Annual Report 2025

2 Sustainable solutions (environmental matters)

2.1 Climate scenario analysis (ESRS 2 IRO–1)

Bystronic conducted a climate scenario analysis aligned with the TCFD framework, evaluating business resilience under 1.5°C and 3°C scenarios.

We are changing our scenario from 4°C (2024) to 3°C as several recent scientific assessments suggest that the likely global warming by the end of the century may be somewhere between +2 and +3°C, lower than the previously feared +4°C scenario. But this depends heavily on global emissions, trajectories and climate policies. Global temperatures in the last 12–18 months have consistently been ~1.3°C above pre-industrial levels. This leaves an extremely low remaining carbon budget to remain below 1.5°C.

While organizations should continue to align with 1.5°C pathways whenever possible – because these trajectories drive the deepest, fastest and most transformative decarbonization – they must also realistically prepare for the physical impacts associated with a 2–3°C world, which is increasingly becoming more likely. In this context, climate adaptation becomes as essential as mitigation, requiring companies to strengthen their resilience to extreme weather, supply-chain disruptions, and regulatory shifts. Those that decarbonize early will be significantly better positioned under tightening climate policies and escalating physical climate risks, gaining strategic advantages in competitiveness, compliance, and long-term value creation.

2.1.1 Scenarios evaluated

2.1.2 Key findings1

  1. UNEP Emissions Gap Report 2025 | Climate Action Tracker | NGFS Phase V Climate Scenarios | IEA World Energy Outlook 2024 | EU ETS price forecasts, EUROMETAL/Fastmarkets, Bruegel Working Paper 20/2025

2.2 EU Taxonomy disclosure

2.2.1 Alignment assessment approach

2.2.2 KPI definitions–revenue

2.2.3 KPI definitions – capital expenditures (CapEx)

2.2.4 KPI definitions – operating expenditures (OpEx)

EU Taxonomy

Eligible

 

Aligned

 

% Eligible

 

% Aligned

Revenue

596.9 m CHF

 

188.2 m CHF

 

97.3%

 

30.7%

CapEx

4.7 m CHF

 

2.8 m CHF

 

49.3%

 

29.8%

OpEx

Not estimated

 

-

 

-

 

-

graphic

2.3 Climate Change (ESRS E1)

Bystronic joined the Science-Based Targets initiative in 2023 and received validation of near-term targets in April 2025. The Group aims for a net-zero operations and net-zero value chain by 2050.

graphic

2.3.1 Transition plan (E1–1)

2.3.2 Policies (E1–2)

2.3.3 Actions and resources (E1–3)

2.3.3.1 SBTi-validated targets

The baseline year for Scope 3 was updated to 2023 to reflect improved data quality and expanded category coverage achieved in 2023. In 2025, Scope 3 was recalculated to consider method improvement and Life Cycle Assessment results.

2.3.4 Decarbonization actions

2.3.4.1 Operational decarbonization

Bystronic advanced its renewable energy and low-carbon initiatives in 2025. Solar installations were completed at Niederönz (Switzerland), Hoffman Estates (USA), and Tianjin (China), with Foshan (China) finalized in late 2025. Geothermal heating became operational at Bystronic Laser AG in 2024, eliminating natural gas consumption and reducing Scope 1 emissions. In the USA, a Power Purchase Agreement with Verde Energy has supplied 100% renewable electricity to our facilities since June 2025. Renewable electricity contracts are active at Niederönz, Gotha (Germany), and Hoffman Estates, with a Foshan contract planned for 2026, subject to government grid operations.

2.3.4.2 Value chain decarbonization

Bystronic supports suppliers in establishing their own Science-Based Targets through workshops and guidance.

SSAB partnership renewed in 2025 for collaboration on fossil-free and recycled steel solutions. Pilot projects are ongoing with initial tests demonstrating comparable processing quality for fossil-free steel compared to conventional steel.

2.3.4.3 Product innovation

Bystronic products and solutions actively support customer sustainability and emissions reduction. Deep standby chillers, standard on all ByCut Fiber systems, achieve up to 50% idle energy reduction, lowering operational emissions during non-production periods. Nesting software provides digital optimization, achieving an average of 8% material waste reduction, which decreases both material costs and associated embodied emissions. Modular ByCut platforms use standardized designs that enable upgrades, extending system lifecycles by five or more years and reducing the need for equipment replacement and related production emissions. In addition, Bystronicʼs Life Cycle Assessment (LCA) program is expanding coverage of the product portfolio, providing customers with data to support Scope 3 reporting under emerging regulations.

