistic.

3. Use SBTi target-setting tools

SBTi provides approved tools and methods to calculate:

  • Required reduction pathways

  • Target years

  • Scope-specific reductions

These tools ensure consistency across companies and sectors.

4. Submit targets to SBTi for validation

Targets are submitted to SBTi for independent review against its published criteria.

If approved, they are published on the SBTi website.

If rejected, companies must revise and resubmit.

Validation timelines vary depending on the complexity of the submission, scope coverage and data quality. In practice, many organisations experience review periods ranging from several weeks to a few months.

Delays are commonly caused by:

  • Incomplete Scope 3 coverage or justification

  • Inconsistencies between targets and emissions baselines

  • Ambition levels that do not meet SBTi thresholds

Validation confirms that targets meet SBTi criteria, but responsibility for delivery and ongoing progress remains with the company.

5. Track progress and communicate responsibly

Once validated, companies are expected to:

Science-based targets are not set and forget. Ongoing tracking and disclosure form the Report pillar of a credible climate strategy and help protect against greenwashing risk.

SBTI target setting

This is the core process most organisations follow.

1. Measure your carbon emissions baseline

You must calculate a robust baseline covering:

  • Scope 1 emissions

  • Scope 2 emissions

  • Scope 3 emissions (where required)

Accuracy at this stage is critical; weak baselines undermine the entire submission.

Read more about how to measure and manage your carbon footprint in our article, here.

2. Choose your target boundary and ambition

Setting a science-based target requires clear decisions about which emissions are included and how ambitious the target needs to be.

SBTi requires companies to:

  • Set near-term targets aligned with a 1.5°C pathway

  • Define coverage thresholds across emissions scopes

  • Meet minimum ambition levels based on sector and emissions profile

Under the Reduce pillar of Ecologi’s 3Rs framework, science-based targets should be designed to drive meaningful emissions reductions across the value chain, not just meet minimum criteria.

In practice, this means:

  • Scope 1 and Scope 2 emissions must always be included and typically require absolute reductions

  • Scope 3 emissions must be included where they represent a significant share of total emissions, which is the case for most businesses

  • Target boundaries should reflect the full emissions profile, rather than focusing only on areas that are easiest to measure or reduce

SBTi sets minimum coverage thresholds to prevent selective targets that overstate progress while excluding material sources of emissions.

In practice, setting credible targets requires more than selecting percentages from an SBTi tool.

Organisations should:

  • Select a representative baseline year with robust data coverage

  • Develop a business-as-usual emissions trajectory reflecting expected growth

  • Model the gap between projected emissions and a 1.5°C-aligned reduction pathway

  • Identify priority reduction levers across operations and the value chain

  • Assess operational and financial feasibility of each intervention

This modelling step is critical. Without it, targets risk being technically compliant but operationally unrealistic.

3. Use SBTi target-setting tools

SBTi provides approved tools and methods to calculate:

  • Required reduction pathways

  • Target years

  • Scope-specific reductions

These tools ensure consistency across companies and sectors.

4. Submit targets to SBTi for validation

Targets are submitted to SBTi for independent review against its published criteria.

If approved, they are published on the SBTi website.

If rejected, companies must revise and resubmit.

Validation timelines vary depending on the complexity of the submission, scope coverage and data quality. In practice, many organisations experience review periods ranging from several weeks to a few months.

Delays are commonly caused by:

  • Incomplete Scope 3 coverage or justification

  • Inconsistencies between targets and emissions baselines

  • Ambition levels that do not meet SBTi thresholds

Validation confirms that targets meet SBTi criteria, but responsibility for delivery and ongoing progress remains with the company.

5. Track progress and communicate responsibly

Once validated, companies are expected to:

Science-based targets are not set and forget. Ongoing tracking and disclosure form the Report pillar of a credible climate strategy and help protect against greenwashing risk.

SBTI target setting

What is SBTi Net-Zero?

SBTi Net-Zero is a specific framework for long-term net-zero commitments.

It requires companies to:

  • Set near-term science-based targets

  • Commit to deep emissions reductions across the value chain

  • Use carbon removals only for residual emissions

SBTi Net-Zero is more demanding than traditional net-zero claims and is designed to prevent misleading offset-heavy strategies.

An image of a forest

SBTi Net-Zero is a specific framework for long-term net-zero commitments.

It requires companies to:

  • Set near-term science-based targets

  • Commit to deep emissions reductions across the value chain

  • Use carbon removals only for residual emissions

SBTi Net-Zero is more demanding than traditional net-zero claims and is designed to prevent misleading offset-heavy strategies.

An image of a forest

How SBTi fits within a credible climate strategy

The Science-Based Targets initiative focuses on reducing emissions within a company’s own operations and value chain. This is the foundation of credible climate action, but it is not the whole strategy.

At Ecologi, we align the SBTi within our 3Rs framework to ensure climate targets translate into real-world impact:

Reduce - Measure emissions accurately and cut them in line with science-based targets across Scopes 1, 2 and 3.

Restore - Take responsibility for ongoing emissions by supporting high-quality climate and nature projects beyond the value chain, without using offsets as a substitute for reductions.

Report - Track progress transparently, communicate responsibly, and ensure climate claims stand up to scrutiny from investors, customers and regulators.

This approach ensures SBTi targets are not treated as a one-off validation exercise, but as part of a long-term, credible climate strategy grounded in science, transparency and integrity.

The Science-Based Targets initiative focuses on reducing emissions within a company’s own operations and value chain. This is the foundation of credible climate action, but it is not the whole strategy.

At Ecologi, we align the SBTi within our 3Rs framework to ensure climate targets translate into real-world impact:

Reduce - Measure emissions accurately and cut them in line with science-based targets across Scopes 1, 2 and 3.

