MOVE Logistics Group Limited logo

FY25 Climate Statement

ESG16 October 2025MOVIndustrials

Climate Related
Disclosures

2025

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CLIMATE RELATED DISCLOSURES 2025

INTRODUCTION

Move Logistics Group Limited (MOVE) is pleased to present its second Climate

Statement. It relates to the reporting period 1 July 2024 to 30 June 2025 (FY25).

Statement of compliance

MOVE is a climate-reporting entity (CRE) under the Financial Markets Conduct Act

23 and as such is required to produce a climate statement that complies with the

Aotearoa New Zealand Climate Standards (NZ CS) issued by the External Reporting

Board (XRB).

Adoption provisions

In preparing this statement we have utilised the following NZ CS 2 Adoption

Provisions for this FY2025 report, meaning the disclosures in this climate statement

do not cover these aspects of NZ CS:

Adoption Provision 2: Anticipated financial impacts

Adoption Provision 6: Comparatives for metrics

Adoption Provision 7: Analysis of trends

Limitations and disclaimers

This report sets out MOVE’s current understanding of, and response to climate-

related risks and opportunities, approach to scenario analysis, current and

anticipated impacts of climate change and the strategy to respond to these risks

and opportunities.

This report reflects MOVE’s understanding as of 16 October 2025 for the financial

year ended 30 June 2025. MOVE is required to produce group climate statements

under the Financial Markets Conduct Act 2013 (FMCA) that comply with the

Aotearoa NZ Climate Standards for FY2025 (1 July 2024 – 30 June 2025). The

Climate Statement (also referred to as Climate-related Disclosures, or ‘CRD’)

contains disclosures that rely on early and evolving assessments of current and

forward-looking information, incomplete and estimate data, and MOVE’s related

judgements, opinions and assumptions that MOVE considers to be appropriate in

the circumstances. These disclosures are based on information, which is uncertain

and likely to change over time, including as a result of factors outside of MOVE’s

control, which is likely to influence the validity of such disclosures.

MOVE has sought to provide accurate information in respect of FY25 but cautions

reliance being placed on representations that are necessarily subject to

significant risks, uncertainties and/or assumptions. Climate change is an evolving

challenge, with high levels of uncertainty, particularly over long-term horizons.

Descriptions of the current and anticipated impacts of climate change on MOVE

therefore draw on and/or represent estimates only. Forward looking statements

should not be taken as guarantees of future performance, and actual results

may differ materially from what is stated. MOVE is committed to progressing its

response to climate-related risks and opportunities but is constrained by the

novel and developing nature of climate change.

The information in this report may change following publication of this report

and will not be updated over time. MOVE gives no representation, guarantee, or

warranty that actual outcomes or performance will not materially differ from the

forward-looking statements and accepts no liability for any loss arising from use

of information contained in this report.

This report is not an offer or recommendation to invest in, distribute, or purchase

financial products and does not constitute guidance with respect to MOVE’s

strategic performance, earnings, or growth. Nothing in this report should be

interpreted as advice, whether investment, legal, financial, tax or otherwise.

This report and the data it contains is unaudited, except for the scope 1, 2 and

3 emissions located in the Metrics and Targets section which are subject to

mandatory assurance.

Approved on behalf of the Board on 16 October 2025 by:

Julia Raue Lachlan Johnstone

Chair Director

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CLIMATE RELATED DISCLOSURES 2025

Governance

Oversight of climate-related risks and opportunities

MOVE’s Board of Directors is responsible for the company's corporate governance

and, as part of this, oversees the management of all principal risks, including

climate-related risks and opportunities. The Board's oversight includes:

• Ensuring that MOVE has appropriate risk management and regulatory

compliance policies in place; and monitoring the appropriateness and

implementation of these policies.

• Monitoring reporting systems, audit requirements and external audit

processes, and compliance with its continuous disclosure requirements.

• Promoting the long-term success of the company with regard to

Environmental, Social and Governance (ESG) matters by ensuring that

strategies and action plans are in place to help underpin long-term

shareholder and stakeholder value.

• Approving and monitoring the company's progress with sustainability

initiatives, and sustainability and climate reporting.

The Risk Assurance and Audit Committee (RAAC) is a sub-committee of the Board,

which assists the Board in relation to risk management and oversight and fulfilling

its responsibilities in relation to climate-related disclosures. It provides additional

monitoring of the enterprise risk management processes and ensures all key risks,

including climate-related risks, have been appropriately identified, managed, and

reported to the Board. The RAAC’s oversight includes:

• Review greenhouse gas emissions (GHG) reporting and climate-related

disclosures and recommend to the Board for approval.

• Review and evaluate with the CEO, CFO and external advisers, the processes

in place for assessing and verifying GHG reporting and climate-related

disclosures.

• Review the assurance process undertaken in respect of any sustainability

and climate-related disclosures including mandatory assurance of such

disclosures.

Board skills and competencies

The Board Charter specifies the responsibilities of board members inclusive of

setting and overseeing the execution of MOVE’s strategy, and the supervision of

management in the operation of the business.

The Governance and Remuneration Committee of the Board is responsible for

ensuring that the Board comprises the required breadth and depth of experience,

diversity and knowledge to achieve its objectives. It assesses the Board’s range of

skills, including Corporate Social Responsibility which is inclusive of Sustainability

and Climate Change risk competencies, using a skills matrix.

Board members are supported and encouraged to undertake appropriate

training and education so they can best perform their duties. This may be

undertaken individually or collectively. MOVE’s Board and sub-committees access

climate-related expertise and advice from within the business and externally as

required.

Reporting process and frequency

The RAAC receives six-monthly reporting from management on the risk register

and top risk profile, as well as ad-hoc reporting on risk management when

required.

The Chair of the RAAC reports the committee's findings and recommendations to

the Board twice per year. This includes updates relating to climate-related risks

and opportunities.

The Board reviews all enterprise risks, including climate-related risks, at least

annually. GHG emissions updates are provided to the Board as part of the CFO’s

monthly report.

Strategy development

The Board reviews MOVE’s strategy annually. The Board via RAAC is informed of

key enterprise risks (including the risks relating to climate), in the six-monthly

reports from management and considers these in its assessment of the annual

strategy. The Board is wholly responsible in determining the nature and extent of

the principal risks MOVE is willing to take in achieving strategic objectives, inclusive

of climate risks and opportunities.

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CLIMATE RELATED DISCLOSURES 2025

The strategy is developed by management and takes into consideration sector

challenges that MOVE is exposed too, including those related to climate change.

Strategy implementation

On a monthly basis, the Board receives updates on the Group’s performance,

including, where relevant, progress against strategic initiatives.

Oversight of metrics and targets

MOVE has measured and reported GHG emissions, and emission reduction

practices, since 2019. Our GHG inventory is verified by Opportune and includes

reasonable assurance in relation to Scope 1 and 2 emissions and limited assurance

in relation to Scope 3 emissions in accordance with the Aotearoa New Zealand

Climate Standards (NZ CSs) issued by the External Reporting Bard (XRB). The Board

receives a summary report of GHG emissions as a part of the CFO’s monthly report.

Remuneration

The Group’s incentive scheme does not currently include any specific climate-

related or sustainability-related performance-tied initiatives.

Management

The Board delegates to the Chief Executive Officer (CEO) who acts as the

principal representative of MOVE and in turn delegates several functions to the

management team.

The Chief Financial Officer (CFO) is primarily responsible for management of risks,

including climate-related risk, and reporting and presenting risks to the Board

and RAAC. The CFO reports bi-annually to the Board on risk register updates

and climate-related matters, as well as ad hoc reporting where risk tolerance

thresholds have been breached.

The CFO is also responsible for establishing the framework for setting climate-

related metrics and targets and tracking performance. This includes measuring

MOVE’s GHG emissions and reporting these to the Board within the CFO report on a

monthly basis.

