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Demand for low-quality credits undermines the voluntary carbon market

August 20, 2024
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Are carbon reduction claims accurate?
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Kyoto, Japan — Claims by large corporations of carbon reduction — or even carbon neutrality — may not hold up under close inspection.

Are carbon reduction claims accurate?

Credit: KyotoU (adapted from flickr/mrhayata)

Kyoto, Japan — Claims by large corporations of carbon reduction — or even carbon neutrality — may not hold up under close inspection.

In a new Nature Communications study, researchers at Kyoto University have shown that the 20 companies retiring the most offsets from the voluntary carbon market — or VCM — over the past four years have largely relied on low-quality, low-cost credits. These include major oil companies, airlines and aircraft makers, automotive manufacturers, logistics operators, and others.

“Concerns are growing that many projects supplying carbon credits on the VCM are of low quality and fail to achieve the emissions reductions claimed by their developers,” says lead author Gregory Trencher of KyotoU’s Graduate School of Global Environmental Studies. The companies studied collectively account for more than one-fifth of all offsets retired from the world’s offset registries.

The research is based on an original, publicly available dataset that tracks offset retirements made between 2020 and 2023, encompassing the largest three offset registries in the VCM: Verra’s Verified Carbon Standard, the United Nation’s Clean Development Mechanism, and Gold Standard. The collaborative study includes co-authors at EPFL in Switzerland and the University of Hamburg.

The team’s analysis reveals that none of the 20 companies could claim that a substantial portion of their retired offsets met well-known quality standards on the VCM. The study also found that many companies deliberately targeted cheap offsets, most of which come from projects implemented a decade or more ago. This indicates that most company spending on offsetting has failed to drive new investments in climate mitigation.

“This suggests that the VCM’s unresolved quality issues stem not only from the supply side, but also from the demand-side, particularly from the purchasing decisions made by individual companies,” continues Trencher.

These conclusions are especially concerning given that all but one of the 20 companies have set a net-zero climate target, with many also offering services touted as “climate neutral”, only adding to a view that many firms are “greenwashing” their records.

“Prevailing offsetting practices on the VCM cannot be seen as an effective substitute for robust government policies that mandate physical changes in the energy technologies, supply chains, and business models of large emitters,” says Trencher.

###

The paper “Demand for low-quality offsets by major companies undermines climate integrity of the voluntary carbon market” was published on 10 August 2024 in Nature Communications, with doi: 10.1038/s41467-024-51151-w

About Kyoto University

Kyoto University is one of Japan and Asia’s premier research institutions, founded in 1897 and responsible for producing numerous Nobel laureates and winners of other prestigious international prizes. A broad curriculum across the arts and sciences at undergraduate and graduate levels complements several research centers, facilities, and offices around Japan and the world. For more information, please see: 



Journal

Nature Communications

DOI

10.1038/s41467-024-51151-w

Method of Research

Data/statistical analysis

Subject of Research

Not applicable

Article Title

Demand for low-quality offsets by major companies undermines climate integrity of the voluntary carbon market

Article Publication Date

10-Aug-2024

COI Statement

The authors have no competing interests to declare.

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