The Guardian (USA)

Rainforest carbon credit schemes misleading and ineffectiv­e, finds report

- Patrick Greenfield

Rainforest conservati­on projects are not suitable for carbon offsetting and a different approach should be used to effectivel­y protect critical ecosystems such as the Amazon and Congo basin, a report has concluded.

New research by UC Berkeley Carbon Trading Project looking into rainforest carbon credits certified by Verra, which operates the world’s leading carbon standard, found that the system is not fit for purpose.

It generates highly inflated environmen­tal impacts and some projects fail to provide safeguards for vulnerable forest communitie­s, according to the report, making them unsuitable for companies to use for carbon offsetting claims as they are not equivalent to fossil fuel emissions.

Halting the destructio­n of the world’s rainforest­s is an urgent task for meeting UN climate and biodiversi­ty targets, and supporters of carbon markets say they could direct billions to climate change and biodiversi­ty mitigation if they work as intended.

Through offsetting, companies and people say their own emissions have been cancelled out by paying for greenhouse gas removal or reductions elsewhere, often in developing countries.

But a new assessment by a team of 14 UC Berkeley researcher­s, funded by the NGO Carbon Market Watch, found that the current system of generating rainforest protection carbon credits was not fit for purpose and was open to exploitati­on.

The researcher­s assessed five quality factors of Verra’s rainforest carbon credit system, known as Redd+ projects: their durability, forest carbon accounting, community safeguards, deforestat­ion leakage and baselines, finding widespread shortcomin­gs in all areas.

They found that the majority of credits did not represent a positive impact on the climate, that projects had routinely underplaye­d the risk of displacing deforestat­ion elsewhere, and that auditors often failed to enforce Verra’s own rules on generating credits. The report said some Redd+ projects had led to the displaceme­nt or dispossess­ion of vulnerable communitie­s, despite safeguards that were meant to prevent harm.

“Our research shows that the project type with the most credits on the voluntary carbon market, avoided deforestat­ion, generates highly inflated credits that put forest communitie­s at risk. An entirely different approach is needed to reduce deforestat­ion and cut emissions,” said Barbara Haya, the director of the Berkeley Carbon Trading project who led the report.

The report recommende­d that government­s and businesses should focus on curbing the drivers of deforestat­ion around the world, support plans designed to help Indigenous communitie­s conserve forests, and said companies should support a contributi­ons approach to supporting rainforest conservati­on instead of buying offsets.

In response, Verra said it welcomed the scrutiny of the scientific and environmen­tal community on its work, saying that many of the issues highlighte­d in the report would be dealt with in the new methodolog­y for generating carbon credits, which it will be publishing in the next few weeks. It has published a technical response to the study.

“We are committed to transparen­cy, and have built an ecosystem of processes and relationsh­ips to develop consensus standards and methodolog­ies that support climate action,” Verra said in a statement. “It is important to note that the vast majority of findings and recommenda­tions from this research align with extensive and systematic work to update the Verified Carbon Standard (VCS) Program that has been carried out by Verra over the last two years,” it added.

Earlier this year, the Guardian published an investigat­ion that found that a vast numbers of rainforest carbon offsets were worthless. Several large companies have moved away from claims based on offsetting in recent months.

“The research shows that the current rules governing Redd+ projects seriously lack credibilit­y and cannot be trusted to generate high quality carbon credits. Businesses are offsetting their emissions on the cheap by buying low-quality carbon credits connected to forest protection projects in the Global South,” said Inigo Wyburd, a policy expert on global carbon markets at Carbon Market Watch.

Carbon Market Watch said it would be writing to Verra highlighti­ng projects they thought were issuing illegitima­te credits.

“Biodiversi­ty, the climate and Indigenous people or local communitie­s are losing out on what should have been a system to drive meaningful financial flows to the forest conservati­on projects that so desperatel­y need it,” said Gilles Dufrasne, policy lead on global carbon markets for CMW.

“Offsetting should be axed. It cannot work in its current form, and carbon markets must evolve into something different. The focus should be on getting money to the right place, rather than getting as many credits as poss

ible,” he said.

Find more age of extinction coverage here, and follow biodiversi­ty reporters Phoebe Weston and Patrick Greenfield on Twitter for all the latest news and features

 ?? Photograph: Léo Corrêa/AP ?? An Indigenous leader looks at a path created by loggers in Altamira, Pará state, Brazil. Some projects fail to provide safeguards for vulnerable forest communitie­s, says the report
Photograph: Léo Corrêa/AP An Indigenous leader looks at a path created by loggers in Altamira, Pará state, Brazil. Some projects fail to provide safeguards for vulnerable forest communitie­s, says the report

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