Navigating the Risks of Greenwashing in the Voluntary Carbon Market

Voluntary carbon markets (VCMs) offer an important market mechanism that allows firms to efficiently abate their emissions. By utilizing the VCM, firms can buy voluntary carbon credits (VCCs) from carbon projects that have a lower marginal cost of abatement, allowing firms to decarbonize more efficiently.

This efficiency may lead to firms decarbonizing their operations more quickly and further than they would otherwise do on a voluntary basis.

One of the main obstacles in delivering the lowest cost abatement through VCCs and liquid, transparent VCMs is the perceived risk of greenwashing and its associated reputational and regulatory risks.

This paper: (1) provides an overview of VCCs; (2) explains greenwashing; (3) describes the origin, causes and risks of nature- and technology-based VCC methodologies at both the credit and system level; (4) discusses the effects of greenwashing on primary and secondary carbon markets; (5) highlights market reforms to minimize the risk of greenwashing (both regulatory and industry-led efforts); and (6) provides recommendations.

Click on the PDF to read the paper in full.

Documents (1) for Navigating the Risks of Greenwashing in the Voluntary Carbon Market

Data Subject Access Request Form

Pursuant to its mission to promote safe and efficient markets within the over-the-counter (OTC) derivatives industry, The International Swaps and Derivatives Association, Inc. (ISDA) processes personal data of its employees, members and non-members (for example individuals attending ISDA conferences or...

ISDA and GDF publish tokenization report

ISDA and Global Digital Finance have published a report that examines the viability of using tokenized money market funds (MMFs) as collateral for derivatives within existing US legal, regulatory and operational frameworks. Based on feedback from over 120 firms, the report...

SA-CCR Own Goal Must be Corrected

In soccer, own goals do occasionally occur, when a defending player accidentally hits the ball into his or her own net, usually under intense pressure from the opposing team. In fact, the current FIFA World Cup looks set to break...