According to www.tradingview.com, Aramex has been awarded the title ‘Most Sustainable Company, MENA Logistics & Supply Chain 2026’ by UK-based publication World Finance.
Sustainability Recognition and Strategic Alignment
The award recognizes Aramex’s measurable progress across multiple sustainability pillars, including fleet transformation, route optimization, operational efficiency, energy-conscious infrastructure, and ESG governance. It coincides with the company’s internal Accelerate28 transformation strategy — a long-term roadmap launched to advance operational excellence, innovation, and future-ready logistics solutions. The strategy explicitly anchors sustainability as a core pillar alongside digital capability and customer-centric service delivery.
The recognition reflects not only external validation but also alignment with globally benchmarked climate targets. Aramex has publicly pledged to reduce its Scope 1 and 2 emissions by 2030, with an overarching ambition to achieve net-zero emissions by 2050. These targets are integrated into capital allocation decisions, procurement criteria, and facility retrofitting programs across its network in the Middle East, North Africa, and South Asia.
Leadership Perspective and Operational Integration
“This recognition from World Finance reflects the significant progress Aramex continues to make as we integrate sustainability more deeply across our operations, decision-making and long-term strategy. Sustainability today is not separate from business performance. It is increasingly central to how logistics companies drive efficiency, resilience and long-term value creation.” — Manosij Ganguli, Chief Sustainability Officer at Aramex
Ganguli’s statement underscores a practitioner-level shift now evident across Tier-1 logistics providers: sustainability metrics are no longer siloed in corporate responsibility reports but embedded in KPIs for regional operations managers, fleet procurement teams, and warehouse engineering units. For example, Aramex’s Dubai-based logistics hub — one of 12 regional distribution centers across the MENA region — recently completed a solar panel installation covering 4,200 m² of rooftop space, contributing directly to its 2030 Scope 2 reduction target.
Industry Context and Peer Benchmarking
Aramex’s 2026 recognition places it among a growing cohort of logistics firms aligning sustainability commitments with verifiable decarbonization timelines. In 2024, DHL announced a €7 billion investment in zero-emission vehicles and green infrastructure through 2030; UPS reported a 12.5% reduction in absolute greenhouse gas emissions (Scope 1 and 2) between 2020 and 2023; and FedEx committed to 100% electric pickup-and-delivery vehicle fleets in Europe by 2025. Unlike many peers whose net-zero pledges begin post-2040, Aramex’s 2050 horizon aligns with the Science Based Targets initiative (SBTi) standard for transport-intensive sectors.
This competitive context matters for supply chain professionals evaluating carrier partners: sustainability certifications now influence tender scoring in public-sector contracts across the UAE and Saudi Arabia, where ESG compliance accounts for up to 15% of bid evaluation weight. Aramex’s award reinforces that environmental performance is becoming a non-negotiable component of service-level agreements — not just a marketing differentiator.
Source: www.tradingview.com
Compiled from international media by the SCI.AI editorial team.










