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- Fri 00:42After five years of shareholder engagement targeting the enforcement of voluntary net zero commitments, a Canadian investor advocacy group announced they are sunsetting as investor accountability is not sufficient to manage climate risk and drive decarbonisation outcomes from the country’s financial institutions and strongest emitters.
- Thu 23:28Turkish COP31 President Designate Murat Kurum and Australian COP31 President of Negotiations Chris Bowen published their first joint open letter on Thursday, pledging to continue the work of previous climate summit presidencies, support the implementation of Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs) and National Adaptation Plans, and expand climate finance globally.
- The Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB) issued new guidance for companies to improve financial accounting and disclosure of environmental credits.
- Thu 22:59US President Donald Trump axed Thursday two Biden-era regulations targeting the phase down of refrigerants and hydrofluorocarbon (HFC) leakage, claiming the deregulation would help American families save on groceries.
- Thu 22:52Canada can reduce embodied carbon in housing and infrastructure projects at little or no added cost by using lower-carbon materials and design changes already available from domestic suppliers, according to a new report.
- Thu 22:50Q1 electricity sector emissions reported under Massachusetts's Global Warming Solutions Act (GWSA) carbon market rose 6% year-on-year (YoY) in Q1, recently updated data showed.
- Thu 21:13The UK Emissions Trading Scheme (UK ETS) Authority has published its latest compliance report, showing a sharp decline in GHG emissions during the 2025 scheme year, driven largely by cuts in heavy industry and major changes at the Port Talbot steelworks.
- Thu 20:23Data centre developers are unlikely to integrate carbon removal (CDR) into projects at scale unless hyperscale tenants, policy incentives, and long-term offtake agreements make it part of the commercial structure, according to legal and industry experts.
- Thu 20:06The UN body overseeing implementation of the Paris Agreement Crediting Mechanism (PACM) has approved a new methodology to reduce N2O emissions from nitric acid production.
- Thu 18:45Canada’s federal government has announced a revised long-term industrial carbon pricing trajectory extending through 2040, with the headline carbon price rising from the current C$95/tonne to C$130 ($94.36) by 2035, before increasing annually by 1.5% until reaching C$140 in 2040.
- Thu 17:47Fifteen years in, the Australian carbon market is becoming more vibrant, more active, and more mature. But as stakeholders prepare for a review of the Safeguard Mechanism, and with legislative changes to the Australian Carbon Credit Unit (ACCU) Scheme afoot, its future evolution is still to be determined.
- Thu 17:26European carbon allowance prices fluctuated in a familiar €1 range on Thursday, ending the day at the lower end of the recent price channel as the lacklustre price action and low liquidity continued to frustrate traders.
- CDR hire - Residual, a carbon asset developer, has appointed Julien Jacob as Vice President of Finance to lead project finance and offtake strategy across the company's pipeline, which spans eight projects. Jacob joins from Puro.earth, where he spent four years as Head of Offtakes & Investments Before carbon, Jacob spent eight years in structured commodity finance across investment banks and capital-raising advisory firms.
- Thu 16:39Fertile ground – Fertiliser-related emissions from Canadian agriculture have more than doubled in 20 years as farmers ramp up production to meet rising global food demand, while synthetic fertilisers now account for around one-quarter of the sector’s GHG output according to a report published this week by RBC. Current emissions accounting systems primarily focus on fertiliser volumes rather than stewardship practices that can lower nitrous oxide (N2O) emissions, the report said. It added that the number of Canadian farmers with nutrient stewardship plans has more than tripled over the past five years, amid growing climate concerns and higher nitrogen fertiliser prices linked to geopolitical supply disruptions.
- Thu 16:24Carbon removal (CDR) developers across Europe urged countries to create national strategies for the sector, including clear plans for transporting captured CO2 to storage sites, during workshop in Brussels held this week.
- Thu 16:14Developed countries increased their public and private finance for climate action for a third year in a row in 2024, with nearly two-thirds directed to emission reduction efforts, according to the OECD's annual assessment, published Thursday.
- Thu 16:13The forestry sector is well positioned to support biodiversity credit markets on the supply and demand sides, according to a report.