Restore - Take responsibility for ongoing emissions by supporting high-quality climate and nature projects beyond the value chain, without using offsets as a substitute for reductions.

Report - Track progress transparently, communicate responsibly, and ensure climate claims stand up to scrutiny from investors, customers and regulators.

This approach ensures SBTi targets are not treated as a one-off validation exercise, but as part of a long-term, credible climate strategy grounded in science, transparency and integrity.

Is SBTi certification mandatory?

No. SBTi is not a legal requirement.

However:

  • Many organisations treat SBTi validation as a de facto standard

  • Stakeholders increasingly question targets that are not science-based

  • Regulators are scrutinising unsupported climate claims more closely

In this context, SBTi often functions as a defensive credibility measure as much as a leadership signal.

No. SBTi is not a legal requirement.

However:

  • Many organisations treat SBTi validation as a de facto standard

  • Stakeholders increasingly question targets that are not science-based

  • Regulators are scrutinising unsupported climate claims more closely

In this context, SBTi often functions as a defensive credibility measure as much as a leadership signal.

Common mistakes when setting SBTi targets

Many organisations struggle with similar challenges, including:

  • Incomplete or inaccurate emissions baselines

  • Underestimating Scope 3 complexity

  • Confusing intensity targets with absolute reductions

  • Treating offsets as a substitute for reductions

  • Making claims before targets are validated

Avoiding these mistakes early saves time, cost, and reputational risk.

Many organisations struggle with similar challenges, including:

  • Incomplete or inaccurate emissions baselines

  • Underestimating Scope 3 complexity

  • Confusing intensity targets with absolute reductions

  • Treating offsets as a substitute for reductions

  • Making claims before targets are validated

Avoiding these mistakes early saves time, cost, and reputational risk.

How Ecologi supports businesses on their SBTi journey

Preparing for SBTi requires more than submitting targets. It depends on having the right data, assumptions and internal processes in place to support long-term delivery.

Ecologi supports businesses across the full journey by helping them build the foundations required for credible science-based targets.

Under the Reduce pillar, we support organisations to:

  • Establish accurate emissions baselines across Scopes 1, 2 and relevant Scope 3 categories

  • Model emissions reduction pathways aligned with SBTi criteria, including near-term ambition and boundary decisions

  • Identify practical reduction levers that support delivery against targets over time

Under the Report pillar, we help businesses:

  • Track progress against targets year on year

  • State their GHG inventory and reduction plans transparently

  • Align disclosures with frameworks such as SECR, CSRD, CDP and SBTi

  • Communicate climate commitments clearly while avoiding greenwashing risk

Under the Restore pillar, we support businesses to:

  • Develop an Oxford Principles-aligned strategy for Beyond Value Chain Mitigation

  • Set a science-aligned internal carbon price

  • Compensate for unavoidable emissions through verified carbon avoidance and removal credits

  • Contribute to global climate goals by funding nature-based restoration and systemic climate solutions

This ensures SBTi alignment is embedded within a complete, credible climate leadership strategy.

We do not certify or validate SBTi targets, but we help businesses approach SBTi with confidence by ensuring the underlying data, modelling and strategy are robust.

Trusted by over 16,000 businesses, including more than 270 certified B Corps, Ecologi supports organisations at every stage of their climate journey.

Speak to a climate expert to understand whether SBTi is right for your organisation and how to approach it with confidence.

Preparing for SBTi requires more than submitting targets. It depends on having the right data, assumptions and internal processes in place to support long-term delivery.

Ecologi supports businesses across the full journey by helping them build the foundations required for credible science-based targets.

Under the Reduce pillar, we support organisations to:

  • Establish accurate emissions baselines across Scopes 1, 2 and relevant Scope 3 categories

  • Model emissions reduction pathways aligned with SBTi criteria, including near-term ambition and boundary decisions

  • Identify practical reduction levers that support delivery against targets over time

Under the Report pillar, we help businesses:

  • Track progress against targets year on year

  • State their GHG inventory and reduction plans transparently

  • Align disclosures with frameworks such as SECR, CSRD, CDP and SBTi

  • Communicate climate commitments clearly while avoiding greenwashing risk

Under the Restore pillar, we support businesses to:

  • Develop an Oxford Principles-aligned strategy for Beyond Value Chain Mitigation

  • Set a science-aligned internal carbon price

  • Compensate for unavoidable emissions through verified carbon avoidance and removal credits

  • Contribute to global climate goals by funding nature-based restoration and systemic climate solutions

This ensures SBTi alignment is embedded within a complete, credible climate leadership strategy.

We do not certify or validate SBTi targets, but we help businesses approach SBTi with confidence by ensuring the underlying data, modelling and strategy are robust.

Trusted by over 16,000 businesses, including more than 270 certified B Corps, Ecologi supports organisations at every stage of their climate journey.

Speak to a climate expert to understand whether SBTi is right for your organisation and how to approach it with confidence.

Frequently asked questions

What does SBTi stand for?
Is SBTi the same as net zero?
Do SMEs need SBTi targets?
Can you set SBTi targets without Scope 3?
Does SBTi allow carbon offsets?

Frequently asked questions

What does SBTi stand for?
Is SBTi the same as net zero?
Do SMEs need SBTi targets?
Can you set SBTi targets without Scope 3?
Does SBTi allow carbon offsets?

Is your business ready
to take climate action?

If this article has inspired your business to start its climate journey, talk to our team today.

Is your business ready
to take climate action?

If this article has inspired your business to start its climate journey, talk to our team today.

Is your business ready
to take climate action?

If this article has inspired your business to start its climate journey, talk to our team today.