MOVE’s Health, Safety, Wellbeing and Sustainability Committee’s remit includes

climate and sustainability-related matters and promotion of the climate and

sustainability agenda across the business. This Committee currently comprises all

executive managers, and representatives from various divisions across general

managers, health and safety managers and branch managers. The Committee

meets bi-monthly and provides a report up to the Board at each Board meeting.

Management of climate-related risks and opportunities

MOVE undertook a full climate-related risk assessment in May 2023, which involved

key stakeholders from the management team. This assessment was a first-pass

risk assessment to surface climate-related risks and opportunities that the Group

is exposed to. A full climate risk assessment is planned to be carried out every

three years, supported by an annual pulse check.

Our first annual pulse check occurred in FY25 with executive and senior leadership

team participation. The pulse check highlighted material changes to be

considered in the context of the updated scenario analysis, an overview of climate

risk and opportunities rating methodology, and confirmation of the material risks

and updates to MOVE’s climate register.

MOVE intends to incorporate climate risk identification, capture and management

activities into existing enterprise risk management (ERM) processes for future

reporting periods.

GHG emissions are reported monthly to the Board as part of the CFO’s

monthly report. Emissions are currently measured at the group level. MOVE

has implemented a new GHG emissions measurement tool and is now able to

measure these by site across its business.

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CLIMATE RELATED DISCLOSURES 2025

Strategy

Our vision

To be the preferred freight and logistics provider in Australasia

This means delivering the best solution and service for our customers, providing

secure and rewarding work opportunities for our people, and generating value for

our shareholders.

Our mission

To keep our customers moving

Our expert term provides comprehensive freight and logistics solutions to help our

clients stay ahead and succeed.

Our mantra

Customer, Safety, Team

We work together to deliver the best possible customer experience and

business performance, strive to exceed our customer’s expectations and remain

unwavering in our dedication to ensuring the well-being and safety of our people,

partners and communities in our work.

What we do

We make logistics easy for our customers

MOVE is one of New Zealand’s largest providers of domestic freight, warehousing

and logistics solutions, with a clear vision to be the preferred partner in the

industry. We are driven by our mission to keep our customers moving through a

reliable, competitive and scalable service.

Our strengths lie in our national network, regional reach, operational capability

and logistics expertise across the entire supply chain. We prioritise strong

customer partnerships and our team are focused on positive customer outcomes.

We are committed to delivering excellence across New Zealand, ensuring our

customers’ needs are met with care and precision.

Board of Directors

Governance body ultimately responsible for oversight and implementation

of Move Logistics Group’s sustainability framework, strategy and of the

management of Move’s climate-related risks and opportunities.

CEO

Promotes a culture of pro-actively managing risks (including climate-related risks),

aligned with policy and framework.

Management Level

Board Level

Move Logistics operating units –

GMs

Identifying and managing

climate-related risks and opportunities.

Executive Management

Health, Safety, Wellbeing and

Sustainability Committee

All Executive Managers,

representatives from Branch

Managers, H&S managers and

General Managers.

Oversight of climate-and

sustainability-related matters and

promotion of the importance of

these across the business.

CFO

Facilitating regular reviews and

updates to the CEO and the RAAC

on risks, including coordinating

climate-related risks and

opportunities identification and

reporting.

Risk Assurance and Audit Committee (’RAAC’)

This sub-committee assists the Board in relation to

climate-related risk management and oversight.

Figure 1 Organisational structure related to climate-related risks and opportunities.

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CLIMATE RELATED DISCLOSURES 2025

3PL PROVIDERMARKET LEADER IN SPECIALISED SERVICES

FREIGHTWAREHOUSINGINTERNATIONALFUELSSPECIALIST

We are one of the largest

domestic freight providers

in New Zealand. Our services

include general freight,

primary produce, project

cargo and full truck loads.

We offer contracted

solutions for customers

including warehousing and

supply chain capability. Our

warehouses are central to

main routes and easy for

port access.

We are global logistics

specialists and provide

international freight

forwarding and shipping

agency services across a

broad range of industries.

Our trans-Tasman shipping

service adds another

valued service to our offer.

Our specialist road tanker

division is one of the

largest operators in the

New Zealand fuel delivery

market.

We move oversized and

large items that require

specialist haulage. From

heavy haulage, and

machinery transports

to oversized freight

movements –we can move

anything.

Scenario analysis undertaken

Our scenario analysis was based on the Transport Sector Climate Change

Scenarios. A group of executives, general management and subject matter

experts from across the business participated in several workshop sessions,

facilitated by external consultants, to develop MOVE’s entity level climate scenario

analysis in 2024 and to refine and update the scenario narratives in 2025.

Scenarios chosen

To help identify climate-related risks and opportunities and better understand the

resilience of our business model and strategy, we analysed three scenarios:

Orderly – Net Zero by 2050 (~1.5°C), Disorderly – Delayed Transition (~2°C) and

Hot House World – Current Policies (~3°+C). The scenarios are not intended to be

forecasts or predictions but represent challenging, plausible futures.

These three scenarios were chosen because they cover a plausible range of

futures and, therefore, are useful to test and identify a range of physical and

transition risks and opportunities under different levels of uncertainty.

Timeframes used in scenario analysis

MOVE’s scenario analysis was performed over three timeframes: short-term

(present-2030), medium-term (2030-2050), and long-term (2050-2080). The time

horizons were chosen to align with our asset design life and strategic planning

horizons. The climate risk assessment and scenario analysis scope, boundaries,

and time horizons have not been adjusted in the current reporting period.

Within each scenario, we primarily considered the timeframe that would pose the

greatest challenge to our strategy and our business model. Over the short-term,

we anticipate incurring moderate-high transition challenges under an orderly

transition, while a disorderly transition, characterised by delayed and disjointed

responses, will result in higher transition and physical impacts during the 2030-

2050 period. In a hot house world scenario, where the status quo is maintained,

the years beyond 2050 are anticipated to be the most challenging, as our

exposure to physical impacts become more extreme.

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CLIMATE RELATED DISCLOSURES 2025

Scenario development process

The boundaries for the scenario analysis were established as being one tier up

and one tier down our value chain in alignment with our climate risk assessment.

The process of our scenario development was disclosed in the prior period, and

included the following steps:

• To guide our scenario development, we defined the focal question “How

can MOVE’s best navigate climate-related regulatory and technology

uncertainty, while securing employee buy-in, meeting customer

expectations, and keeping in-step with competition?”.

• We agreed the key driving forces, choosing from a long list informed by the

Transport Sector Climate Change Scenarios, prepared by the Aotearoa Circle.

• We determined which driving forces were most relevant to informing our

narratives by applying a materiality lens, considering the influence the

driving force will have for us, and the level of certainty around it.

• The political, social, and economic context of each of the key driving forces

was explored, with participants working in groups and brainstorming

potential developments under each scenario and time horizon.

MOVE’s scenario narratives were developed during FY24 and incorporate outputs

of our physical risk scenario analysis conducted in FY23. A scenario analysis

refresh was conducted during FY25. This was undertaken in order to capture

material macroeconomic and geopolitical changes, and to reflect emerging

climate science and any updates to climate data sets. Scenarios were applied

to MOVE’s climate risk and opportunities register, with the objective of testing

completeness, relevance, and ratings (see Risk Management section).

We intend to conduct a refresh on an annual basis aligned with our climate risk

register review cadence. Our scenario analysis has not yet been integrated with

our annual strategic planning process.

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CLIMATE RELATED DISCLOSURES 2025

Scenario summary

Overview of MOVE’s scenario archetypes:

Orderly architecture and snapshot

Global climate and

socioeconomics

IPCC SSP1-1.9

NGFS - Net Zero 2050 and

Highway to Paris

NIWA Downscaled

SSP1-2.6, NGFS Downscaled

Orderly –

Fully Charged

MOVE

Scenarios

Net Zero 2050 describes a scenario in which the

international Net Zero 2050 targets are achieved.

