By Kate Dooley*
Negotiators at the COP29 climate conference in Baku have struck a landmark agreement on rules governing the global trade of carbon credits, bringing to a close almost a decade of debate over the controversial scheme.
The deal paves the way for a system in which countries or companies buy credits for removing or avoiding greenhouse gas emissions elsewhere in the world, then count the reductions as part of their own climate efforts.
Some have argued the agreement provides crucial certainty to countries and companies trying to reach net-zero through carbon trading, and will harness billions of dollars for environmental projects.
However, the rules contain several serious flaws that years of debate have failed to fix. It means the system may essentially give countries and companies permissions to keep polluting.
What is carbon offsetting?
Carbon trading is a system where countries, companies or other entities buy or sell “credits”, or permits, that allow the buyer to offset the greenhouse gas emissions they produce.
For example, an energy company in Australia that produces carbon emissions by burning coal may, in theory, offset their impact by buying credits from a company in Indonesia that removes carbon by planting trees.
Other carbon removal activities include renewable energy projects, and projects that retain vegetation rather than cutting it down.
Carbon trading was a controversial part of the global Paris climate deal clinched in 2015.
The relevant part of the deal is known as “Article 6”. It sets the rules for a global carbon market, supervised by the United Nations, which would be open to companies as well as countries. Article 6 also includes trade of carbon credits directly between countries, which has begun operating even while rules were still being finalised.
Rules for carbon trading are notoriously complex and difficult to negotiate. But they are important to ensure a scheme reduces greenhouse gas emissions in reality, not just on paper.
A long history of debate
Over the past few years, annual COP meetings made some progress on advancing the carbon trading rules.
For example, COP26 in Glasgow, held in 2021, established an independent supervisory body. It was also tasked with other responsibilities such as recommending standards for carbon removal and methods to guide the issuing, reporting and monitoring of carbon credits.
But the recommendations were rejected at COP meetings in 2022 and 2023 because many countries viewed them as weak and lacking a scientific basis.
At a meeting in October this year, the supervisory body published its recommendations as “internal standards” and so bypassed the COP approval process.
At this year’s COP in Baku, the Azerbaijani hosts rushed through adoption of the standards on day one, prompting claims proper process had not been followed
For the remaining two weeks of the conference, negotiators worked to further develop the rules. A final decision was adopted over the weekend, but has attracted criticism.
For example, the Climate Land Ambition and Rights Alliance says the rules risk “double counting” – which means two carbon credits are issued for only one unit of emissions reduction. It also claims the rules fail to prevent harm to communities – which can occur when, say, Indigenous Peoples are prevented from accessing land where tree-planting or other carbon-storage projects are occurring.
Getting to grips with carbon removal
The new agreement, known formally as the Paris Agreement Trading Mechanism, is fraught with other problems. Most obvious is the detail around carbon removals.
Take, for example, the earlier scenario of a coal-burning company in Australia offsetting emissions by buying credits from a tree-planting company in Indonesia. For the climate to benefit, the carbon stored in the trees should remain there as long as the emissions produced from the company’s burning of coal remains in the atmosphere.
But, carbon storage in soils and forests is considered temporary. To be considered permanent, carbon must be stored geologically (injected into underground rock formations).
The final rules agreed to at Baku, however, fail to stipulate the time periods or minimum standards for “durable” carbon storage.
Temporary carbon removal into land and forests should not be used to offset fossil fuel emissions, which stay in the atmosphere for millennia. Yet governments are already over-relying on such methods to achieve their Paris commitments. The weak new rules only exacerbate this problem.
To make matters worse, in 2023, almost no carbon was absorbed by Earth’s forests or soils, because the warming climate increased the intensity of drought and wildfires.
This trend raises questions about schemes that depend on these natural systems to capture and store carbon.
What next?
Countries already can, and do, trade carbon credits under the Paris Agreement. Centralised trading will occur under the new scheme once the United Nations sets up a registry, expected next year.
Under the new scheme, Australia should rule out buying credits for land-based offsets (such as in forests and soil) to compensate for long-lasting emissions from the energy and industry sectors.
Australia should also revise its national carbon trading scheme along the same lines.
We could also set a precedent by establishing a framework that treats carbon removals as a complement — not a substitute — for emissions reduction.
*Kate Dooley, Senior Research Fellow, School of Geography, Earth and Atmospheric Sciences, The University of Melbourne
This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.
9 Comments
In short, we cannot run our current consumption-rate, ex fossil carbon. So we are lying to ourselves, via economics, that we can pay out way somehow without doing real sequestration.
And the jig is up - fossil energy is leaving us, there are too many of us, and we cannot afford to divert the energy (from the fossil burn) to doing the sequestering. And the climate impacts are already baked-in; feedback loops are already happening.
Excellent.
At present CO2 removal mechanically is not practical or cost effective so natural sequestration is the practical option to sequester as much CO2 for a limited time whilst a long term solution of CO2 emmission reduction/elimination. Whilst trees may sequester carbon for say 50 years the products end use - house framing/furniture etc means the stored carbon remain stored for a longer period, eg many Kiwi houses are 80-100 years old constructed of wood and future use of wood for structural laminated beams etc should utilise more timber and increase the sequstration period. The current ETS scheme fails to recognise these facts by claiming credits earned and sold should be repurchased when a forest is harvested whihc is hardly conducive to plant trees for profit especially as the fastest trees - Pinus Radiata - take 28 years to maturity.
50-100-150 years is NOT sequestering; it's temporary abeyance-ing.
We evolved in the above-ground habitat, as did all current species.
We are ADDING below-ground carbon, to that ABOVE GROUND arena. That CANNOT be mitigated; it's an ADDITION.
And yes, I'm shouting.
And the first 3 trillion trees we plant, are merely replacement for the ones we've already razed.
I think you've missed the point about timeframe. The settling of all the carbon below ground took millions of years. It's taking less than 200 to put it back in the atmosphere.
That's a huge shift in the equilibrium.... which you're right, will result in an ecosystem full of a life in a high carbon atmosphere. Just not an ecosystem which will suit humans.
LL will know that sodding well. The question is: why does he need to obfuscate?
Yes, there was a Carboniferous. No, it didn't include us, nor did it include many present life-forms. But my posit stands; we evolved - totally - with the carbon locked away underground. We evolved suited to that habitat - indeed it could have been no other way. We are changing that habitat - and it's starting to impact us. Surprise sur effing prise!
If we kept burning fossil fuels at the recent rate of ~1.5ppm CO2 per year I'm sure you're right, CO2 levels would cross 600ppm in another century or so. The thing is, that extrapolation is unrealistic. Global population will be aging and declining rapidly, electrification and alternative power including nuclear will be taking over and more to the point - we are going to run out of fossil fuels long before then. So the worst case climate scenarios really are all doomer-mongering.
COP29’s “Get out of jail free” card: Article 6 carbon trading mechanisms
“Countries have little incentive not to game the system.”
https://reddmonitor.substack.com/p/cop29s-get-out-of-jail-free-card
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