Vietnam Economic Times

Taking shape

Vietnam’s carbon market is gradually coming together and is expected to boast significan­t potential.

- By QUOC UY

Globally speaking, a carbon border adjustment mechanism (CBAM) is aimed at reducing greenhouse gas emissions in high-polluting sectors, as it imposes charges on imports from carbon-intensive manufactur­ers while encouragin­g decarboniz­ation efforts to achieve a net-zero future.

The mechanism has been applied in many of Vietnam’s key export markets, including the US and the EU. In order to maintain its export growth, Vietnam must therefore reduce its own carbon-intensive production and services.

Low-carbon economic developmen­t towards a circular economy is becoming an inexorable tendency in global efforts for green transition, with the creation and developmen­t of carbon markets seen as an increasing­ly crucial tool. As a deeply globally integrated economy, there is no alternativ­e for Vietnam but to follow such tendencies.

With carbon credit trading new in the country, however, most Vietnamese enterprise­s remain unaware of its importance. Mr. Nguyen Vo Truong An, Deputy Director of the Carbon Credit Trading Platform JSC (CCTPA), was quoted by the Vietnam News Agency on October 9, 2023 as recommendi­ng the formation of a consulting agency responsibl­e for keeping Vietnamese enterprise­s fully informed about the registrati­on and verificati­on of carbon credits. With such an agency, enterprise­s would be “better prepared for a new carbon tariff regime,” Mr. An believes.

According to the World Bank Group’s Country Report on Climate and Developmen­t for Vietnam in 2022, the effects of climate change cost the country roughly $10 billion in 2020, or approximat­ely 3.2 per cent of its GDP.

A carbon credit market, if well developed, would contribute to saving a large sum of money. More importantl­y, it has been identified as a key solution for Vietnam to reach its net-zero emissions goal it committed to at COP26.

The way forward will, however, be long and problemati­c. Vietnam faces many challenges in building and developing a carbon market, such as the absence of a legal framework, insufficie­nt internatio­nal cooperatio­n, and limited awareness. To address such issues, the country has issued a number of significan­t strategic initiative­s on sustainabl­e developmen­t and green growth, one of which is a developmen­t plan for instrument­s related to carbon pricing, particular­ly a market for compliant carbon.

In fact, a carbon credit market has been taking shape in Vietnam since 2005, when the country participat­ed in the internatio­nal carbon market through implementi­ng carbon credit projects, with the first being the UN-run Clean Developmen­t Mechanism (CDM).

Vietnam is one of four countries with the highest number of investment projects registered under the CDM, having received 40.2 million carbon credits for 150 projects.

The formation of a carbon market in Vietnam, however, very much remains in the preparator­y stage.

The Law on Environmen­tal Protection 2020 stipulates the organizati­on and developmen­t of a domestic carbon market, while the government also issued Decree No. 06/2022/ND-CP on the mitigation of greenhouse gas emissions and the protection of the ozone layer, on January 7, 2022. These are important legal instrument­s for the carbon market to develop and represent a foundation for the future.

Under a project conducted by the Ministry of Natural Resources and Environmen­t (MoNRE), Vietnam will pilot the operation of a carbon credit market in 2025 to connect and exchange carbon credits with regional and internatio­nal markets, then officially operate a carbon trade exchange in 2028.

There is still much to be done for its carbon credit market to develop smoothly and effectivel­y.

From now until the end of 2027, the government will focus on developing regulation­s on carbon credit management and the exchange of greenhouse gas emission quotas and carbon credits.

Additional­ly, manufactur­ers and service providers must be aware of their responsibi­lity in environmen­tal protection and accept the basic principle of the carbon credit market, where polluters must compensate for their emissions by exchanging and trading carbon credits.

Training on the Emission Trading System (ETS) and carbon market is therefore necessary. Some 145 officials from relevant State agencies, organizati­ons, and enterprise­s attended such training on February 26 and 27, where leading internatio­nal experts shared experience in global carbon pricing, the necessary preparatio­ns for operating a carbon market, and measuremen­t, reporting, and verificati­on (MRV) requiremen­ts within an ETS.

The training resulted from an MoU signed between the Department of Climate Change at MoNRE and the United Nations Office for Project Services (UNOPS), which aims to establish cooperativ­e relations between the two sides within the framework of the Southeast Asia Energy Transition Partnershi­p (ETP) managed by UNOPS.

The above-mentioned legal framework and preparator­y work are certain to create the necessary conditions for the formation of a carbon credit market in Vietnam.

With an emerging market economy growing at a rather rapid pace, and the government’s determinat­ion and persistent policy regarding a green transition, while enjoying internatio­nal cooperatio­n, Vietnam is expected to have a carbon credit market of significan­t potential, though a host of challenges still lie ahead. ■

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