Under this scenario, exposure to physical risks over the

medium and long term is low, while the exposure to

transition risk in the short and medium term is high.

Global energy &

emissions pathways

NZ physical and

transition impacts

NZ sector-specific factors

Entity-specific analysis

Policy

ambition

<1.5 ̊C

Policy

reaction

Immediate

Technology

change

Fast

Behaviour

change

Fast

Disorderly architecture and snapshot

Global climate and

socioeconomics

IPCC SSP1-2.6, SSP2-4.5

NGFS - Delayed Transition and

Sudden wake-up call

NIWA Downscaled

SSP2-4.5, NGFS Downscaled

Disorderly –

Short Detour

MOVE

Scenarios

The Delayed Transition scenario describes a

scenario in which there is delayed investment into

decarbonisation. A sudden shift in domestic and

international governments' response to climate

change occurs after 2027, triggered by major climate

events. Exposure to transition risk in the short and

medium term is high to extreme.

Global energy &

emissions pathways

NZ physical and

transition impacts

NZ sector-specific factors

Entity-specific analysis

Policy

ambition

<3 ̊C

Policy

reaction

Delayed

Technology

change

Slow, then fast

Behaviour

change

Slow

Hot House World architecture and snapshot

Global climate and

socioeconomics

IPCC Regional Rivalry SSP3-7.0

NGFS - Current Policies

NIWA Downscaled

SSP3-7.0, NGFS Downscaled

IPCC AR6, NIWA

MOVE

Scenarios

The Current Policies scenario describes a scenario in

which economic growth remains tied to fossil fuels and

there is little to no transition risk in the short, medium

and long-term. Exposure to physical climate-related

risks however increases steadily from moderate in

the short-term, high in the medium-term; and high to

extreme in the long-term.

Global energy &

emissions pathways

NZ physical and

transition impacts

NZ sector-specific factors

Entity-specific analysis

Policy

ambition

3 ̊C+

Policy

reaction

None - current policies

Technology

change

Slow change

Behaviour

change

Low use

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CLIMATE RELATED DISCLOSURES 2025

Overview of MOVE’s key driving forces:

OrderlyDisorderlyHot House World

Social Expectations of Sustainability,

Health and Wellbeing

Society demands sustainable action Slow change, with short-term cost

considerations impacting progress

Disconnected, with a focus on

mitigating damage

System user preference and

behaviours

Early adoption of low emissions

technology

Delayed adoption of technology due to

high costs

Cost-centric, with consumers unwilling

to pay a premium for sustainability

Government funding and investmentGovernment funding enables wide

adoption of technology

Government support is delayed and

inconsistent

Limited government funding and

investment, focused on mitigation

Acute climate impactsClimate events occur at current

frequency and intensity

Increasing frequency and severity of

events

Frequent damage to large parts of the

transport infrastructure network

Chronic climate impactsEvidence of chronic impacts in certain

locations

Chronic impacts become more

widespread

Impacts such as heat stress and sea

level rise are felt widely

International geopolitical stabilityDisrupted tradeHeightened instability, frequent supply-

side shocks

Trade protectionism and conflict

Government enforcement of climate

laws

Stable policy environment, unified

approach

Divided and changeable until delayed

implementation

Policies consistent with todays

environment

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CLIMATE RELATED DISCLOSURES 2025

Scenario narratives

We have summarised the outputs from the climate scenario workshops and

scenario analysis refresh, in which we explored how the key driving forces we

identified might respond to the political, social, and economic landscape under

each scenario.

Climate scenarios illustrate what the future might look like under differing degrees

of climate change. They are not predictions about what will happen, but rather

plausible hypotheses about potential pathways to different futures that can aid

our understanding of, and preparation for, the uncertain future impacts of climate

change.

Orderly – Net Zero 2050

An orderly scenario presupposes early and decisive investment in decarbonisation

from the present day to 2030. This enables New Zealand and the world to halve

emissions by 2030 and achieve the global target of net zero emissions by 2050.

Under this scenario, exposure to physical risks over the medium and long term is

low, while the exposure to transition risk in the short and medium term is high.

A coherent, cohesive, and proactive societal response to climate change,

supported by legislative frameworks and regulation and a technology-driven

transformation of supply chains and energy systems, unfolds gradually signalling

a shift towards comprehensive emissions reduction. There is a dynamic response

to the decarbonisation of the transport industry and associated infrastructure

supported by policy. The Land Transport Clean Vehicle Standard is strengthened

and extended beyond light vehicles to include heavy vehicle imports. Strong

performance on emissions reduction is reinforced by financial disclosure regimes

that discourage capital allocation to fossil fuel-intensive activities, robust carbon

markets and effective sustainable finance taxonomies (locally and globally).

The rapid commercialisation and uptake of zero carbon transport technologies

drives down the cost of batteries, green hydrogen, and clean transport fuels,

while sustainable use of artificial intelligence drives further cost efficiency gains.

Climate resilient infrastructure and assets, including climate-controlled logistics,

are investment priorities. Installed renewable energy generating capacity rapidly

increases and clean energy generation matches energy demand. The surging oil

price, due to geopolitical events such as Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and conflict

in the Middle East, incentivises and accelerates investment in alternatives and

redirects capital flows to clean energy generation.

While there are often disruptions from changing weather patterns and other

climate events, the impacts are relatively short-lived. Transport mode shift is

apparent and multi-modal freight is increasingly common. Low-emissions

transport technology is readily available, and uptake is strong as new

technologies outperform expectations. Consumer behaviour strongly favours

products and services that have a low emissions profile, with consumers

accepting price premiums and/or a slower supply chain.

Disorderly – Delayed Transition

A disorderly scenario assumes delayed investment into decarbonisation with

abrupt policy implementation being triggered by major climate events. A sudden

shift in domestic and international governments’ response to climate change

occurs after 2027, driving rapid investment into decarbonisation technologies. The

demand spike and surging carbon prices (carbon price (USD/TCO2e) of $22.42

rises to $461.45 by 2035) creates supply side shocks as the exposure to transition

risk in the short and medium term is high to extreme.

The short-term period is characterised by disjointed policy responses to climate

change including inconsistent disclosure regimes, domestically and globally,

unresolved trade tensions and heightened geopolitical risks. The international

response lacks co-ordination with a large portion of the global energy system

tied to fossil-fuelled activities. The delayed transition is compounded by resource

scarcity, with key minerals and metals required for the energy transition being

concentrated in a handful of countries. Supply shocks relating to increasingly

frequent weather events that impact sea, air and road logistics has an inflationary

effect, making it increasingly costly and difficult for New Zealand to procure

essential goods and components.

Fiscal policies that continue to support fossil-fuelled freight results in a disjointed

industry response, with some market participants able to undercut prices through

continued reliance on fossil-fuelled vehicles, which provides consumers with

cheaper options and hinders the wide-spread societal shift away from high

emissions freight. Inflationary pressures result in businesses and households

prioritising price over sustainability, while abrupt policy changes send conflicting

market signals that weaken the business case for freight decarbonisation.

Delayed investment into critical infrastructure and resilience results in increased

costs associated with damage remediation caused by increasingly frequent and

intense extreme weather events. In the short to medium term, the damage caused

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CLIMATE RELATED DISCLOSURES 2025

to roads, rail and ports leads to increased disruption to freight networks and safety

risks to operators. There is an increase in demand for freight and logistics services to

manage transport of demolition and construction waste and materials. Road freight

remains dominant however damage to road infrastructure begins to drive demand

for ocean freight as an alternative, more resilient, freight option.

The sudden introduction of punitive fiscal policies that penalise emissions

intensive activities like diesel-powered road freight, requires significant capital

expenditure into zero emissions fleet. The associated demand spike drives up

capital costs for the freight logistics sector, which in turn drives up the cost

of logistics and dampens demand. Despite wider societal understanding

and acceptance of the need to decarbonise, there is only partial buy-in from

businesses and households when it comes to shouldering the associated costs,

due to broader inflationary effects.

