Honda’s Strategy Combines EVs, Hybrids and Low-Carbon Manufacturing
NEW DELHI (India CSR): Honda has said that reducing CO2 emissions from the use of its products will remain one of the company’s biggest climate priorities as it works toward achieving carbon neutrality across all products and corporate activities by 2050. According to the Honda ESG Report 2026, most of Honda’s CO2 emissions in the fiscal year ended March 31, 2026 came from the use of its products. These emissions are mainly linked to the burning of fossil fuels in internal combustion engine vehicles and hybrid electric vehicles, both of which use internal combustion engines.
Product Use Is the Main Climate Challenge
Honda said the expansion of electrified products is an effective way to reduce CO2 emissions from product use. However, the company also made it clear that it will continue selling products with internal combustion engines in the short to medium term. Because of this, Honda will continue improving the environmental performance of its motorcycles, automobiles and power products. This includes better fuel efficiency, cleaner hybrid technologies and support for carbon-neutral fuels.
EVs Alone May Not Fully Solve Emissions
Honda noted that electrification can reduce emissions, but emissions from electrified products may still remain depending on the availability and use of renewable energy in different countries and regions. This means that cleaner vehicles must be supported by cleaner electricity systems. The company said it will not only expand its own use of renewable energy but also support wider clean energy transition through external policy and stakeholder engagement. Honda is also considering the possibility of becoming directly involved in supplying clean energy to customers.
Corporate Emissions Also Under Focus
Honda said emissions from corporate activities mainly come from direct emissions at production sites and indirect emissions from fossil fuel-based energy used in manufacturing and processing. To reduce these emissions, the company is focusing on three key actions: improving production efficiency, electrifying equipment and replacing conventional energy with renewable energy.
Key Facts from Honda ESG Report 2026
| Fact | Details |
|---|---|
| Carbon neutrality goal | Across all Honda products and corporate activities by 2050 |
| Biggest emission source | Use of Honda products |
| Main cause of product-use emissions | Fossil fuel combustion in ICE vehicles and HEVs |
| Product-use strategy | EVs, HEVs, improved ICE performance and carbon-neutral fuels |
| Corporate emission strategy | Production efficiency, equipment electrification and renewable energy |
| 2031 corporate target | 46% reduction in total CO2 emissions from corporate activities compared with FY2020 |
| 2031 product-use emission intensity targets | Motorcycles: 15.0%, Automobiles: 13.6%, Power products: 13.4% |
| Reporting method | GHG Protocol-based emissions accounting |
| Clean energy approach | Renewable energy use, advocacy and possible clean energy supply to customers |
2031 Emission Reduction Targets
Honda has set a target to reduce total CO2 emissions from corporate activities by 46% by the fiscal year ending March 31, 2031, compared with the fiscal year ended March 31, 2020. It has also set product CO2 emission intensity reduction targets of 15.0% for motorcycles, 13.6% for automobiles and 13.4% for power products by FY2031.
Supply Chain Disclosure
Honda said that, as a comprehensive mobility company, it believes calculating and disclosing emissions across the entire supply chain is essential for reducing CO2 emissions. The company calculates and discloses its emissions based on the Greenhouse Gas Protocol, a widely used global emissions accounting standard developed mainly by the World Business Council for Sustainable Development and the World Resources Institute.
Why This Matters
Honda’s climate strategy shows that the future of mobility will not depend on electric vehicles alone. The company is taking a broader approach that includes EVs, hybrid vehicles, cleaner internal combustion engines, carbon-neutral fuels, renewable energy, cleaner factories and lifecycle emissions disclosure. For customers, this means future Honda products are likely to become more fuel-efficient, more electrified and increasingly connected to clean energy systems. For the industry, Honda’s plan highlights a larger reality: cutting emissions from mobility requires cleaner products, cleaner factories and cleaner energy infrastructure working together.
