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Press Release | Monday, 29 April 2024

Greenwashing or Climate Saviour? Academies Highlight the Need for Action in the Voluntary Carbon Market.

Joint press release of, acatech – National Academy of Science and Engineering, German National Academy of Sciences Leopoldina and Union of the German Academies of Sciences and Humanities

The voluntary carbon market was one of the central themes of the international climate conference (COP 28) in Dubai in November 2023. The aim was to strengthen the integrity of this mechanism and so enable more sustainable private climate funding. After all, whether the voluntary market does actually protect the climate is subject to debate – and often difficult for consumers to gauge. The Academies’ Project “Energy Systems of the Future” (ESYS) highlights the areas where action is needed in the voluntary market and how it can make a more effective contribution to climate protection in the future.

Companies and other private entities purchase carbon credits on the voluntary carbon market to offset their own greenhouse gas emissions – and in so doing fund climate action projects. However, the shortage of quality in these projects and sometimes inadequate corporate climate protection strategies often raise the question of what effect these measures actually have. The Academies’ Project “Energy Systems of the Future” (ESYS) – a joint initiative of acatech, Leopoldina and Akademienunion – addresses the question of whether the voluntary carbon market is – or could be – a valuable mechanism for climate protection.

The Discussion Paper “What Is the Voluntary Carbon Market – and What Contribution Does It Make to Climate Action?” reveals that as well as insufficient regulation, both the supply and demand sides of the market are afflicted by a multitude of problems. As a result, the voluntary carbon market in its current form makes only a limited contribution to climate protection.

Overestimated contribution to climate protection, lack of public control

Many of the climate action projects that generate carbon credits for the voluntary market reduce greenhouse gases by less than they claim. One of the reasons for this is that some of the projects fail to comply with quality criteria or only do so to a limited degree. In some cases, the nature of the project makes reliable quantification and verification of the avoided greenhouse gases almost impossible, e.g. when the projects are aimed at avoiding deforestation. The absence of public supervisory authorities to put in place binding and overarching quality criteria for the climate action projects exacerbates these problems.

Low transparency in corporate climate strategies and a one-sided focus on offsetting

Demand for carbon credits on the voluntary market comes primarily from companies seeking to use them to offset their own emissions. In many cases, the companies are aiming to become “climate neutral“. This is an “open” term, which means companies can decide for themselves whether they reduce emissions or offset them using carbon credits. This can lead to companies making less effort to cut their emissions – even though, from a climate protection point of view, this should take priority over offsetting, especially if the mitigation effect of the offsetting projects is uncertain. And then there is the fact that companies often only take into account a proportion of the emissions generated by their value chain. Alternative climate protection strategies could counteract these problems to some extent, but are still in the early stages of development.

“The voluntary carbon market has the potential in principle to strengthen global climate protection and support the broad implementation of climate protection technologies,” emphasises Manfred Fischedick, Member of the ESYS Board of Directors and President and Scientific Managing Director of the Wuppertal Institute for Climate, Environment and Energy. “For it to realise this potential, though, reforms are now needed that significantly improve the quality of the climate action projects and ensure that carbon credits are only issued for those projects that reliably contribute to climate protection. COP 28 provided an opportunity to agree on central criteria at international level.”

The German National Academy of Sciences Leopoldina, acatech – National Academy of Science and Engineering, and the Union of the German Academies of Sciences and Humanities provide policymakers and the public with independent, science-based advice on current issues of crucial importance for our future. The Academies’ members and other experts are leading researchers from Germany and abroad. Working in interdisciplinary working groups, they draft position papers that are published in the series of papers Schriftenreihe zur wissenschaftsbasierten Politikberatung (Monograph Series on Science-based Policy Advice) after being externally reviewed and approved by the Standing Committee of the German National Academy of Sciences Leopoldina.

The lead institution of the joint initiative “Energy Systems of the Future” (ESYS) is acatech. Within the Academies’ Project, over 160 energy experts from the science and research communities develop policy options for the implementation of a secure, affordable and sustainable energy supply.

Main contact:
Claire Stark, Press and Public Relations Officer
acatech – National Academy of Science and Engineering | “Energy Systems of the Future” Project Office
Tel.: +49 (0)89 5203 09-929
stark@acatech.de

Other contacts:
Julia Klabuhn, Acting Head of Press and Public Relations
German National Academy of Sciences Leopoldina
Tel.: +49 (0)345 472 39-800
presse@leopoldina.org

Dr. Annette Schaefgen, Head of Press and Public Relations
Union of the German Academies of Sciences and Humanities
Tel.: +49 (0)30 325 98 73-70
schaefgen@akademienunion.de

CONTACT

Leopoldina

Julia Klabuhn

Acting Head of the Department Press and Public Relations

Phone 0345 - 47 239 - 800
Fax 0345 - 47 239 - 809
E-Mail presse(at)leopoldina.org