Hot House World – Current Policies

Under a Hot House World scenario, economic growth remains tied to fossil fuels

and there is little to no transition risk in the short, medium and long-term. Exposure

to physical climate-related risks however increases steadily from low to moderate

in the short-term; moderate in the short-term; high in the medium-term; and high

to extreme over in the long-term.

Regular, severe extreme weather events present significant challenges to society.

Record high temperatures and extreme oscillations in weather patterns drive

an increase in emissions as energy demand for heating and cooling continues

to grow. Subdued global and national policy response to climate change pre-

2030 is triggered by a global ‘anti-woke’ sentiment, fuelled by the resistance to

decouple the energy system from fossil fuels, despite warnings from the scientific

community that tipping points are approaching faster than anticipated, and

despite the frequent occurrence of fatal heat domes, wildfires, and floods linked to

global warming.

Frequent and severe climate events present significant challenges for the road

logistics sector, due to roading infrastructure being heavily impacted by extreme

heat, rain, and flood. Governments continue to be reactive to climate impacts,

through to 2030. The longer-term impact is that public sector expenditure is tied

up in recurrent damage remediation, with little budget left over for enhanced

infrastructure resilience.

Logistics delays relating to road access impairment due to over-slips, under-slips

and inundation are increasingly frequent. Related costs associated with re-routing,

labour, and health and safety, mount year-on-year, reducing logistics margins

significantly. The lack of public sector investment into infrastructure resilience

results in an increasing number of isolated communities that are difficult to reach,

and costly to serve. Key logistics markets, such as New Zealand’s agricultural,

horticultural, and forestry sectors, are highly vulnerable to climate impacts, shrinking

the primary commodity logistics market, as many producers withdraw.

Governments are reactive, and expenditure is heavily directed towards recurring

recoveries and rebuilding national infrastructure.

Major disruptions to trade and energy flows trigger protectionist trade policies

and a shift to friend-shoring and onshoring, with the traditional cost benefits

associated with global trade (such as economies of scale and competitive

advantage), ceded to serve national interests and geopolitical objectives. Freight

logistics providers are faced with supply chain challenges, with components, parts

and assets difficult and costly to procure.

Global conflict intensifies emissions through heightened military activities and

energy market volatility, as countries prioritise military expenditure over the

advancement of climate action. Escalating geopolitical tensions continue to

divert resources from clean technology to defence, indirectly boosting emissions.

In the medium-term, compounding climate events fuel economic volatility due to

capital loss and asset impairment. Mounting climate damage costs, and reduced

productivity, trigger cascading economic impacts that further hinder effective

climate action.

There is increased population displacement, climate migration, and social unrest

as vulnerable communities are disproportionately impacted. New Zealand

sees a growing prioritisation of food, energy, and water security, in the face of

an increasingly fractured global trade system. By 2050, a lack of investment in

infrastructure results in communities that are increasingly difficult and costly to

serve. The global average temperature has risen by 2.5 degrees Celsius and is

on track to exceed 3+ degrees Celsius of global surface temperature warming.

Beyond 2050, New Zealand’s primary sector is profoundly affected by climate

events devastating farm systems, disrupting food supply and transport. Soaring

unemployment and supply-side shocks further fuel inflation and erode disposable

household income, causing GDP to plummet.

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CLIMATE RELATED DISCLOSURES 2025

Transition risks and opportunities

Transition risks and opportunities were considered in the context of the IPCC AR6 SSP1-1.9 and SSP2-4.5, and NGFS Orderly and Delayed Transition scenarios. The Hot House

World scenario was not considered as it assumes no transition occurs. In the orderly scenario, the transition is completed by ~2050 and so transition risks and opportunities

are not considered relevant or material post-2050.

The following table sets out the material transition risks for FY25:

Key – Timeframes

ST - Short-term (now-2030)

MT - Medium-term (2031-2050)

LT - Long-term (2051-2080)

Risk

ID

Risk AreaRisk DescriptionCurrent ImpactsAnticipated

Impacts

Related

Transition

Planning

Initiatives

ScenarioTimeframe

ST | MT | LT

TR1. TechnologyRisk of increased investment costs relating to relatively

higher cost of low/zero carbon fuel technology.

None noted.Increased

investment

costs.

None noted.SSP1-1.9

SSP2-4.5

TR2.TechnologyRisk that the electricity network capacity [transmission]

is insufficient to accommodate heavy haulage fleet

electrification.

Disrupted

productivity due

to insufficient

electricity capacity,

increased

electricity costs.

None noted.SSP1-1.9

SSP2-4.5

TR3. TechnologyRisk that MOVE’s adoption of low / zero carbon fuel tech is

too slow and results in customer loss.

None noted.Customer loss,

market share

reduction.

None noted.SSP1-1.9

SSP2-4.5

TR4.ReputationRisk that MOVE is unable to attract capital market interest

due to inability to demonstrate material progress (on ESG),

thereby restricting access to equity capital to fund MOVE’s

growth strategy.

None noted.Reduced

capital

available.

None noted.SSP1-1.9

SSP2-4.5

TR5.Policy and Legal Risk that MOVE is unable to source low/zero carbon

technology and results in delayed adoption, which in turn

presents regulatory risk arising from their inability to comply

with low carbon regulations, due to New Zealand logistics

companies’ relatively small scale and unique technical

specifications.

None noted.Increased

capital costs.

None noted.SSP1-1.9

SSP2-4.5

Key – Risk Rating

■ Extreme

■ High

■ Moderate

■ Low

Scenario Reference

SSP1-1.9: Orderly – SSP1-1.9 (NIWA downscaled 1.9)

SSP2-4.5: Disorderly – SSP2-4.5 (NIWA downscaled 4.5)

13
CLIMATE RELATED DISCLOSURES 2025

The following table sets out the material opportunities for FY25:

Key – Timeframes

ST - Short-term (now-2030)

MT - Medium-term (2031-2050)

LT - Long-term (2051-2080)

Opportunity

ID

Opportunity TypeOpportunity DescriptionCurrent ImpactsAnticipated ImpactsScenarioTimeframe

ST | MT | LT

TO1MarketsMOVE’s decision to decarbonise opens avenues to

government subsidies, co-funding opportunities and grants

relating to decarbonisation.

None noted.Increased funding. SSP1-1.9

SSP2-4.5

TO2Resource efficiencyAdvanced technologies for route planning enhances

MOVE’s operational efficiency and lowers its running costs,

over time.

None noted.Increased

productivity and

reduced operating

costs.

SSP1-1.9

SSP2-4.5

TO3MarketsHydrogen powered logistics creates a differentiator for

MOVE through offsetting or carbon credit generation

through fleet decarbonisation.

None noted.Increased revenue. SSP1-1.9

SSP2-4.5

TO4Energy SourceInstallation of onsite generating capacity can shield MOVE

from rising energy costs and provide the ability to electrify

fleet.

None noted.Increased security of

energy supply.

SSP1-1.9

SSP2-4.5

TO5Resource efficiencyInstallation of rooftop PV can enhance operating efficiency

and reduce energy-related costs.

None noted.Decreased energy-

related costs.

SSP1-1.9

SSP2-4.5

Key – Risk Rating

■ Extreme

■ High

■ Moderate

■ Low

Scenario Reference

SSP1-1.9: Orderly – SSP1-1.9 (NIWA downscaled 1.9)

SSP2-4.5: Disorderly – SSP2-4.5 (NIWA downscaled 4.5)

SSP5-8.5: Hot house world – SSP5-8.5 (NIWA downscaled 8.5)

14
CLIMATE RELATED DISCLOSURES 2025

Physical risks

We assessed physical risks over three-time horizons: Short-term (now to 2030), Medium-term (2031-2050) and Long-term (2051-2080). We adopted these time horizons to

align with our strategic planning horizons and asset design life and renewal cycles.

