NEDERLANDS   |   ENGLISH


Carbon markets: driving out carbon cowboys

Feeling guilty about the carbon emissions that you caused by attending that London meeting in person rather than by videoconference? Unsure how to make it up to the planet without being taken for a ride by a carbon cowboy?

Part of the trouble with carbon offsets—a way to atone by putting a bit of money into a renewable energy project or perhaps a planted tree—has been that it’s hard to know if that same result would have happened without your money or if someone’s conning you and three other people into paying to plant the same tree.

Buying verifiable carbon offsets will get easier in September,when a new registry system designed by the Voluntary Carbon Standard (www.v-c-s.org) will launch. Bank of New York Mellon, one of three major financial institutions selected, will be the U.S. repository charged with providing “transparency, authenticity and traceability of carbon assets.”

Comments (1)

In these times of mergers and acquisitions which, at times, is Financial Darwinism, how much can we trust institutions that are traditionally associated with those that caused most of the problem in the first place? It has unfortunately proven to be our experience to be skeptical at best of powerful entities who can act beyond the common good.

posted by darthcricket on 7/16/2008 9:00 pm

Post a comment

You must be a registered user to comment. If you are already registered Click here to login or Click here for our fast, free registration.



YES! Please enter my 1 year subscription (10 issues) to Ode magazine and bill me later at the low rate of only $29.95 - a savings of 40% off the regular price! As a part of my paid subscription, Ode will plant a tree to help stop global warming. If I am ever dissatisfied, I can cancel at any time and receive a refund on all unmailed issues.

Offer good for new subscribers only. Offer good in U.S. only. Overseas subscribers please click here. Newsstand price is $4.95 per issue. Please allow 4 to 6 weeks for mailing of first issue. Subscribers: If the Post Office alerts us that your magazine is undeliverable, we have no further obligation unless we receive a corrected address within two years.
Ode Privacy Policy.