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Indonesia resumes international carbon trading after four years

Indonesia resumes international carbon trading after four years

According to a copy seen on Wednesday, Indonesian President Prabowo Subianto has issued a decree to resume international carbon trading after a hiatus of four years.

In 2021, the Southeast Asian country published carbon market regulations that focused more on compliance than voluntary markets.

The regulation effectively ended all trading of carbon credits across borders, even those generated by large projects such as the Katingan Mentaya Conservation Project.

Indonesia claimed that the moratorium allows the country to prioritise meeting its own greenhouse-gas reduction targets instead of selling the reductions abroad.

The suspension was also a result of concerns that carbon prices were too low and countries selling the product weren't benefiting from it.

Until now, Indonesia had been one of the largest suppliers of carbon credits on the international market. This was mainly through the REDD+ reforestation program.

The new decree signed by the president last week, and made public on Tuesday, allows for the international trade of carbon offset units in accordance to Indonesian standards or standards set forth by the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change, and other international certifiers.

In order to avoid double counting, the decree calls for a decentralised registry of carbon units. This registry will be transparent and operate in real-time.

Prabowo who is about to celebrate his first anniversary as president, on October 20, plans to generate capital from the sale of carbon offsets by foreign buyers for projects like rainforest preservation.

This year, Indonesia signed agreements of mutual recognition with international organisations which certify projects to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. These include Verra Gold Standard, Global Carbon Council Plan Vivo, and Joint Credit Mechanism.

Officials have stated that these deals are meant to facilitate international trade in carbon and foreign investment to support Indonesia's goals on climate change.

Indonesia's local Carbon Exchange, which was launched in September 2023 and offers carbon credits to foreign buyers, began offering certificates of carbon credits to foreign buyers last year. However, trading has been very thin.

Indonesia has committed to achieving net-zero emissions of greenhouse gases by 2060, or sooner. (Reporting and editing by David Stanway; Gayatri Suryo)

(source: Reuters)