Key – Timeframes

ST - Short-term (now-2030)

MT - Medium-term (2031-2050)

LT - Long-term (2051-2080)

Climate HazardCurrent ImpactsRisk

ID

Risk Type / Future ImpactRelated Transition

Planning Initiatives

ScenarioTimeframe

ST | MT | LT

Increasing

incidence and

severity of extreme

weather events

Within the reporting

period, MOVE did

not experience any

disruption because of

severe weather events.

PR1 Risk of increased investment costs relating to relatively

higher cost of low/zero carbon fuel technology.

None noted.SSP1-1.9

SSP2-4.5

SSP5-8.5

PR2Disruption to customer productivity for key products (ex:

crop / harvest loss), presenting a risk to customer base

(due to increasing number of customer bankruptcies).

None noted.SSP1-1.9

SSP2-4.5

SSP5-8.5

PR3Delays in fuel delivery, presenting a risk of reduced road

freight productivity.

Training our drivers to

enhance fuel efficiency

(through utilisation of our

eRoad platform).

SSP1-1.9

SSP2-4.5

SSP5-8.5

PR5Reduced weather windows for oversized transport deliveries

resulting in customer complaints or customer losses.

None noted.SSP1-1.9

SSP2-4.5

SSP5-8.5

PR8Increased transit times, causing procurement delays. This

presents a revenue risk linked to MOVE’s ability to secure

fleet.

None noted.SSP1-1.9

SSP2-4.5

SSP5-8.5

PR10Excessive flooding and high winds, reducing access to sites,

presenting a risk of delivery delays and revenue loss (due to

contract penalties and/or eroded customer base).

None noted.SSP1-1.9

SSP2-4.5

SSP5-8.5

Key – Risk Rating

■ Extreme

■ High

■ Moderate

■ Low

Scenario Reference

SSP1-1.9: Orderly – SSP1-1.9 (NIWA downscaled 1.9)

SSP2-4.5: Disorderly – SSP2-4.5 (NIWA downscaled 4.5)

SSP5-8.5: Hot house world – SSP5-8.5 (NIWA downscaled 8.5)

15
CLIMATE RELATED DISCLOSURES 2025

Climate HazardCurrent ImpactsRisk

ID

Risk Type / Future ImpactRelated Transition

Planning Initiatives

ScenarioTimeframe

ST | MT | LT

Increasing number

of hot days

We have not observed

any material impacts of

hot days on our assets,

operations or people.

PR4 Increasing frequency of safe working temperatures being

exceeded, presenting a risk of service disruptions (due to

forced / temperature-related shutdown) (warehousing,

office buildings, freight branches and sea freight).

None noted.SSP1-1.9

SSP2-4.5

SSP5-8.5

PR6Higher working temperatures, presenting a risk of increased

driver fatigue and stress.

None noted.SSP1-1.9

SSP2-4.5

SSP5-8.5

PR7Risk of increased asset investment requirements

related to design specifications to accommodate the

higher temperature profile (i.e. temperature-controlled

transportation units).

None noted.SSP1-1.9

SSP2-4.5

SSP5-8.5

Increasing

frequency and

intensity of pluvial

flooding

The East Coast floods

and Tasman floods

caused disruption to

road freight routes (and

customers) but did not

result in any material

adverse impacts on our

assets, operations or

people.

PR9Reduces access to sites, presenting a risk of revenue loss.None noted.SSP1-1.9

SSP2-4.5

SSP5-8.5

16
CLIMATE RELATED DISCLOSURES 2025

Physical opportunities

We have identified several opportunities that might arise from the physical impacts of climate change. While these opportunities are expected to present in the short- to

medium-term we are yet to determine the likely timeframe for each opportunity and assess the potential financial impact to MOVE. We have not observed any significant

impact from these opportunities in the current reporting period.

Key – Timeframes

ST - Short-term (now-2030)

MT - Medium-term (2031-2050)

LT - Long-term (2051-2080)

Climate

Hazard

Opportunity

ID

Opportunity Description Current ImpactsAnticipated ImpactsScenarioTimeframe

ST | MT | LT

Extreme

weather

PO1MOVE Oceans offers an alternative to impacted road freight

services and routes.

No current impacts.Increased revenue and

increased share of the

logistics market.

SSP1-1.9

SSP2-4.5

SSP5-8.5

Extreme

weather

PO2MOVE has a natural competitive advantage owing to its

specialist and diverse fleet, that sets it ahead of the market

when physical impacts begin to impact freight.

No current impacts.Increased revenue.SSP1-1.9

SSP2-4.5

SSP5-8.5

AllPO3Increased demand from the energy sector for increased

capacity (i.e., major utility projects) results in an increase in

specialist freight services.

No current impacts.Increased specialist

freight service revenue.

SSP1-1.9

SSP2-4.5

SSP5-8.5

AllPO4Additional planned contingency routes as a response to

disruption caused by climate events, presents an opportunity to

support drivers and reduce down-time, stress, and productivity

loss.

No current impacts.Improved employee

wellbeing.

SSP1-1.9

SSP2-4.5

SSP5-8.5

AllPO5Increased engagement with our customers as a result of

climate change will facilitate improved contract management.

No current impacts.Improved relationships

with customers.

SSP1-1.9

SSP2-4.5

SSP5-8.5


Key – Risk Rating

■ Extreme

■ High

■ Moderate

■ Low

Scenario Reference

SSP1-1.9: Orderly – SSP1-1.9 (NIWA downscaled 1.9)

SSP2-4.5: Disorderly – SSP2-4.5 (NIWA downscaled 4.5)

SSP5-8.5: Hot house world – SSP5-8.5 (NIWA downscaled 8.5)

17
CLIMATE RELATED DISCLOSURES 2025

Climate-related risks and opportunities input into capital deployment and

funding decision-making

We have not yet implemented a standardised approach to considering climate-

related risks and opportunities in our capital deployment and funding decision

making processes.

Although there is no standardised method for integrating climate-related risks

and opportunities into our capital deployment processes, sustainability factors are

considered during capital expenditure proposal assessments.

Progress towards transition planning

We operate in a sector that is currently highly dependent on fossil fuels. We

therefore have a role to play in developing a solution for transitioning to a low

emissions future. While we haven’t yet developed our transition plan, we are

committed to reducing emissions where we can. This includes modernising our

fleet; improving energy efficiency; training our drivers to enhance safety and

fuel efficiency (through utilisation of our eRoad platform); optimising routes and

networks to improve fuel efficiency; and offering multi-modal freight solutions

(road, rail and sea freight) that are lower carbon intensity than road freight; and

transitioning our fleet to hydrogen and/or electric trucks.

Our multi-modal freight solutions will also improve resilience in the face of climate

hazards such as extreme weather, flooding, and landslides, as sea freight is less

vulnerable to disruption than road freight.

We review our fleet strategy on an on-going basis to determine the commercial

availability and viability of electric and hydrogen fleet, and the infrastructure

readiness to support this transition. In the interim, we are focused on fuel efficiency

measures and interventions to reduce fuel burn, emissions and costs. In this

regard, from a cost optimisation perspective, our transition risk management

strategy is aligned with our internal capital deployment and funding decision-

making process.

18
CLIMATE RELATED DISCLOSURES 2025

RISK MANAGEMENT

Risk management framework

Our risk management framework provides MOVE’s Board and Management

with a clear understanding of how strategic and operational risk is managed

across the organisation. It sets out the high-level approach to each stage of risk

management.

MOVE’s risk management framework is set out below:

Risk Management Value Chain

Risk management is undertaken within the context of MOVE’s strategic business

objectives and core processes, including the operating environment, strategy and

business plan, business-as-usual operations, and material projects.

