Nippon Steel and JFE Lag Globally in Decarbonization; International NGO Releases Corporate Ranking

Key facts

  • Nippon Steel and JFE Lag Globally in Decarbonization; International NGO Releases Corporate Ranking
  • According to SteelWatch's first scorecard, Nippon Steel and JFE Steel ranked 17th and 12th respectively out of 18 global steelmakers, criticized for their continued reliance on coal and lack of readiness for decarbonization.
  • Source: PR Times
  • Date: March 31, 2026

Direct answer

According to SteelWatch's first scorecard, Nippon Steel and JFE Steel ranked 17th and 12th respectively out of 18 global steelmakers, criticized for their continued reliance on coal and lack of readiness for decarbonization.

Citation
Nippon Steel and JFE Lag Globally in Decarbonization; International NGO Releases Corporate Ranking (March 31, 2026), PR Times
Source
PR Times
Date
March 31, 2026
According to SteelWatch's first scorecard, Nippon Steel and JFE Steel ranked 17th and 12th respectively out of 18 global steelmakers, criticized for their continued reliance on coal and lack of readiness for decarbonization.
調査NQ 78/100出典:PR Times

📋 Article Processing Timeline

  • 📰 Published: March 31, 2026 at 17:00
  • 🔍 Collected: March 31, 2026 at 09:01
  • 🤖 AI Analyzed: April 24, 2026 at 06:19 (573h 17m after Collected)
(Tokyo, March 31, 2026) According to the first "Steel Company Scorecard" [1] survey by international climate NGO SteelWatch published today, none of the 18 major steelmakers assessed are adequately prepared for the transition to decarbonization, revealing that Japanese companies in particular are lagging behind. This research is based on companies' publicly available data up to fiscal year 2024.

Japan's largest steelmaker, Nippon Steel, ranked 17th out of 18 companies (16.8 points out of 100), and JFE Steel ranked 12th (23.4 points), both remaining at the bottom. None of the assessed steelmakers achieved a score of 50, but Nippon Steel and JFE Steel remained at lower scores than their global peers, primarily due to their dependence on coal.

The main reason Nippon Steel was evaluated in the lowest group of companies is that it is focusing on life-extension technologies for high-emission coal blast furnaces rather than phasing them out. Regarding coal consumption, it is on an upward trend. On the other hand, some companies evaluated in the scorecard have clear plans to end coal use.

According to the comprehensive assessment, despite most companies publishing net-zero targets, high-emission coal dependence continues, and the expansion of low-emission technologies is painfully slow. Each company faces a severe "transition readiness gap"—the gap between the level required for steelmakers to transition and their current efforts.

"We expect influential steelmakers like Nippon Steel and JFE Steel to accelerate their efforts toward drastic structural reform based on the evaluation results of this scorecard," said Roger Smith, Asia Lead at SteelWatch.

Link to full report and webpage: https://steelwatch.org/scorecard?lang=ja
Materials such as photos, charts, and corporate score information can be downloaded from here.

End

Notes:
1. The overall score (out of 100) is evaluated based on five categories in total, including "Climate Action Performance," "Target Setting and Transparency," and "Social and Environmental Impact." The average score for "Moving away from coal" remained at 10.5 (out of 25), with all assessed companies except four having recently executed or planning investments in coal blast furnaces. The average score for "Expanding low-emission steel production" was even lower, at just 0.6 points (out of 25).

2. The main findings of this scorecard are as follows:
- At present, the assessed companies have not made sufficient preparations for the transition to near-zero emissions.

FAQ

What is the name and purpose of the survey released by SteelWatch on March 31, 2026, in Tokyo?

The survey is called the 'Steel Company Scorecard,' released by climate NGO SteelWatch to assess the decarbonization readiness of 18 major steelmakers globally based on publicly available data up to fiscal year 2024.

What were the rankings and scores of Nippon Steel and JFE Steel in the SteelWatch assessment?

Nippon Steel ranked 17th out of 18 companies with a score of 16.8 out of 100, while JFE Steel ranked 12th with a score of 23.4 points in the SteelWatch 'Steel Company Scorecard' assessment.

Why did Nippon Steel receive one of the lowest scores in the SteelWatch evaluation?

Nippon Steel received a low score because it is focusing on life-extension technologies for high-emission coal blast furnaces instead of phasing them out, and its coal consumption is on an upward trend.

How did the overall performance of the 18 assessed steelmakers compare in terms of decarbonization preparedness?

None of the 18 assessed steelmakers achieved a score of 50 out of 100, indicating that all lack sufficient readiness for decarbonization despite most having published net-zero targets.

What statement did Roger Smith, Asia Lead at SteelWatch, make regarding Japanese steelmakers' performance?

Roger Smith stated that SteelWatch expects influential steelmakers like Nippon Steel and JFE Steel to accelerate their efforts toward drastic structural reform based on the evaluation results of the scorecard.