voluntary carbon market

Articles tagged “voluntary carbon market

2 articles found

Microsoft''s Carbon Removal Pause: A Strategic Reset or a Market Signal?
Power Energy

Microsoft''s Carbon Removal Pause: A Strategic Reset or a Market Signal?

Microsoft's reported pause on certain carbon removal procurement deals, communicated informally by staff, signals more than a simple program shakeup. This analysis explores the move as a potential strategic reset within the burgeoning carbon removal market. It examines the implications for project developers, the shift from speculative procurement to rigorous portfolio management, and what this pause reveals about the maturation—and growing pains—of the voluntary carbon removal industry. The incident underscores the critical transition from early-stage corporate climate pledges to the complex operational reality of building a reliable, scalable, and cost-effective supply of permanent carbon removal.

Beyond KOKO''s Collapse: Why Infrastructure Integrity, Not Discounted Credits, Will Define Africa''s Carbon Market Future
The Insight

Beyond KOKO''s Collapse: Why Infrastructure Integrity, Not Discounted Credits, Will Define Africa''s Carbon Market Future

The collapse of carbon project developer KOKO is not just a corporate failure but a symptom of deeper systemic vulnerabilities in Africa's nascent carbon market infrastructure. This analysis argues that the continent's future in the global voluntary carbon market hinges not on competing with discounted credits, but on building unparalleled integrity, transparency, and trust from the ground up. We examine how the KOKO case exposes critical gaps in verification, financial flows, and community benefit structures, and propose that Africa's strategic advantage lies in becoming the global benchmark for high-integrity carbon projects, transforming a perceived weakness into its core strength.