Identification and assessment

Risks are identified, using a variety of methods including, but not limited to, past

experience, trends, and scenario analysis.

To identify climate-related risks, a first-pass Organisational Climate Change Risk

Assessment (OCCRA) process was undertaken in the financial reporting period

ended 30 June 2023 and the climate risk register has been reviewed and updated

on an annual basis since then. External consultants are engaged to facilitate

workshops which support the Group to agree or revise the scope and boundaries

of the risk assessment including the strategic time horizons to test against; and

work with subject matter experts (SMEs) from within the business to identify,

assess and confirm specific physical risks (acute and chronic) and transition risks

(associating with transitioning to a low carbon and climate resilient economy).

When conducting our annual review of our climate risks and opportunities

assessment, MOVE’s Executive Leadership Team and SME’s applied refreshed

scenario narratives, that reflect key updates to global and downscaled climate

data sets, as well as geopolitical shifts that are likely to influence global warming

trajectories (see Strategy section).

Our non-climate-related risk assessment assesses consequence and likelihood

to derive a risk rating. MOVE uses a five-point scale for both consequence and

likelihood, the combination of which results in a risk rating of Low, Medium, High, or

Very High (see diagram).

Risk Assessment Matrix

Risk Matrix

Severity

InsignificantMinorModerateMajorSevere

Likelihood

Almost

Certain

Med (5)Med (10)High (15)Very High (20)Very High (25)

Likely

Low (4)Med (8)High (12)High (16)Very High (20)

Possible

Low (3)Med (6)Med (9)High (12)High (15)

Unlikely

Low (2)Low (4)Med (6)Med (8)Med (10)

Rare

Low (1)Low (2)Low (3)Low (4)Med (5)

Our physical climate risk assessment, by contrast, assessed exposure, sensitivity,

and adaptive capacity across three-time horizons, under three global warming

scenarios. Transition risks were assessed using time bound urgency ratings and

impact ratings.

Materiality thresholds derived from MOVE’s enterprise severity consequence table

were applied to inform the ratings given to both physical and transition risks.

B

E

T

T

E

R

,


S

T

R

O

N

G

E

R


B

U

S

I

N

E

S

S

Communication and Reporting

Feedback

Establish

Business

Context

Risk

Identification

Risk

Assessment

Risk

Management

Risk

Monitoring

19
CLIMATE RELATED DISCLOSURES 2025

Risk management

Risk management and mitigation strategies vary, based on the risk rating, and

significant risks (including climate-related) that are rated 'Major' or 'Severe' are

required to have a risk treatment plan in place.

Risks are monitored by the risk owners, who are responsible for reviewing the risks

and controls on a regular basis.

The RAAC receives and reviews reports on significant risks from management bi-

annually, including the risk register, the profile of significant risks and, if required,

supplementary information on issues and events.

Physical risk assessment

MOVE’s physical climate change risk assessment approach aligns with the

ISO14091 climate risk methodology and the Ministry for the Environment’s National

Climate Change Risk Assessment (NCCRA) process and framework.

Physical risks were considered at three-time horizons (2030, 2050, and 2080). The

decision to adopt these time horizons was informed by a sector review of climate

disclosures to align with MOVE’s peers; the design life of MOVE’s fixed and mobile

assets; asset renewal cycles; and MOVE’s long-term, strategic planning horizons.

MOVE’s SMEs identified physical risks that could impact three key areas: our

people; our assets; and our operations.

SMEs identified risks arising as a result of each climate hazard, by risk area and risk

receptor (the person, asset or operation impacted by the hazard). The risks were

categorised by type, and a risk statement, describing the impact of the risk on the

receptor, was drafted.

The physical risk score was calculated on the basis of the exposure, sensitivity,

and adaptive capacity, with the latter two scores giving an overall vulnerability

score. An aggregated climate score was determined for each risk under each of

the three scenarios, informed by our internal consequence table and guided by

downscaled NIWA climate hazard data provided for RCP2.6, RCP 4.5 and RCP 8.5 at

future time horizons.

The methodology for calculating the risk score is set out below. The three climate

risk components (exposure, sensitivity, and adaptive capacity) are rated on a

scale of 1 to 5, and the resulting climate risk score is used to prioritise the physical

risks. The following diagram sets out the approach to calculating the physical

climate risk score:

Transition risk assessment

To understand the transition risk profile, we identified risks against a 1.5-degree

scenario. Accordingly, the transition risks identified reflect the level of transition

risk that this scenario presents for MOVE. Transition risks were identified, then

categorised as Policy and Legal, Technology, Market, and Reputation risks, and

assessed using an urgency and time-to-impact scale over a 30-year time

horizon. Within this timeframe the short-term is 5 years into the future, medium-

term is 5-15 years, and long-term is 15-30 years.

In the current year, transition risk statements and ratings were assessed and

amended, with an impact assessment rating added to supplement the time-

bound urgency rating.

Oversight of climate-related risks

The results of the physical and transition risk assessments and refresh were

presented to the Board for review and feedback. The Board reviewed, discussed,

and approved the risks and opportunities identified.

The degree to which the Risk Receptor is

impacted, either adversely or beneficially, by

the climate hazard. It may be highly exposed

but the impact on business continuity is low;

or it may have moderate exposure, but the

impact on business continuity is high.

Climate Risk

Vulnerability

Sensibility

Adaptive

Capacity

The relative ease, speed and

cost with which the Risk Receptor

can adjust to potential damage,

take advantage of opportunities,

or respond to the consequence.

The degree to which the

Risk Receptor is exposed to

or placed in contact with

the climate hazard.

Exposure

20
CLIMATE RELATED DISCLOSURES 2025

Boundaries of risk assessment

The value chain considered in MOVE’s risk assessment was limited to one

tier upstream and one tier downstream. This is included within Appendix 1 for

reference.

Frequency of assessment

MOVE has committed to undertaking a full climate risk assessment review at least

every three years, with an annual review of the risk register when possible.

Between these reviews, the significant risks, as noted on the enterprise risk register,

will be reviewed and updated as required, as part of MOVE’s enterprise risk

management processes.

21
CLIMATE RELATED DISCLOSURES 2025

Metrics and targets

Greenhouse Gas Emissions (‘GHG’)

ISO CategoryGHG Protocol CategoryFY22 tCO

2e

(Base year)

FY23 tCO

2e

FY24 tCO

2e

FY25 tCO

2e

Change compared

with base year

Category 1Scope 148,361.8441,939.1435,064.9133,005.05(15,356.79)

Total direct emissions48,361.8441,939.1435,064.9133,005.05(15,356.79)

Category 2Scope 2 (location-based)592.20514.85261.57298.77(293.43)

Category 3

Scope 3

1,110.171,210.68984.22687.68(422.49)

Category 455,856.7452,867.4244,785.7244,374.48(11,482.26)

Category 5049.5952.0254.6054.60

Total indirect emissions57,559.1154,642.5446,083.5345,415.53(12,143.58)

Total emissions105,920.9596,581.6881,148.4478,420.58(27,500.37)

Emissions intensity metrics

FTE (gross tCO

2e

/ persons)79.8884.5783.9294.2614.38

Operating Revenue (gross tCO

2e

/ $ Millions)290.99277.77269.97271.63(19.36)

Our GHG emissions inventory has been measured in accordance with ISO 14064-

1:2018 Specification with Guidance at the Organization Level for Qualification and

Reporting of Greenhouse Gas Emissions and Removals (‘ISO 14064:2018’).

The emission sources deemed significant for inclusion in this inventory were

classified into the following categories:

• Direct GHG emissions (Category 1): GHG emissions from sources that are

owned or controlled by the company.

• Indirect GHG emissions (Category 2): GHG emissions from the generation of

electricity, heat and steam purchased by the company.

• Indirect GHG emissions (Categories 3-6): GHG emissions that occur through

the activities of the company but are generated by sources not owned or

controlled by the company.