- Thu 16:09Bigger fall - UK inflation fell more than expected to 2.8% in April, pushed down partly due to the government's cap on household energy bills introduced last month. However, analysts expect inflation to resume in coming months as the effects of the Strait of Hormuz closure keep upward pressure on energy prices. The Bank of England's Monetary Policy Committee kept interest rates unchanged at 3.75% last month, but its chief economist has urged for an immediate increase in borrowing costs to counter the inflation threat. The inflation data was released a day after figures showed renewed weakness in the labour market. The softer inflation and weaker labour activity buy the BoE more time before potentially delivering higher rates, according to JPMorgan. (FT)
- Thu 15:56The UK government is poised to set a legally binding goal to cut emissions by 87% by 2040, compared to 1990 levels, The Times reported on Thursday.
- Thu 15:37UK carbon prices are likely to outstrip those in the EU by 2029 if the two schemes remain unlinked due to higher underlying demand from British power and industrial sectors expected over the coming years, according to a trading and analytics firm.Â
- Thu 14:45European Parliament members clashed sharply over the future of the EU’s Emissions Trading System (ETS) on Wednesday, laying bare a deep divide between those seeking to tighten the bloc’s carbon market and a powerful coalition on the right calling for its suspension, overhaul, or outright abolition.
- Thu 14:28Sealed the deal - Energy Aspects, a consultancy, has received regulatory approval to acquire satellite emissions data firm Kayrros. The deal gives clients a stronger real-time view of global energy markets, combining Energy Aspects' market expertise with Kayrros' ability to verify what is happening on the ground through satellite observation, according to a press release on Thursday. The companies said the deal is intended to broaden their suite of data-driven intelligence tools and strengthen the combined firm’s ability to provide timely insights across the energy value chain. Energy Aspects said the acquisition forms part its wider expansion strategy and follows previous purchases including OilX, INAS, and TankWatch. The planned deal had been announced in March, but was completed this week after it was rubber-stamped by regulators.
- Thu 14:28Accelerating innovation - The Swedish Energy Agency has selected seven new companies to join the Global Innovation Accelerator (GIA), which supports Swedish companies that offer sustainable energy solutions to expand internationally. The chosen companies are: Againity, which develops systems that convert low‑temperature waste heat into power and provides battery energy storage; Airpelago, which offers drone‑based inspections of power lines; JEMAC Sweden, which develops hardware and IoT technologies for industrial applications; Magstrom Nordic, which offers technology for magnetic balancing of generators, primarily in hydro to extend their lifespan; Qurrent, which has an AI platform for optimising battery storage, solar, and other energy assets; Rebasian Technologies, which offers digital tools and data platforms for distributed energy; and Yangi, which develops tech for fibre‑based packaging. The accelerator provides business and market development support, along with a financial contribution tailored to each company, said the release by the Swedish Energy Agency.
- Thu 14:23The aviation sector's international carbon offsetting scheme could face a shortage of eligible credits by 2028 under medium- and high-emissions scenarios, according to analysts, even though only a small portion of expected demand is currently covered by explicit non-compliance penalties.Â
- Thu 14:19Developing countries should build clear domestic rules for carbon crediting while relying where possible on established international standards and infrastructure to avoid slowing market access, the World Bank said in a legal guide published this week.
- Thu 14:16The Science Based Targets initiative (SBTi) has unveiled a new 2026-30 strategy that will see it pivot from a generalised approach to more tailored support across sectors and geographies for corporates aiming to reach net zero, with a direct reference in the plan to the possible use of 'high-integrity' carbon credits as a "complement" for emission reductions.
- Thu 13:41ART credits on Sylvera - Architecture for REDD+ Transactions (ART) credits are now hosted on carbon data platform Sylvera, according to a LinkedIn announcement. Every ART-listed programme including Guyana's ART TREES credits that alone account for over 75% of CORSIA Phase 1 supply, now sits in Sylvera's project catalogue, with data covering issuances, retirements, and cancellations. "With the World Bank's FCPF Carbon Fund now CORSIA Phase 1 eligible and selling through the ART registry, even more demand will flow through ART," said Sylvera.
