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Tech And Finance Giants Back $100M Global Push To Cut Methane, Other Superpollutants

Tech And Finance Giants Back $100M Global Push To Cut Methane, Other Superpollutants

Tech And Finance Giants Back $100M Global Push To Cut Methane, Other Superpollutants

  • Amazon, Google, JPMorganChase and other major firms will deploy $100 million by 2030 to fund projects cutting methane, black carbon and refrigerant gases.
  • Superpollutants drive roughly half of current global warming, making them one of the fastest levers available to slow near-term temperature rise.
  • The initiative aims to channel corporate capital toward high-impact mitigation opportunities with strong climate, health and economic returns.

A coalition of major global companies has committed $100 million to accelerate efforts to reduce superpollutants, a category of powerful greenhouse gases responsible for roughly half of the warming the planet has experienced to date.

The initiative, announced by the Beyond Alliance, will mobilize private capital to fund projects that cut emissions of methane, black carbon and refrigerant gases. These pollutants remain in the atmosphere for shorter periods than carbon dioxide but trap significantly more heat, making them a major driver of near-term temperature increases.

Companies including Amazon, Autodesk, Figma, Google, JPMorganChase, Salesforce and Workday will participate in the Superpollutant Action Initiative. Each company will identify and support projects designed to deliver measurable reductions across sectors such as energy production, agriculture, waste management and cooling systems.

The program aims to deploy the full $100 million by 2030 in areas where action is considered both urgent and scalable.

A Fast Lever For Climate Stabilization

Scientists and policymakers increasingly view superpollutant mitigation as one of the most immediate tools for slowing climate change.

Although these gases typically persist in the atmosphere for far shorter periods than carbon dioxide, they can trap heat tens to thousands of times more effectively. Methane alone is responsible for roughly one third of near-term warming.

Many solutions already exist and can be deployed relatively quickly. Capturing methane leaks from oil and gas infrastructure, improving agricultural practices and upgrading refrigeration systems are among the most widely cited opportunities.

Economic incentives are also significant. Global methane abatement alone could avoid more than $1 trillion in market damages by 2050, according to existing analysis.

The near-term climate benefits are equally striking. Aggressive reductions in superpollutants could prevent more than half a degree Celsius of warming by mid-century while improving air quality and reducing health risks associated with pollution.

Corporate Climate Strategy Expands Beyond CO2

For participating companies, the initiative reflects a broader shift in corporate climate strategy toward tackling multiple greenhouse gases simultaneously.

Superpollutants are a major part of the equation to limit atmospheric warming. Experts agree that eliminating them where we can is one of the most powerful levers we have to deliver near-term impact, playing a vital and complementary role to removing CO2. Google is excited to join our peers in accelerating progress to eliminate superpollutants,” said Randy Spock, Carbon Credits and Removals Lead at Google.

Randy Spock, Carbon Credits and Removals Lead at Google

Reducing superpollutants can also deliver rapid public health benefits by lowering air pollution, which contributes to millions of premature deaths each year.

Reducing superpollutants is one of the best ways to limit near-term warming, delivering critical benefits for air quality, public health, and agricultural resilience. A multi-stakeholder approach can help accelerate solutions at scale. Salesforce is proud to support this initiative with our peers,” said

Max Scher, Vice President of Sustainability at Salesforce

For corporate climate leaders, the initiative also offers a new channel for deploying climate finance beyond traditional carbon removal projects.

RELATED ARTICLE: Google Commits $50 Million to Cut Methane, Other Superpollutants Through 2030

Building A Roadmap For Corporate Climate Capital

The Beyond Alliance, a business-led coalition focused on expanding corporate investment in high-integrity climate solutions, will coordinate the initiative and support participating companies with research, reporting and knowledge sharing.

To identify the most effective mitigation opportunities, the alliance will partner with the Carbon Containment Lab and leading scientific experts to develop a global roadmap for superpollutant reduction.

The roadmap, expected later this year, will outline priority sectors and regions where private capital can deliver the largest and fastest emissions cuts. It will also be publicly available, allowing governments, investors and companies outside the initiative to replicate the approach.

We are in a decisive decade for the climate, and reducing superpollutants is one of the few levers that can bend the curve quickly,” said Luke Pritchard, Director of the Beyond Alliance. “This initiative shows how companies can deploy private capital where it matters most unlocking solutions that cut warming, improve air quality, and deliver measurable results now, while creating a clear pathway for others to follow.”

Growing Momentum Around Methane And Short-Lived Pollutants

The initiative arrives amid growing international attention on short-lived climate pollutants, particularly methane, which governments and regulators increasingly view as a critical target for near-term mitigation.

Organizations including Cascade Climate, the Clean Air Fund, the Climate and Clean Air Coalition, the Climateworks Foundation, the Environmental Defense Fund, the Global Methane Hub and the Super Pollutant Action Alliance have welcomed the effort.

For executives and investors, the message is clear. While decarbonizing energy systems remains essential for long-term climate stability, tackling superpollutants offers one of the fastest and most cost-effective opportunities available today to reduce warming, improve public health and protect global food systems.

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