L'Oréal has set up a robust governance structure involving the Group's most senior management levels in overseeing material climate-related matters. In particular, the climate transition plan is prepared according to several key stages:
Once the climate transition plan has been validated by L'Oréal's top management bodies, it is implemented at all levels of the organisation:
Operational deployment: each business line, Division and Region receives a tailored roadmap, transposing the Group's net zero strategy to local scale:
Prioritisation: the roadmaps set out the priority actions, with quantitative time-bound targets, so as to ensure that the plan is implemented in a concrete and measurable way.
Involving the Sustainability Leaders Network: this internal network made up of employees trained in sustainability provides the operational teams with expertise and support, and acts as a point of reference as they implement the plan.
Each year, the Board of Directors reviews the outcomes of the climate strategy against the initial objectives. Within this framework, in 2025, the Group conducted an in-depth review of the carbon pathway, whose conclusions were presented to the Board of Directors. The outcomes are also reviewed by the Strategy and Sustainability Committee. The Chief Executive Officer also presented the Group's climate change strategy to the 2024 Annual General Meeting. Shareholders can engage in discussion with L'Oréal on a regular basis as part of the Group's shareholder consultation process. The Board of Directors receives an account of these discussions.
The level of remuneration of the Chief Executive Officer and the Group's top management is subject to the achievement of climate objectives (see sections 2.4.1.2.1. and 7.4.3.6). Each year, the Human Resources and Remuneration Committee reviews both the upcoming remuneration policy objectives and the performance achieved during the year in question. The Committee makes recommendations in this regard to the Board of Directors.
Fully engaged in the fight against climate change and attentive to scientific recommendations, L'Oréal has developed a climate transition plan whose pathway has been validated by the SBTi(1). This plan pursues two ambitions:
In absolute terms, these reductions refer to a 2019 baseline year.
To meet its target for reducing Scopes 1 & 2 emissions by 2030, L'Oréal has made commitments regarding the transition to renewable energies. In 2025, L'Oréal hit a historic milestone by reaching 100% renewable energy use on operated sites and stores(2). The Group’s efforts will continue under its L'Oréal for the Future programme so as to maintain this performance. This ambition is important because Scopes 1 & 2 concern, respectively, direct emissions linked to the Group's activities, such as on-site combustion, and indirect emissions linked to the consumption of purchased energy, such as electricity. By using renewable energy sources such as wind power and solar energy to power its facilities, L'Oréal is reducing its dependence on fossil fuels, thereby limiting its carbon footprint.