‘Very high integrity risk’ found in corporate-funded climate projects

By Anne C. Mulkern | 09/09/2024 06:12 AM EDT

New doubts are being raised about the “voluntary” carbon market where polluters pay for climate projects to offset their own emissions.

Activists at the COP28 U.N. climate summit in December protest carbon markets.

Activists at the COP28 U.N. climate summit in December protest carbon markets, which now face new scrutiny. Peter Dejong/AP

Shell Oil, Chevron and other major corporations have set lofty climate goals that rely in part on them funding green projects such as wind power plants in Turkey and Vietnam.

But the corporate spending, which aims to offset the businesses’ own greenhouse gas emissions, is facing mounting questions about whether it actually cuts climate pollution.

The doubts focus on the global “voluntary” carbon market, where climate-related projects raise money by selling polluters “credits” for each metric ton of carbon emissions a project is projected to eliminate. Businesses use the credits to meet net-zero carbon targets and to address shareholder concerns and avert potential regulation.

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With no government regulation, the market is facing increasing concerns that the projects it funds are doing little for planetary climate change.

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