DUBAI, Dec 4, 2023 (BSS/AFP) - The COP28 climate talks have been flooded
with announcements hyping controversial carbon credits before rules for them
have been hammered out, with environmental groups fearing "greenwashing" on a
massive scale.
The concept behind the credits has taken a major hit recently as scientific
research has repeatedly shown claims of reduced emissions under the schemes are
often hugely overestimated -- or simply non-existent.
Carbon credits allow corporations -- or countries under certain conditions
-- to offset their greenhouse gas emissions.
One credit equals the reduction or removal of one tonne of CO2 from the
atmosphere, often in developing countries by projects focusing on things like
fighting deforestation.
Scientists stress that any offsetting should not be used as a passport to
continue polluting, with emissions needing to fall by almost half this decade
to meet global warming goals.
US climate envoy John Kerry declared on Sunday that his country's Energy
Transition Accelerator for developing nations -- one of a number being touted
-- as a "bold new idea" .
However environmental groups quickly expressed scepticism, pointing to the
past failures of similar schemes.
The initiative -- a partnership between the US government, the Rockefeller
Foundation and billionaire Jeff Bezos's Earth Fund -- aims to shift developing
countries from dirty to clean fuel.
Under the scheme, companies -- and potentially countries -- will be able to
buy credits for carbon emissions from projects that do things like boost
renewable energy, build electrical transmission lines or "retire" coal plants.
- 'Smoke and mirrors' -
Amazon, Bank of America, Mastercard, McDonald's, Morgan Stanley, PepsiCo
and Walmart are some of the US corporate giants lining up to pilot projects in
Chile, the Dominican Republic and Nigeria.
Kerry said the initiative could generate tens of billions of dollars,
insisting the credits will be "high integrity" and "not the kind of carbon
crediting that you read about in some headlines."
He was referring to a series of investigations in recent months that have
raised doubts about the effectiveness and integrity of the vast majority of
carbon credits already in circulation.
Erika Lennon, a lawyer for the Center for International Environmental Law,
said the announcement was "merely smoke and mirrors distracting from the US's
paltry contribution to climate finance".
Washington said it was working with the World Bank to ensure the quality of
the credits.
Separately on Friday, the World Bank said it had plans to help 15
developing countries in Africa, Southeast Asia and Latin America to earn money
from carbon credits by 2028 for forest protection.
Such projects have previously been shown to be the least reliable for
reducing emissions, but the World Bank insisted its scheme would be of "high
integrity".
AFP has also identified hundreds of events dedicated to carbon credits at
COP28, many led by companies seeking a way to compensate -- at least on paper
-- for their carbon footprint.
- Vagueness -
Many different players have rushed to set up their own carbon credit rules,
slowing down negotiations for a common regulatory framework, according to
environmental groups.
This absence of common rules has given companies free rein to engage in
widely-criticised offsetting as part of a voluntary carbon credit market.
At COP28, negotiators have been tasked with looking into applying Article
Six of the 2015 Paris Agreement.
It allows countries to cooperate on hitting their emissions-reduction
targets -- including by swapping carbon credits.
It also envisages a reform of the global carbon credit market that has been
dragging on for years.
The Climate Action Network, which brings together hundreds of environmental
groups, was scathing about the lack of ambition.
"Just like last year, we feel the draft (agreement) is more likely to
remove ambition from climate action than carbon dioxide from the atmosphere,"
it added.
The network also criticised the vagueness of planned rules for a future UN
supervisory body overseeing a global carbon market, which it said could leave
the "door too wide open for risky practices" and to protect the rights of the
communities involved.
These contentious rules could still be pushed through by countries
impatient to start offsetting their emissions, led by wealthy and oil-producing
nations -- and possibly developing countries keen to reap vast sums from the
market.
On Friday, around 10 countries including the United States, France and the
UAE -- as well as Colombia, Kenya and Senegal -- called for carbon markets to
be "complementary" to efforts to reduce emissions.
They said that there must be "transparency" and "high-integrity standards"
for these markets to reach their potential.