The following emission sources have been excluded:

• Category 3: Employees working from home. Estimated impact is immaterial.

• Category 4: Recycling. Weight data not available for: Document destruction

services; MOVE Freight sites of Invercargill, Whanganui, Masterton, Hamilton;

and MOVE Specialist paper recycling.

MOVE utilises the ‘operational control’ consolidation method for our emissions

inventory. Organisational boundaries have been set with reference to the

methodology prescribed in the GHG protocol and ISO 14064-1:2018 standards. This

approach considers all emissions from entities over which MOVE exercises a level

of operational control whereby we have complete authority to introduce and

implement operating policies.

22
CLIMATE RELATED DISCLOSURES 2025

The entities included in this emissions inventory include:

• MOVE Logistics Group Limited

• MOVE Investments Limited

• MOVE Fuel Limited

• MOVE Freight Limited

• MOVE Logistics & Warehousing Limited

• Southern Fleet Leasing Limited

• MOVE Specialist Lifting and Transport Limited

• Pacific Asset Leasing Limited

• MOVE Oceans Singapore Pte Limited

• MOVE Oceans Limited

• MOVE International Limited

• Alpha Customs Services Limited

• TNL International Limited

All physical sites of these companies, business units, and facilities were considered

and included in the inventory. MOVE Oceans Limited was previously excluded

and reported as a non-operating entity in the prior period, however it is now in

operation and its emissions are included within inventory for the current period.

We have excluded the following subsidiary companies from our Group GHG

inventory as they are non-operating:

• Global Logistics Group Limited (amalgamated June 2022)

• Appian Transport Limited

• MOVE Liquid Logistics Limited

In addition, the following entities are not included within our organisational

boundary for reporting as operational control does not exist. These subsidiaries

operate independently of our business and use their own accounting systems for

financials. This includes the entity:

• TNL International (Australia) Pty Limited

Our emissions inventory was quantified using the standard calculation

methodology:

Emissions = activity data x emissions factor

All emissions are calculated using the Diligent ESG system. The emissions factors

and global warming potential (‘GWP’) rates in Diligent ESG are based on the

Ministry for Environment’s “Measuring emissions guide 2025”. Global Warming

Potentials (GWP) from the IPCC fifth assessment report (AR5) are the preferred

GWP conversion. Where applicable, unit conversions applied when processing the

activity data has been disclosed.

More details about our GHG inventory, including methods, assumptions and

estimation uncertainty, can be found in our detailed GHG Inventory report, which is

available on our website: Sustainability.

Vulnerability to transition risks

To date, our risk assessment has been undertaken on a qualitative basis and

consequently we are not able to accurately quantify the percentage of assets or

business activities that are vulnerable to transition risks.

Our business model, and the transport sector more broadly, is currently reliant on

fossil fuels and is therefore particularly vulnerable to transition risks associated

with regulation; the commercial availability and cost of zero emissions technology

such as hydrogen trucks; the lack of sufficient infrastructure to support 100% zero

emission fleet; policy uncertainty; and lack of demand from customers for zero

carbon freight logistics.

The majority of our moveable assets (truck and light vehicle fleet, tankers, specialist

and lifting transport, and ocean multi-purpose vessels) are powered by fossil fuels

and are therefore vulnerable to transition risks associated with asset stranding

driven by the availability of lower carbon technologies, and rising fuel costs.

Vulnerability to physical risks

Our warehouse machinery and equipment comprise predominately of moveable

assets (i.e. forklifts) and, from our high-level assessment, we have determined the

vulnerability of these assets to physical risks to be immaterial.

23
CLIMATE RELATED DISCLOSURES 2025

Our network of leased warehouses (right-of-use assets) spans 39 locations

around New Zealand. Through our qualitative climate risk assessment, we have

determined the vulnerability of our warehouse network to be immaterial on the

grounds of historical evidence, our geographical dispersion and the leased nature

of our properties. Although New Zealand has experienced extreme weather events

in the current reporting period, such as the Tasman Floods in June 2025, MOVE has

not experienced any disruptions to our business operations as a result.

In relation to business activities, we function across the length of New Zealand,

and across the Tasman, shipping to four ports in Australia. This broad coverage

diminishes the vulnerability of our business activities to acute climate events

as the network can be dynamic and respond to disruptions by working out of

different regions as needed. When network disruption does occur, the impacts are

primarily on service levels as costs relating to re-routing are generally passed on

to our customers.

Alignment with climate-related opportunities

Our approach to harnessing climate-related opportunities has, to date, focused

on the optimisation of routes, efficiency of our fleet and growth of our ocean

logistics and rail business.

Our fleet management platform, eRoad, gives MOVE the ability to develop

climate-related metrics and targets. We intend to utilise the platform in the future

in developing these metrics and targets.

We have identified a strategic opportunity in growing our Oceans logistics fleet

to mitigate road haulage delays and win new business that we anticipate from

climate-related disruptions to road and rail logistics.

We currently manage these activities as part of our business-as-usual operations

and there are no specific metrics in the current reporting period. We intend to

develop metrics that will provide insight into the alignment of our activities with

climate-related opportunities.

Capital deployed towards climate-related risks and opportunities

During FY25, we did not make any material investments in initiatives that either

addressed climate-related risks, or harnessed climate-related opportunities.

Despite no material investments having been made, we leveraged the eRoad

platform to analyse our fleets’ fuel economy, allowing for process improvements

for optimised efficiency.

Internal emissions price

We do not currently use an internal emissions price and did not progress with

developing one in the current reporting period.

Remuneration linked to climate-related risks and opportunities

Our employee remuneration scheme does not currently include any

performance-related incentives, and there is no management remuneration

linked to sustainability nor to management of climate-related risks or

opportunities.

Industry based metrics

We have introduced industry-based metrics this year to support accurate and

comparative emissions reporting, and management of climate-related risks and

opportunities. This includes beginning to track vehicle utilisation rates, idle time

and fuel burn rates.

24
CLIMATE RELATED DISCLOSURES 2025

GHG Targets

MOVE Logistics’ emissions reduction targets are set out in the table below. We established these targets in 2022, as part of our commitment to a lower carbon future. Our

GHG emissions reduction targets for all scopes are aligned with limiting warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius. We are targeting a 42% reduction in absolute emissions from Scope

1 and 2, and 42% reduction in absolute emissions from Scope 3 both from a FY22 baseline. We have not set any interim targets. Our targets do not rely on us offsetting any

emissions.

Emissions

Scope & Category

2022 Baseline

tCO2e

Timeframe

for Target

tCO2e – 2030

2025

Performance

tCO2e

% Overall

reduction

from Base

year

Performance against target (comments)

Total Scope 148,36228,05035,005(27.6)%

Total scope 1 emissions have decreased ahead of plan due to lower activity

levels as a result of reduced economic activity in New Zealand. Fleet

utilisation optimisation and a shift to an asset lite has been a focus which

includes the use of alternative modes of transport e.g. rail.

Total Scope 2 – Location based592344299(49.5)%Reduction due to rationalisation of locations.

Total Scope 356,96733,04145,117(20.8)%

Year on year emissions have reduced a further 1.7% as we focussed on

reducing opex and capex. This was offset by the impact of the continued

shift to an asset lite model and increased use of subcontractors.

25
CLIMATE RELATED DISCLOSURES 2025

Appendix 1 – Value chain map

Our value chain map indicating the scope of our climate risk assessment is included below.