- Direct air capture (DAC) is unlikely to reach a billion-tonne scale by 2050 unless governments move quickly to boost early capacity, according to a study published this month.
- Thu 12:53The European Commission should adopt a phased approach to regulating CO2 transport, and first focus on getting the required infrastructure up and running and boosting investment in the sector, a group of carbon capture, utilisation, and storage companies (CCUS) said on Thursday.
- Thu 11:53A large European airline has signed a multi-year offtake agreement with a Berlin-based broker, doubling the share of permanent carbon removals in its credit portfolio.
- Thu 11:40Germany’s Federal Ministry for the Environment (BMUV) has launched a new initiative to develop high‑integrity carbon removals in Africa, backed by funding from the International Climate Initiative (IKI) and implemented by the development agency GIZ.
- A carbon removals registry has certified a protocol for reducing landfill methane, the first of which it has published in the super pollutants category.
- Thu 11:33The European Commission and private sector players formally launched the EU's carbon removals buyers' club in Brussels this week, though the organisation's governance and legal structure remain to be clarified.
- Thu 10:26Malaysian industry is seeking urgent clarity from the government on whether carbon credits will be eligible for use under the country’s planned, but now delayed, carbon tax, as uncertainty around implementation continues.
- Thu 10:00Redirecting planned coal-based steel investment before 2030 could avoid emissions at around half the cost of cutting the same amount of CO2 later through other sectors or carbon removals (CDR), according to a study released Thursday.
- Thu 09:55Lagging behind - Easyjet has said that its summer holiday bookings are behind where they were last year as the Iran war impacts consumer confidence and leaves holidaymakers holding off on booking trips. The budget airline spent an extra £25 mln on jet fuel in March after the conflict began, though has hedged 72% of its fuel needs for the next six months, and says it's not facing any disruption to fuel supplies in the near term. Customers should book with confidence, it said, adding that it doesn't expect to cancel any further flights this summer. The news comes as Easyjet reported a £552 mln pre-tax loss for the six months to Mar. 31 compared with a loss of £394 mln in the same period a year earlier. The airline typically makes money in the second half of the year, including the peak summer period. (the Guardian)
- Thu 09:19The UN's international aviation offsetting scheme is slowly growing, but has the potential to take off quickly if supply and demand fall into lockstep, the founder of a carbon markets analysis company told Carbon Pulse.
- Thu 09:08Upcoming reviews of Australia’s Safeguard Mechanism and the Australian Carbon Credit Unit (ACCU) Scheme need to ensure that their role in achieving the country’s long-term climate goals is clear, said the CEO of the Carbon Market Institute (CMI).
- Thu 07:45India's EV push – India is considering incentives of over $1 bln to boost private-sector adoption of electric buses and trucks, in a bid to cut fossil fuel use, Bloomberg reported. The programme would target India’s privately-owned commercial vehicle fleet, with the lion’s share likely earmarked for inter-city bus operators. Bloomberg, citing sources, said meetings with the Prime Minister’s Office and industry stakeholders are expected this month to refine the plan.
- Punjab, Pakistan’s most populous province, is preparing an extensive push into carbon markets, with officials targeting the launch of a sub-national emissions trading system (ETS) by mid-2027 while developing a pipeline of Article 6 and voluntary carbon market projects spanning forestry, transport, waste, energy, and clean water.
- Thu 07:15Project developers in developing countries face short-term economic strain as carbon credit methodologies are brought into line with the Core Carbon Principles (CCP), but the move is already yielding higher prices and renewed buyer confidence, said Amy Merrill, CEO of the Integrity Council for the Voluntary Carbon Market (ICVCM).
- Thu 07:00A carbon market assets company on Thursday announced a series of transactions aimed at turning carbon removals into longer-term financial assets.
- Thu 01:49Open system carbon removal (CDR) projects need larger deployments and shared datasets to reduce monitoring, reporting, and verification (MRV) uncertainty that is raising credit costs and limiting scale, experts said on Wednesday.