2.3.5 Targets (E1–4)

GHG targets

Baseline

 

Target

 

Status

 

2025

Scope 1+2 (tCO₂e)

12,028 (2021)

 

6,976 (-42% by 2030)

 

On track

 

8,687

Scope 3 (tCO₂e)

785,261 (2023)

 

530,051 (-32.5% by 2033)

 

Ahead

 

672,699

2.3.6 Energy consumption and mix (E1–5)

The following table provides a detailed view of Bystronicʼs energy consumption over the last three years, categorized by activity type:

Energy consumption

YoY

2025

 

2024

 

2023

 

2022

 

2021

Total energy consumption (MWh)

-8%

35,407

 

38,509

 

39,576

 

41,664

 

43,861

Fuel for fleet

 

14,520

 

15,139

 

14,268

 

15,042

 

14,949

Stationary energy (buildings)

 

4,979

 

6,398

 

8,183

 

9,297

 

10,014

District heating

 

2,347

 

2,490

 

2,905

 

2,246

 

2,226

Non-renewable electricity

 

6,225

 

8,168

 

7,708

 

7,680

 

14,759

Renewable electricity

 

7,335

 

6,314

 

6,513

 

7,399

 

1,912

Energy intensity (MWh/million CHF)

 

57.7

 

59.4

 

42.6

 

41

 

46.7

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Share of renewable electricity

 

54%

 

44%

 

46%

 

49%

 

11%

Share of renewable energy

 

21%

 

16%

 

16%

 

18%

 

4%

Analysis of energy consumption and intensity evolution

The data indicates an 8% year-over-year decrease in total energy consumption in 2025, highlighting effective energy management strategies and a decrease in manufacturing activities. The increase in the share of renewable electricity from 11% in 2021 to 54% in 2025 demonstrates a significant shift towards more sustainable energy sources. The energy intensity saw a peak in 2024 due to reduced revenue during the CORE restructuring period.

2.3.7 GHG emissions (E1–6)

graphic

Scope 1, 2 emissions

GHG emissions Scope 1 & 2

2025

 

2024

 

2023

 

2022

 

2021

Scope 1 (tCO₂e)

5,108

 

5,559

 

6,126

 

7,110

 

6,678

Fuel for fleet

3,937

 

4,035

 

3,871

 

4,236

 

4,197

Stationary energy

1,102

 

1,428

 

1,836

 

2,119

 

2,265

Refrigerants

69

 

97

 

419

 

755

 

216

Scope 2 market-based (tCO₂e)

3,579

 

4,567

 

4,384

 

4,303

 

5,350

Non-renewable electricity

2,864

 

3,807

 

3,543

 

3,464

 

4,509

District heating

715

 

761

 

840

 

840

 

841

Scope 1+2 total (tCO₂e)

8,687

 

10,127

 

10,510

 

11,413

 

12,028

GHG intensity (tCO₂e/million CHF)

14.2

 

15.6

 

11.3

 

11.2

 

12.8

Analysis of GHG emissions and intensity evolution

Scope 1 emissions decreased 24% from 2021 baseline, driven by natural gas elimination through geothermal heating and fleet efficiency improvements. Scope 2 market-based emissions decreased 33% from baseline through renewable electricity procurement. Decreased manufacturing activities in Europe were a strong contributor to Scope 1 and 2 emission reductions, while being a non-structural factor. Total Scope 1 +2 emissions of 8,687 tCO₂e in 2025 represent a 28% reduction from 2021 baseline, tracking ahead of 2030 target trajectory.

Although sales have not yet recovered, Scope 1 & 2 CO₂e emissions intensity has decreased thanks to strong decarbonization measures in 2025, more than offsetting the revenue decline.

Scope 3 emissions by category

GHG emissions Scope 3

Since 2023

YoY

2025

 

2024

 

2023

Scope 3 total emissions (tCO₂e)

-14%

6%

672,699

 

632,262

 

785,261

Cat 1 - Purchased goods & services

 

 

111,552

 

109,777

 

124,524

Cat 2 - Capital goods

 

 

523

 

444

 

557

Cat 3 - Fuel- and energy-related activities

 

 

1,917

 

2,190

 

1,970

Cat 4 - Upstream transportation and distribution

 

 

2,006

 

1,795

 

2,002

Cat 5 - Waste generated in operations

 

 

194

 

200

 

263

Cat 6 - Business travel

 

 

5,835

 

6,078

 

4,078

Cat 7 - Employee commuting

 

 

8,042

 

8,617

 

10,049

Scope 3 upstream emissions

 

