By Ron Bousso and Shadia Nasralla

LONDON (Reuters) – Royal Dutch Shell’s <RDSa.L> chief executive took aim beyond the energy sector to call on leaders of other industries including aviation, shipping and steel to jointly draw up plans to tackle greenhouse gas emissions.

Ben van Beurden also warned on Wednesday that energy companies that do not collaborate in the fight against climate change under the 2015 Paris agreement risk going out of business.

“Climate change is the biggest challenge facing the energy industry, but the energy industry isn’t the biggest challenge for the world trying to tackle climate change,” van Beurden told the Oil & Money conference.

“All sectors need to figure out pathways to net zero emissions.”

Oil and gas companies have come under huge public and investor pressure in recent years to reduce carbon emissions from their operations and the products they sell.

For a graphic on Oil Majors' Carbon emissions, click https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/gfx/editorcharts/OIL-CARBON/0H001QX928M7/eikon.png

But van Beurden said that to reach the Paris climate goals for “net zero” emissions by the end of the century, governments and industries need to transform demand.

Government-set taxes on carbon emissions will not be enough to turn the tide and coordinated action from industries to improve efficiency and reduce emissions is essential, he said.

“If this type of sector-by-sector action does not happen, the world will fail to meet the goals of the Paris agreement.”

Shell, the world’s second-largest listed energy company, has recently taken part in a joint effort with the Danish government, AP Moeller Maersk <MAERSKb.CO>, the world’s largest shipper, and Citigroup <C.N> bank, to come up with ways to develop a system to offset emissions from commercial ships, van Beurden said.

“Energy companies which do not play a full role in such in such collaborations and that do not evolve will fall behind society. They will fall by the wayside,” van Beurden said.

(Reporting by Ron Bousso; Editing by Kim Coghill)