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United States unveils policy to boost carbon offset market stability

The U.S. federal government unveiled rules to govern using voluntary carbon credits on Tuesday, seeking to enhance self-confidence in a nascent market after some highprofile balanced out projects stopped working to deliver the guaranteed emissions decreases.

The heads of the Treasury, Energy and Farming Departments along with President Joe Biden's leading environment and financial advisers revealed a joint statement of policy and principles to guide participation in voluntary carbon markets as part of its broader efforts to motivate their advancement.

Voluntary carbon markets can help open the power of personal markets to reduce emissions, however that can just occur if we attend to considerable existing obstacles, stated Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen.

The concepts released today are an essential step towards building high-integrity voluntary carbon markets.

Many business balance out their own greenhouse gas emissions by buying voluntary carbon credits, which represent the avoidance or removal of emissions through tasks mainly located in developing nations.

But a series of high-profile controversies has shaken confidence in the market for carbon offsets, with numerous big companies that purchase carbon credits pulling away from the marketplace as recent research studies found that numerous big forest protection jobs failed to deliver their guaranteed emission reductions.

Voluntary carbon markets shrank for the very first time last year in at least seven years.

The concepts for accountable participation in balanced out markets detailed by U.S. officials on Tuesday consist of strict requirements to ensure that tasks provide genuine and measurable emissions decreases, keeping track of to ensure jobs do not damage regional neighborhoods and that corporate purchasers prioritize decarbonizing their own supply chains before choosing credits.

Credibility is literally the commodity, stated Energy Secretary Jennifer Granholm at an occasion announcing the policy in Washington, D.C., on Tuesday. It's a problem that VCMs have not. always lived up to their pledges.

The move by the U.S. to ensure stability in voluntary. carbon markets comes as a number of companies, such as the. Integrity Council for Voluntary Carbon Markets (ICVCM), have. begun to publish principles to specify premium offsets.

ICVCM Council Chair Annette Nazareth stated the new principles. aligned with its own Core Carbon Principles which are emerging. as the very first independent global criteria for high-integrity. carbon credits.

We remain in a climate emergency and we require every tool in the. box to fulfill the 1.5 ° C target, she said. High-integrity carbon. credits can set in motion private financing at scale for tasks to. decrease and eliminate billions of tonnes of emissions that would not. otherwise be practical.

WWF senior vice president of climate change Marcene Mitchell. said carbon credits have the potential to unlock considerable. investment in a range of environment options but that. evidence-based science and assistance was required to make it possible for. business to transform their own operations and value chains.

The Energy Department announced in 2015 that it would. purchase credits from projects that will get rid of co2. from the air in a bid to strengthen that innovation.

The Agriculture Department has actually also produced a program to. help farmers, ranchers and forest owners to take part in. carbon markets by assisting them to determine high-integrity carbon. balanced out programs for producing carbon credits. The firm said. Tuesday it was soliciting input on executing the program.

Meanwhile, the State Department set up the Energy Transition. Accelerator, a carbon offset program that intends to assist. establishing nations transition far from coal, in addition to the. LEAF union, which intends to stem tropical deforestation.

(source: Reuters)