 

130,069

 

129,101

 

143,443

Cat 9 - Downstream transportation and distribution

 

 

10,564

 

9,797

 

13,303

Cat 11 - Use of sold products

 

 

529,376

 

490,613

 

624,744

Cat 12 - End-of-life treatment

 

 

2,690

 

2,751

 

3,770

Scope 3 downstream emissions

 

 

542,630

 

503,161

 

641,818

Analysis of GHG emissions and intensity evolution

Scope 3 emissions account for 99% of Bystronicʼs carbon footprint. Category 11 (use of sold products) represents 79%, based on electricity consumption throughout the entire product lifecycle per GHG protocol guidelines. Category 1 (purchased goods and services) represents 17%. Scope 3 emissions increased 6% year-over-year. While manufacturing volumes remained stable – offering no volume-driven emission reduction – the product mix shifted toward higher-powered laser systems, which carry higher lifetime energy consumption and therefore higher estimated use-phase emissions.

New calculation method reduced Scope 3 by 30% compared to previous results (see previous reports). Scope 3 emissions have been recalculated to incorporate new Life Cycle Assessment data in Scope 3 Category 11 – Use of sold products (flat laser machine lifetime has been reduced from 20 years to 10 years) and in Scope 3 Category 1 – purchased goods and services (spend method has been replaced by weight method for accuracy improvement). Baseline and target years have been recalculated according to the Science-Based Target reduction plan of 32.5% over the 2023–2033 period.

2.3.8 Customer decarbonization impact

Bystronicʼs laser cutting systems integrate sustainability features across three dimensions – energy efficiency, circularity, and material efficiency – that directly reduce customersʼ operational emissions, resource consumption, and total cost of ownership. The illustration below shows how these features are embedded across the system architecture.

graphic
2.3.8.1 Product efficiency features
2.3.8.2 Life Cycle Assessment program

Standardized Life Cycle Assessment methodology per ISO 14040/14044 applied to product portfolio. LCA scope includes raw material extraction and processing, component manufacturing and assembly, transportation and distribution, use-phase energy consumption, and end-of-life treatment options.

Coverage expanding from current ~60% to 100% of standard products by 2027. Results provided to customers to support their Scope 3 reporting requirements under emerging regulations including CSRD and SEC climate disclosure rules. Data enables customers to quantify emissions associated with capital equipment purchases.

2.3.8.3 Customer engagement

Joint pilot projects with lead customers test new sustainability features before commercial launch. Industry partnerships through associations advance sustainability standards and benchmarks collaboratively. Transparency through publicly available sustainability datasheets for all products. Integration with customer carbon accounting software platforms facilitates emissions tracking and reporting.

2.4 Water & Marine Resources (ESRS E3)

2.4.1 Policies (E3–1)

Environmental management systems cover water management at ISO 14001 certified sites. Site-specific water efficiency programs identify reduction opportunities. Wastewater treatment ensures discharge compliance with local regulations.

2.4.2 Actions and resources (E3–2)

Water consumption monitoring implemented at manufacturing sites with quarterly reporting. Closed-loop water systems installed where technically and economically feasible, particularly at headquarters. Discharge permit compliance maintained at all facilities with wastewater treatment requirements.

WRI Aqueduct Water Risk Atlas used to assess water stress at all facility locations. Tianjin (China) site classified as high baseline water stress.

2.4.3 Metrics and targets (E3–3 & E3–4)

Water withdrawal and consumption in manufacturing plants (m³)

Water management

YoY

2025

 

2024

 

2023

 

2022

Water consumption in manufacturing plants (m³)

–21%

18,532

 

23,562

 

23,664

 

12,274

Water withdrawal

 

18,659

 

24,259

 

23,664

 

12,274

Water discharged

 

127

 

697

 

 

 

 

Water intensity per net sales (m³/million CHF)

 

30.2

 

36.3

 

25.4

 

12.1

Analysis: We started monitoring water consumption in 2022 with a limited number of manufacturing plants. In 2025 we had data coverage for six of nine manufacturing sites. Coverage expansion remains a priority.

Water stress assessment: 39% of total water withdrawal occurs in medium-high to extremely high water stress areas. This concentration drives focused risk management and adaptation efforts.