• Vehicle procurement

• Port authorities

• Fuel suppliers

• Electricity providers

• NZTA and Local councils (roading

infrastructure)

• National infrastructure bodies

(electric and hydrogen)

• Government agencies, i.e. Worksafe

• Kiwi rail

• Ferry operators

• Landlords

• Insurance provider(s)

• Banks/lender

• Investors and shareholders

• Regulators

STAKEHOLDERSCORE OPERATIONSSTAKEHOLDERS

Road freight, Rail freight, Ocean freight,

Warehousing, Freight forwarding

• Employees

• Contractors

• Owner-drivers

• Board of Directors

Key customers:

• Aqua-culture (salmon and mussels)

• Horticulture (kiwifruit, hops supply)

• Food grade packaging

• Fuel (Z Energy)

• Power generation

• Timber/forestry

• Beverage industry

1 TIER UPSTREAM 1 TIER DOWNSTREAM

26
Opportune

Independent Assurance Report on the Greenhouse Gas (GHG)

Disclosures in the Climate Statement

To MOVE Logistics Group Limited

Scope of our engagement

We have undertaken a reasonable assurance engagement in relation to Category 1 and

Category 2 emissions and limited assurance in relation to Category 3 to Category 6

emissions, for GHG Disclosures in the Climate Statement as required by Part 461ZH of the

Financial Markets Conduct Act 2013, for MOVE Logistics Group Limited (MOVE), for the

year ended 30 June 2025.

GHG Disclosures Reference page

Greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions: gross emissions in metric tonnes of

carbon dioxide equivalent (CO2e) classified as:

•category 1;

•category 2 (calculated using the location-based method);


category 3 to 6

21

Additional requirements for the disclosure of GHG emissions 21-22

GHG emissions methods, assumptions and estimation uncertainty 21-22

Our assurance engagement does not extend to any other information included, or

referred to, in the Climate Statement on pages 1 to 20 and 23 to 25. We have not

performed any procedures with respect to the excluded information and, therefore, no

conclusion is expressed on it.

Our conclusion

Reasonable assurance opinion

In our opinion, MOVE’s Category 1 and Category 2 GHG Disclosures within the scope of

our reasonable assurance engagement for the year ended 30 June 2025 are fairly

presented and prepared, in all material respects, in accordance with the Aotearoa New

Zealand Climate Standards (NZ CSs) issued by the External Reporting Board (XRB).

Limited assurance conclusion

Based on the procedures we have performed and the evidence we have obtained, nothing

has come to our attention that causes us to believe that MOVE’s Category 3 to Category 6

GHG Disclosures within the scope of our limited assurance engagement for the year ended

30 June 2025 are not fairly presented and are not prepared, in all material respects, in

accordance with the Aotearoa New Zealand Climate Standards (NZ CSs) issued by the

External Reporting Board (XRB).

Other matter – comparative information

The comparative GHG emissions information for the year ended 30 June 2022 and 30 June

2023 was audited by another practitioner at that time and is not covered by our assurance

conclusion.

Opportune assured in the previous year the comparative information for the year ended

30 June 2024.

Responsibility of MOVE Logistics Group Limited

The Directors of MOVE Logistics Group Limited are responsible for the preparation and

fair presentation of the GHG Disclosures in accordance with NZ CSs. This responsibility

includes the design, implementation and maintenance of internal control relevant to the

preparation of GHG Disclosures that are free from material misstatement, whether due to

fraud or error.

Inherent Uncertainty

GHG emissions quantification is subject to inherent uncertainty because of incomplete

scientific knowledge about the measurement of GHGs as well as the measurement

uncertainty used to quantify emissions within the bounds of existing scientific knowledge.

Our Responsibility

Our responsibility is to express a conclusion on the GHG Disclosures based on the

procedures we have performed and the evidence we have obtained. We have conducted

our engagement in accordance with New Zealand Standard on Assurance Engagements 1:

Assurance Engagements over Greenhouse Gas Emissions Disclosures (NZ SAE 1) and the

International Standard on Assurance Engagements (New Zealand) 3410, (ISAE (NZ) 3410):

Assurance Engagements on Greenhouse Gas Statements, issued by the XRB. These

standards require that we plan and perform this engagement to obtain limited assurance

about whether the GHG Disclosures are free from material misstatement in accordance

with NZ CSs.

We are not permitted to be involved in the preparation of the GHG information as doing

so may compromise our independence.

27
Opportune

Summary of work performed

Reasonable assurance

Our reasonable assurance engagement was performed in accordance with NZ SAE 1 and

ISAE (NZ) 3410. This involves performing procedures to obtain evidence about the

quantification of emissions and related information in the Category 1 and 2 GHG

Disclosures.

The nature, timing and extent of procedures selected depend on the assurance

practitioner’s judgement, including the assessment of the risks of material misstatement,

whether due to fraud or error, and the consideration of internal controls, in the Category

1 and 2 GHG Disclosures.

A reasonable assurance engagement also includes:

•Assessing the suitability in the circumstances of MOVE’s use of NZ CSs, as the basis

for preparing the Category 1 and 2 GHG Disclosures;

•Evaluating the appropriateness of quantification methods used, and the

reasonableness of estimates made by MOVE; and

•Evaluating the overall presentation of the Category 1 and 2 GHG Disclosures.

We believe that the evidence we have obtained is sufficient and appropriate to provide a

basis for our opinion.

Limited assurance

Our limited assurance engagement involved assessing the risks of material misstatement

whether due to fraud or error, responding to the assessed risks as necessary in the

circumstances, and evaluating the overall presentation of the Category 3 to 6 GHG

Disclosures.

The procedures we performed were based on our professional judgement and included

enquiries, observation of processes performed, inspection of documents, analytical

procedures, evaluating the appropriateness of quantification methods and reporting

policies, and agreeing or reconciling with underlying records. In undertaking our limited

assurance engagement on the Category 3 to 6 GHG Disclosures, we:

-Assessed the MOVE Category 3 to 6 GHG Disclosures organisational boundary and

operational boundary;

-Through enquiries, obtained an understanding of the control environment relevant

to Category 3 to 6 emissions quantification and reporting;

-Assessed the completeness of Category 3 to 6 emissions through enquiries and

analysis of supporting documents;

-Evaluated whether the Category 3 to 6 emissions measurement methods, including

estimates, had been consistently applied;

-Tested a limited number of items to, or from, supporting records, as appropriate;

-Assessed a limited number of emission factor sources and reperformed a limited

number of emissions calculations for mathematical accuracy;

-Assessed the presentation and disclosure of the Category 3 to 6 GHG Disclosures

The procedures performed in a limited assurance engagement vary in nature and timing

from, and are less in extent than for, a reasonable assurance engagement. Consequently,

the level of assurance obtained in a limited assurance engagement is substantially lower

than the assurance that would have been obtained had a reasonable assurance

engagement been performed.

Our Independence and Quality Management

We have complied with the independence and other ethical requirements of Professional

and Ethical Standard 1: Code of Ethics for Assurance Practitioners issued by the New

Zealand Auditing and Assurance Standards Board, which is founded on fundamental

principles of integrity, objectivity, professional competence and due care, confidentiality

and professional behaviour.

Our firm does not perform any other non-audit services for MOVE.

The firm applies Professional and Ethical Standard 3: Quality Management for Firms that

Perform Audits or Reviews of Financial Statements, or Other Assurance Engagements

issued by the New Zealand Auditing and Assurance Standards Board, and accordingly

maintains a comprehensive system of quality management including documented policies

and procedures regarding compliance with ethical requirements, professional standards

and applicable legal and regulatory requirements.

Use of Report

Our assurance report is made solely to MOVE in accordance with the terms of our

engagement. Our work has been undertaken so that we might state to MOVE those

matters we have been engaged to state in this assurance report and for no other purpose.

To the fullest extent permitted by law, we do not accept or assume responsibility to

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anyone other than MOVE for our work, for this assurance report, or for the conclusions

we have reached.

Andrew Douglas

16 October 2025

Director

Opportune

New Zealand

Data sourced from publicly available filings. Our datasets may not be complete. Automated analysis can produce errors. If you believe any data on this page is incorrect, please contact us at hello@nzxplorer.co.nz. For informational purposes only. Not investment advice.

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