Table › Companies › Mosenergo PJSC
🔥 Mosenergo PJSC ranks #48 because its tracked power plants burn fossil fuels at scale.
Mosenergo PJSC, based in Russian Federation, generates electricity and heat, largely by burning fossil fuels. Climate TRACE attributes 6 high-emitting assets to it. Its largest tracked activities are electricity generation.
See the proof
Power plants & sites behind it6 attributed assets · ownership split equally across listed owners
| Asset | Sector | Ownership | Attributed | Conf. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| CHP-26 (Mosenergo) power station | Power | 7.5 Mt | very low | |
| Moscow CHP-22 power station | Power | 6.2 Mt | very low | |
| CHP-21 (Mosenergo) power station | Power | 5.6 Mt | very low | |
| CHP-20 (Mosenergo) power station | Power | 4.6 Mt | very low | |
| CHP-23 (Mosenergo) power station | Power | 4.3 Mt | very low | |
| CHP-25 (Mosenergo) power station | Power | 3.6 Mt | very low |
Who profits
Hand-curated shareholder, revenue and investor context from primary public sources. This data is shown alongside — but is not used to compute — the Climate Damage Score.
About this data. Institutional investors like BlackRock, Vanguard and State Street typically hold shares on behalf of clients — appearing in shareholder records does not mean they control or direct the company. State entities and individuals with majority stakes are different and labelled accordingly.
Emissions intensity
Above the curated-sample median (2.02 Mt/$bn) — more emissions per dollar of revenue than the typical large emitter we have data for.
Top shareholders & investors
- Gazprom Energoholding (Gazprom subsidiary, state-controlled)53.5%state
- City of Moscow (Department of City Property)26.5%state
- Public free float (Moscow Exchange)20%public
Source: primary public filings via Wikipedia. Stakes can change; see filings for the latest.
Main electricity and heat supplier for the Moscow region. Controlled by Gazprom (majority state-owned) with a substantial Moscow city government stake.
How it's allowed
Signals below are derived from emissions data and ownership coverage only — not from any legal or regulatory finding.
Climate Villains makes no claim that any entity has broken any law. These are data-derived signals, not allegations.
Trend
Attributed emissions are falling by about +2.7% per year. Attributed emissions, 2022–2024.
It ranks #48 mainly because its attributed assets emitted about 31.8 Mt CO₂e in 2024 (≈ 6.9M cars/yr).
The Climate Damage Score is driven by that absolute size on a log scale, with a -0.3-point improving adjustment.
Score breakdown
See the full methodology for how the score is built, or data & coverage for how complete the underlying numbers are.
What we know · what we don't
What we know
- Attributed emissions: 31.8 Mt CO₂e in 2024 (≈ 6.9M cars/yr).
- Primary sector: Power; primary country: Russian Federation.
- Evidence: 6 assets; ~100% ownership-attribution coverage.
- Source: Climate TRACE (CC BY 4.0).
What we don’t
- Exact ownership percentages — Climate TRACE lists owners but not stakes, so shared assets are split equally.
- Indirect (supply-chain / financed / product-use) emissions are not included.
- No PR claims, lobbying records, litigation history or policy-compliance data are included.