Water by location

Water stress

% of Total

 

Actions

2025

 

2024

Bystronic Tianjin (China)

Extremely High (4-5)

39%

 

Monitoring

7,267

 

8,146

Bystronic Laser (Romania)

High (3-4)

3%

 

Closed plant

617

 

987

Bystronic Manufacturing (USA)

Medium-High (2-3)

7%

 

Monitoring

1,289

 

1,336

Bystronic Tube Processing (Italy)

Medium-High (2-3)

6%

 

Monitoring

1,146

 

2,242

Other locations

Low to Medium (0-2)

45%

 

-

8,213

 

11,548

2.5 Resource Use & Circular Economy (ESRS E5)

2.5.1 Policies (E5–1)

Bystronicʼs circular economy strategy follows the waste hierarchy, focusing first on preventing waste through product design, reducing material consumption via process and software optimization, reusing components and materials where feasible, recycling materials at end-of-life, and recovering energy only as a last resort. Material efficiency targets have been established for both product design and manufacturing operations to drive continuous improvements and support sustainable resource use.

2.5.2 Actions and resources (E5–2)

graphic

Read more about the Circulus project here.

Extending product life through laser module refurbishment

Bystronicʼs laser module refurbishment program demonstrates how circular economy principles translate into measurable impact. Rather than replacing high-value components at end-of-service, we developed an industrial refurbishment process that recovers usable assemblies, recalibrates optical paths, and restores cutting heads to original performance standards – often with enhanced monitoring capabilities. This approach goes beyond basic repair: each laser module is stripped, cleaned, realigned, and rebuilt from the optics upward, delivering performance-secure components with significantly reduced resource consumption compared to new production. The program delivers environmental and economic value. From a circularity perspective, refurbished laser modules avoid the material extraction, machining, and manufacturing emissions associated with new component production while keeping structurally sound parts in the use cycle, embodying the principle of reuse over replacement. Customers benefit from reduced capital expenditure, minimized downtime, and the confidence that older machines remain competitive in demanding production environments.

These initiatives position Bystronic as a circular economy leader in the capital equipment industry, creating value through resource efficiency while meeting increasing customer and regulatory demands for circularity.

2.5.3 Metrics and performance (E5–4)

Resource inflows in manufacturing plants:

Resource inflows

2025

 

2024

 

2023

Total purchased goods (tons)

26,261

 

22,738

 

29,423

Amount of metals (tons)

23,970

 

20,963

 

27,517

Share of recycled steel (%)

27%

 

27%

 

27%

Estimated recycled content (tons)

6,472

 

5,660

 

7,429

Analysis: Total purchased goods increased due to the increased number of large size machines produced in China. Recycled steel content remained at 27%, meeting minimum target. Opportunities exist to increase recycled content through supplier collaboration and specification changes.

2.5.4 Material flow analysis (E5–5)

Waste generation and management

Waste in manufacturing plants

YoY

2025

 

2024

 

2023

 

2022

 

2021

Waste, total amount in manufacturing plants (tons)

–6%

2,150

 

2,288

 

3,323

 

3,860

 

4,267

Non-hazardous waste

 

2,103

 

2,241

 

3,266

 

3,785

 

4,213

Metals

 

1,511

 

1,593

 

2,400

 

2,989

 

3,253

Wood

 

160

 

176

 

375

 

465

 

575

Paper & cardboard

 

116

 

102

 

117

 

137

 

218

Plastics

 

5

 

4

 

6

 

6

 

7

Domestic

 

307

 

346

 

354

 

176

 

156

Special non-hazardous waste

 

4

 

18

 

13

 

11

 

4

Hazardous waste & toxic material

 

47

 

47

 

57

 

75

 

54

Waste by disposal methods (%)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Landfill

 

0%

 

1%

 

1%

 

1%

 

 

Incineration

 

15%

 

15%

 

10%

 

5%

 

 

Share of metal waste (mostly recycled)

 

83%

 

81%

 

87%

 

92%

 

 

Other disposal methods

 

2%

 

3%

 

2%

 

2%

 

 

Waste intensity per net sales (tons/million CHF)

 

2.7

 

2.9

 

3.6

 

3.8

 

4.5

Analysis: Total waste generation in 2025 was 2,150 ton compared to the 4,267 ton baseline in 2021, representing a 50% reduction and exceeding the 2030 target of 3,413 tons early. This achievement reflects reduced manufacturing activity during CORE restructuring and improved material efficiency. Recycling rate is at 83% as most metal waste (70%) and wood, paper and cardboard waste (pallet, packaging) is recycled.

With the closure of our plant in Romania, we ended all waste to landfill in 2025.

Waste by disposal method

2.5.5 Outlook and priorities 

2.5.5.1 2025–2027 Circular economy priorities
3 Engaged people (social issues) 1 Environmental, Social and Governance (ESG) at Bystronic (CSRD)