Bloomberg has expanded its climate solutions suite with analytics to help financial institutions assess how companies and portfolios may perform as low-carbon technologies continue to scale.
The tools enable investors to identify opportunities, evaluate risks and align portfolios with their net-zero goals, shared the provider. According to Bloomberg’s data, global investment in low-carbon technologies has surged from $160 billion in 2009 to $2.1 trillion in 2024, with renewable energy project investment reaching a record $386 billion in the first half of 2025, up 10% year-on-year.
Traditional transition risk models have largely centred on carbon pricing mechanisms such as taxes or emissions fees. Bloomberg’s expanded framework integrates carbon analytics with bottom-up assessments of how companies are exposed to shifts in markets, technology, and policy.
The analytics provide insight into revenue and capital expenditure linked to clean energy and fossil fuels, evaluate the credibility of corporate transition plans and test revenue sensitivity under different climate scenarios.
The data set covers companies representing 96% of global market capitalisation, complementing Bloomberg’s existing transition revenue-at-risk, carbon forecasts and transition credibility scores.
“Bloomberg’s enhanced transition offering provides deeper insights into how companies are exposed and adapting to the rise of low-carbon technologies, said Jessica Bennett, head of transition analytics at Bloomberg. “As this trend continues to evolve, we are committed to providing the analytics investors need to identify leaders and laggards, unlock value and mitigate risks.”











