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- Tue 23:52Brazil’s National Bank for Economic & Social Development (BNDES) and two financial institutions announced on Tuesday at COP the launch of the country's first national carbon credit certifier.
- Tue 23:51Fireside CDR chat - Carbon removal (CDR) lobby group Carbon Business Council (CO2BC) sat down with Michael Weber, global senior director for South Pole’s buyers club TechGen, on how it aims to accelerate the carbon removal market. Weber called buyer clubs a critical catalyst for the market, especially for capital-intensive pathways. He noted they can help to de-risk upfront investment and sent a clear signal to project developers and investors that there is a viable market for high-quality CDR. Â
- Tue 23:48Canada's government, led by Prime Minister Mark Carney, looks to meet emissions targets set by the former Trudeau government, according to local media reports.
- Tue 23:26The future of forest carbon accounting and the effort to rebuild market confidence hinge on digital monitoring, reporting, and verification (dMRV), speakers at a recent online event suggested.
- Tue 23:18Full implementation of countries' updated climate commitments could reduce global CO2 emissions by 25% from current levels by 2035, according to an analysis by an energy research firm.
- Tue 23:04The Brazilian state of Amazonas signed on Monday at COP30 its first contract for a REDD+ carbon credit project on a conservation unit (UC) with a Sao Paulo-based developer.
- Tue 22:32China has declined to invest in Brazil’s Tropical Forest Forever Facility (TFFF), while talks with India have faltered, dealing a blow to the recently launched conservation fund aimed at protecting global forests, according to media reports.
- Tue 22:26Nearly 1 million people have lost their lives to about 10,000 extreme weather events over the past three decades, with damages totalling $4.5 trillion, according to a report launched at COP30. Â
- Tue 22:26Passive hit - Morningstar Sustainalytics reported that European climate-focused funds saw heavy investor withdrawals in the first half of 2025, even as the overall sustainable investment universe grew. Total assets in European climate-themed funds, including mutual funds and ETFs, rose 8% to $553 bln. However, investors pulled $13 bln from the sector amid economic pressures and regulatory uncertainty. ETFs and index funds, representing 53% ($316 bln) of total climate assets, suffered the largest blow, accounting for $8.3 bln in outflows between January and June. The biggest losses came from the 'low-carbon' category, which saw $5.5 bln in redemptions as investors shifted towards more sophisticated climate transition strategies. Three ETFs alone – iShares Environment & Low Carbon Tilt Real Estate Index Fund-UK (-$3 bln), Xtrackers MSCI USA ESG ETF (-$1.3 bln), and Xtrackers MSCI World ESG ETF (-1.1 bln) – accounted for over $5.5 bln in withdrawals. Despite the broader sell-off, investors continued allocating to climate transition strategies, which attracted $1.6 bln in new money. UBS’s Equities World ex CH Climate Aware NSL and Global Equity Climate Transition funds led inflows, collectively raising $1.7 bln. The move reflects a preference for active management: while passive transition ETFs lost $2 bln in H1 2025 (up from $600 mln in all of 2024), active transition funds drew nearly $2 bln. Morningstar attributed outflows from Paris-aligned benchmark trackers (-$1.7 bln globally) to tracking errors, fossil-fuel exclusions, portfolio turnover, and growing competition from bespoke transition strategies. The 'clean energy/tech' category rebounded strongly in performance, averaging 11.8% returns versus 9.9% for the Morningstar Global Index, but still lost $2.9 bln in investor redemptions. Assets in this segment fell 1.8%, as sentiment remained weak. Product development also slowed sharply, with only 25 European launches in the first half of 2025 compared to 62 a year earlier, and just 20% of these were passive. Morningstar described this as a historical low but said it reflected a normalisation after years of rapid expansion. The firm cited the ongoing review of the EU’s Sustainable Finance Disclosure Regulation (SFDR 2.0) - potentially delayed until early 2026 - as a major factor behind the slowdown. Managers have adopted a wait-and-see stance amid uncertainty over whether the current Article 8 and 9 fund classifications will be replaced with new 'sustainable' and 'transition' labels. (Citywire)
- Tue 22:25BRIEFING: As cries for SCOTUS intervention grow, Boulder asks high court to keep out of climate caseAttorneys representing a Colorado community are asking the US Supreme Court (SCOTUS) to reject a petition from two major oil and gas companies that asks the high court to consider a climate case the two sides have been litigating for years.
