Greenbang logo

World Bank gets into carbon swapping game

By jumperhead on Thursday, 20th March 2008

emissions2.jpgCarbon is the new Panini stickers – it looks like everyone’s up for trading these days (Greenbang has the shiny foil ones – they’re worth more). The latest to jump on the “got, got, need, got, swap,” bandwagon is the World Bank’s lender, International Finance Corporation (IFC).

The IFC has come up with a carbon trading scheme for Sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia giving “companies selling carbon credits the chance to access a wider range of potential buyers by mitigating country and project risk”.

Under the new carbon delivery guarantee, IFC facilitates delivery of carbon credits from companies in developing countries to buyers in developed countries. IFC acts as an intermediary, selling companies’ credits in the market and passing an attractive price back to the projects. Clients profit from IFC’s AAA credit rating by gaining access to markets and benefit from full price transparency. For buyers in developed countries, IFC also eliminates the risk of not receiving the promised carbon credits.

Some of the first folk to step up with their deck of spares held together with an elastic band is Omnia, a South African fertiliser company which has 900,000 credits to sell, and Indian coke-seller Rain CII Carbon with 850,000. And here’s how they’ve got them:

IFC is actively pursing carbon delivery guarantee deals throughout the developing world. In Rain’s case, the Indian company used IFC financing to install waste heat recovery facilities that help eliminate its dependence on fossil fuels for power generation and generate carbon credits as a result.

Omnia’s emission reductions will come from a nitrous oxide destruction facility that will significantly reduce emissions. Nitrous dioxide and other greenhouse gases are considered the leading cause of global climate change.

Tags: , , , , , , ,

READERS COMMENTS - Have your say...




Please note: Comment moderation is enabled and may delay your comment. There is no need to resubmit your comment.

Additional comments powered by BackType


RELATED NEWS

LATEST HEADLINES

Plan for a solar future means knowing when the sun won’t shine thumbnail

Plan for a solar future means knowing when the sun won’t shine

While energy experts elsewhere are looking for answers to one question — How
Wild warming or sulphur rain? Climate ‘party planners’ can’t decide thumbnail

Wild warming or sulphur rain? Climate ‘party planners’ can’t decide

Imagine you and your office mates are trying to plan a really special
A clean energy future? The devil is in the details thumbnail

A clean energy future? The devil is in the details

Who, besides maybe the oil and coal companies and their stockholders, wouldn’t want
Bloomberg: Renewables spending needs to reach $500bn by 2030 thumbnail

Bloomberg: Renewables spending needs to reach $500bn by 2030

Global spending on renewable energy projects could more than
The Grumpy Environmentalist: The woes of waste thumbnail

The Grumpy Environmentalist: The woes of waste

There is plenty to be grumpy about when it
CO2 doesn’t stop at the border; Neither should energy policies thumbnail

CO2 doesn’t stop at the border; Neither should energy policies

Once upon a time, climate change felt like a