A deep dive into 866 public companies and 1,413 carbon projects reveals some twists in who relies on cheap offsets and who chooses to cut their own emissions instead.
Carbon offsets have become big business as more companies make promises to protect the climate but can’t meet the goals on their own.
The results raise questions about how some companies use these offsets and cast doubt on how effective voluntary carbon markets – at least in their current state – are in assisting a global transition to net-zero-emissions. In contrast, high-emissions industries, such as oil and gas, utilities or transportation, used negligible amounts of offsets compared to their heavy carbon footprints.
A more pernicious explanation for the growth in voluntary offsets is that offsets enable “greenwashing.” In this view, companies use offsets to cheaply refurbish their image to naive stakeholders who are not well informed about the quality of offsets. Agencies rate offset projects on how likely they are to meet their climate claims, among other indicators of the trustworthiness of offsets.
Banks Business COP29 Carbon Emissions Carbon Markets Carbon Offsets Clean Energy Climate Change Climate Solutions Companies Energy Efficiency Forests Greenhouse Gas Emissions (GHG) Oil Industry Trees UN Climate Sumit United Nations
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