- Starting lineup - The Climate Action Reserve (CAR) has finalised the membership of its new permanence workgroup. The body in September launched its first comprehensive review in over a decade of its permanence standards for carbon storage credits, aiming to modernise its 100-year commitment model. The registry said the update would explore new permanence timeframes, post-issuance monitoring approaches, and improved tools for addressing potential reversals, in response to advances in science, technology, and policy. The workgroup's members include:
- Ben Parkhurst, Anew Climate
- David Antonioli, Transition Finance
- David LaGreca, EcoEngineers
- Jason Gray, Governors’ Climate and Forests Task Force
- Jeff Seale, HabiTerre
- Jennifer Jenkins, Rubicon Carbon
- Johanna Depenthal, Cool Effect
- Jordan Wildish, Washington State Department of Ecology (Observer)
- Lizethe Rivera, Secretaria de Sustentabilidad, Medio Ambiente y Agua del Estado de Aguascalientes (Observer)
- Lynn Riley, American Forest Foundation
- Max DuBuisson, Indigo Ag
- Megan Baskerville, Environment and Climate Change Canada (Observer)
- Nandini Wilcke, CarbonPool
- Oscar Espinosa, Bioforestal Mexico
- Pedro Morales, GLZ
- Racheal Notto, Kita
- Rosendo Perez, Integradora de Comunidades IndÃgenas y Campesinas de Oaxaca
- Sebastian Ortiz, ALLCOT
- Sheldon Zakreski, Greenline Climate
- Tara Ursell, California Air Resources Board (Observer)
- Victor Duribe, Sky Harvest
- Tue 21:15Stakeholders remain cautiously optimistic about the long-term expansion of global carbon markets, but note that growing geopolitical tensions are impacting integration timelines and climate policy design, according to a new survey.
- Tue 21:12Christmas coal comes early -Â Officials from the Colorado Energy Office submitted a proposal on Monday to extend the life of a major coal unit, as part of an effort to prevent a jump in electricity prices, E&E News reported Tuesday. Staff are looking for a one-year extension on a generating unit at the Comanche generating station, which was scheduled to retire at the end of the year. The station has considered other options such as nuclear and a retrofit CCS in lieu of coal, but to the criticism of a US think tank.
- Tue 21:04Beatriz Soares da Silva, coordinator-general of green finance at Brazil’s Ministry of Environment and Climate Change (MMA), misspoke in announcing that her country anticipates closing an MoU with Sweden on Article 6 cooperation at COP30 in Belem. Soares da Silva actually meant Switzerland, having mixed up the two countries' names. As a result, Carbon Pulse has withdrawn the story.
- Tue 20:34Mexico's environment secretary has unveiled climate targets for 2035 that are significantly more ambitious than the government previewed three months ago.
- Tue 20:30A European private equity firm on Tuesday announced it has received over €100 million in commitments for its nature-based solutions (NbS) strategy, predominantly targeting restoration projects in emerging economies.
- Tue 20:28Brazil’s National Bank for Economic and Social Development (BNDES) and state-owned oil major Petrobras on Tuesday launched their first call for a proposals under an initiative aimed at Amazon restoration, looking to contract 5 million carbon credits.
