Exclusive-World Bank's IFC taps blockchain for carbon offsets
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[August 17, 2022] By
Simon Jessop, Shadia Nasralla and Cole Horton
LONDON/NEW YORK (Reuters) - International
Finance Corp (IFC), a World Bank affiliate, told Reuters on Wednesday it
is backing a blockchain-enabled platform to trade carbon offsets, aiming
to attract more support from institutional investors for
climate-friendly projects in emerging markets.
It is a bet that using blockchain - a digital database with information
that can be publicly shared within a large decentralised network - will
boost the use of carbon offsets to a greater extent than more
traditional methods.
These credits are used by companies and organisations to offset
emissions when accounting for their carbon footprint. They are backed by
projects that compensate for emissions, such as tree planting or
creating solar and wind power.
Several financial technology firms have sprung up over the last year to
turn carbon offsets into digital tokens, yet the market has struggled to
gain traction with companies and institutional investors amid concerns
about the origin and environmental benefits of some of the traded
credits. Blockchain technology has also been criticised by
environmentalists as being too energy intensive.
Verra, operator of the world's largest registry of carbon credits, has
said it will not allow its retired carbon offsets to be tokenised, and
has announced a consultation on the tokenisation of its credits.
An IFC spokesperson told Reuters it would only source, tokenise and sell
unused credits from an established registry that pass its additional
quality checks.
The IFC has partnered with sustainability finance company Aspiration,
blockchain technology firm Chia Network and biodiversity investor
Cultivo to launch the Carbon Opportunities Fund, which will provide the
carbon offsets on blockchain.
Seeded with $10 million as a proof-of-concept, the fund will buy carbon
credits from projects chosen by Aspiration and Cultivo, which will then
be tokenised using technology from Chia and tracked using the World
Bank's Climate Warehouse
https://www.theclimatewarehouse.org/
work/climate-warehouse database.
A Verra spokesperson said it was speaking with the IFC about its role in
the Climate Warehouse.
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A tree that is about to be planted is seen during a reforestation
project in Nova Mutum, Brazil, February 19, 2020. Picture taken
February 19, 2020. REUTERS/Alexandre Meneghini/File Photo
"It's going to set a standard and a benchmarking for the market that makes it
more likely other institutional capital will come in behind it," said Steve
Glickman, president of Aspiration's international arm.
Glickman added that only about 10% of carbon credit projects would currently
meet the fund's criteria.
Carbon credit markets are largely unregulated as governments have yet to agree
on trading rules. Many countries and companies consider offsetting as a way to
help meet their net-zero carbon emissions targets by 2050, a crucial goal to
mitigate the effects of climate change.
Yet only a third of the 50-60 gigatonnes of emissions that need to be slashed
annually can be eliminated through renewable energy sources and efficiency
measures, according to Aspiration.
The IFC's fund has identified 250,000-300,000 tonnes of credits that can be
bought by year-end and is conducting due diligence on projects that represent
around 1 million tonnes of credits that could be available in the next few
months.
Bruce Keith, senior investment officer at the IFC, said the platform's
transparency would help companies and investors better assign value to the
environmental projects behind the offsets.
"Why is a credit from the Amazon worth more or less than a credit from the Congo
basin? Or more or less than a credit from a forest in the southern U.S.? You
(now) have the means to know that," Keith said.
(Reporting by Simon Jessop, Shadia Nasralla and Cole Horton; Editing by Greg
Roumeliotis and Josie Kao)
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