Schneider Electric Releases Global Autonomous Maturity Report
Schneider Electric has revealed the Europe findings of its Global Autonomous Maturity Report which draws on 400 senior energy and chemical industry leaders across 12 countries and four regions. The findings expose a timely crossroads at the heart of Europe’s climate strategy: the region most convinced that autonomous operations are indispensable to net zero is the region furthest from deploying them at scale. For the hard-to-abate industries that account for around 40 percent of global emissions, this gap is real and measured in megatons. It is also a competitiveness gap. As the global race to decarbonize industry accelerates, Europe’s must take this opportunity to adopt adoption of AI-powered autonomous operations risks ceding industrial leadership at the very moment that sustainable industry and competitive industry have become one and the same.
AI-driven autonomy accelerates decarbonization in ways that traditional hardware investment cycles cannot match cutting unplanned downtime, raising plant-wide energy efficiency, and compressing the timeline from ambition to action. Every year of delayed adoption is a year of excess emissions that cannot be recovered.
“Europe’s leadership on climate ambition is clear, but ambition alone won’t deliver outcomes. Autonomous operations are one of the most powerful levers we have to decarbonize industry at speed and scale. The risk is not standing still; the risk is moving too slowly while others accelerate. The opportunity for Industry is to act now and turn this moment into a competitive advantage,” said Devan Pillay, president, heavy industries segment, Schneider Electric.
The AI–Climate Nexus: From Ambition to Accountability
The report establishes a direct link between autonomous maturity and emissions performance. Facilities operating at higher levels of autonomy demonstrably outperform peers on energy intensity, process efficiency, and scope 1 emissions. For Europe’s energy and chemicals sectors under intense regulatory scrutiny and facing binding 2030 and 2050 targets autonomous operations are increasingly becoming a strategic climate lever.
The study reveals distinct motivational profiles across Europe. Mainland European leaders cite enhanced productivity (30 percent) and competitive advantage (30 percent) as primary drivers. UK leaders are more focused on cost reduction and profitability (48 percent). Crucially, a third of UK respondents identify improved environmental performance as their leading incentive - the highest proportion globally signaling that the business and climate cases are converging. This alignment reflects a broader shift in how industry leaders understand the relationship between performance and purpose: planet and profitability are not in conflict. Electrifying, automating, and digitalizing industrial operations does not force a trade-off between competitiveness and decarbonization - it eliminates the need to choose.
From Research to Real-World Deployments
Momentum is building: six in ten European leaders describe their adoption trajectory as rapid and accelerating — but with Europe trailing every other major region on autonomous maturity, faster and broader deployment is not optional; it is the condition for remaining competitive.