- Tue 20:04Watt’s going on? - US Senators Richard Blumenthal (D-CT), Ed Markey (D-MA), Chris Hollen (D-MD), Ron Wyden (D-OR), and Bernie Sanders (D-VT) sent a letter on Monday to Office of Science and Technology Policy Director Michael Kratsios and Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick seeking details on how the Trump administration’s promotion of new AI data centres is affecting household energy and water costs, accusing the White House of favouring 'big tech' while undermining clean-energy deployment. The senators cited rising electricity prices, up about 10% since January, with projections of 30-60% residential rate increases in the Mid-Atlantic. They requested by Nov. 21 information on measurement of consumer impacts, any legal arrangements with companies to mitigate grid and water risks, a list of coordinated data-centre projects and their resource use, federal coordination with states and municipalities, and any plans to compensate households.
- Tue 19:59Oil strikes back - The Trump administration plans to allow new oil and gas drilling in federal waters off the California coast for the first time in nearly four decades, according to the New York Times Tuesday. The Interior Department proposal could be announced this week and would also open leasing in the eastern Gulf of Mexico. The move sets up a major confrontation with California Governor Gavin Newsom, who opposes offshore drilling.
- Tue 19:52A global non-profit announced a four-year, $1.4-billion commitment at COP30 on Friday to help smallholder farmers in sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia adapt to worsening climate impacts and expand access to innovations that boost food security and resilience.
- Tue 19:35A Brazilian state has signed a letter of intent with the non-profit that coordinates public-private buyers’ club the LEAF Coalition, it was announced Tuesday at COP30.
- Tue 19:05Cooling-related greenhouse gas emissions could almost double by mid-century as global demand for inefficient methods surges, according to a report launched by the UN Environment Programme (UNEP) on Tuesday at COP30 in Belem.Â
- Tue 18:46Six environmental and community organisations filed a lawsuit in federal court this week, alleging the US DOE and the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) illegally cancelled hundreds of clean energy projects in Democratic-leaning states during the October government shutdown.
- Tue 17:35Two large global standard setters have welcomed the COP30 Action Agenda’s emphasis on harmonising carbon accounting frameworks.
- Clearing up accounting questions will now be key to potential integration of carbon markets, and in particular Article 6, into the new global climate finance goal, agreed last November in Azerbaijan, according to experts.
- Forty-four governments, representing roughly 40% of the world’s mangrove coverage, have endorsed an initiative that seeks to generate finance to protect and restore the important ecosystem for climate and biodiversity.
- Tue 15:50A new facility that claims to be the next generation for commercial scale production of sustainable aviation fuel (SAF) is set to be built in Singapore.
- Day 2 at COP in Belem. Activity and anticipation are picking up as attendees continue to shuffle in more and more following the first day of negotiations. In our daily running blog, Carbon Pulse will report relevant or useful updates throughout the day. Timestamps are in local time (GMT-3).
- Tue 11:43An Asian multilateral development bank has approved a $1 billion loan to support Brazil’s Ecological Transformation Plan across natural infrastructure, sustainable finance, and the energy transition.
- Tue 09:00Making lower-carbon choices generated collective savings of more than $54 billion for companies last year, according to disclosure data released by an international non-profit on Tuesday.
- Tue 09:00There has been a large uptick in the use of misleading narratives around the affordability and national security benefits of fossil fuels, likely in response to outcomes of the Global Stocktake (GST), according to analysis published Tuesday.
- Tue 05:42A new study by climate governance experts has set out a practical method for assessing whether governments’ climate pledges genuinely reflect the 'highest possible ambition' required under the Paris Agreement — a term long criticised for its vagueness and uneven application across countries.
- Tue 00:29Canada, Luxembourg, New Zealand, Peru, Switzerland, and Zambia have officially endorsed principles promoted by a Singapore-led coalition to grow carbon markets, even as their motivations and perceptions of quality appear to differ.
- Tue 00:21Guyana, Chile, Suriname, Bolivia, and Caribbean small island states are all poised for high-profile announcements or interventions at COP30.
- Tue 00:01Over half of the 85 countries analysed by a UK-based research institution have renewable energy pipelines exceeding their current fossil fuel capacities, a paper published Tuesday said.



