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Home - Carbon Credit - The voluntary carbon credit industry needs immediate innovation to restore integrity
Carbon Credit

The voluntary carbon credit industry needs immediate innovation to restore integrity

solarenergyBy solarenergyJuly 5, 2024No Comments3 Mins Read
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AUSTIN, TX / ACCESS WIRE / July 5, 2024 / David Goodnight, resident of Austin, Texas, and founder of Comnet International, emphasizes the need for unquestionable credit to restore industry confidence. David highlights the ongoing challenges within the carbon credit market and the four key principles that new projects must embrace to revive the industry.

The once respected and well-intentioned voluntary carbon credit market is evolving into a deeply criticized system that governments and companies are increasingly reluctant to support due to the endless backfire of publicly failed projects. The underlying problem is that the industry is based on a broken model of forest protection or reforestation in emerging market economies. The superficial challenge is an industry unwilling to accept new methodologies based on better science and technology. Fortunately, the ‘validators’ of this industry will now be forced to support new and innovative solutions.

The majority of carbon offset projects are aimed at protecting forests in countries with high geopolitical risk. A study from the University of Cambridge found that only 5.4 million of the 89 million potential forestry carbon credits could be linked to actual carbon reduction. It was recently discovered by The Guardian that 90% of forestry projects approved by the industry’s main validator are ‘worthless’, forcing the CEO to resign in 2023.

Carbon projects with greater credibility are on the horizon, but each faces years of bureaucratic delays before receiving “approval” from the key validators who happen to have approved millions of heavily criticized “worthless” credits.

A carbon offset project should be based on four principles:

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(1) Indisputable scientific methodology in the calculation of carbon impact.

(2) A term of 100 years or perpetual.

(3) Historical and consistent rule of law.

(4) Established geopolitical stability.

A typical forest project fails massively on all four principles mentioned above. New governments change laws and fail to honor previous agreements, and there is no way to patrol a forest to determine that it will undoubtedly be “protected” for the agreed term of several decades.

Innovation from environmental scientists, technologists and energy specialists will emerge. This next generation of carbon offset programs will be so advanced, digitally traceable and unquestionable that it will reinvigorate integrity. Current validators must start accepting these new programs or their control over the industry will steadily disappear.

A noble effort is Direct Air Capture (DAC); removing carbon from the air with colossal fans. These projects are capital intensive and consume a huge amount of fossil energy, essentially making the project a wash. If it is powered sustainably, it is simply more effective and logical to supply that energy to the electricity grid to replace fossil energy. DAC projects will only exist with the financial support of the US carbon credit of $85 per ton in the US 45th quarter.

David Goodnight, a resident of Austin, Texas, is the Founder and Managing Partner of The Goodnight Group and Comnet International. The Goodnight Group is an investor-developer and Comnet International is a project finance and trade advisor. Both companies have separate interests in supporting the voluntary carbon market and customers looking to buy unquestionable products.

See also  Comprehensive carbon credit plan unveiled by the Ministry of Industry and Trade

Media contact:
Company names: Comnet International and the Goodnight Group
Contact: David Good night
City country: Austin, Texas
E-mail: [email protected]
Websites: www.comnetlimited.com And www.goodnightgroup.com
Twitter: https://x.com/goodnighttexas
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/david-goodnight-65864b237/

SOURCE: Comnet International and the Goodnight Group

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