SB64: Status quo falls short of Belem biofuels pledge, but policy signals can drive growth -panellists
The status quo will be insufficient to reach a Belem pledge to quadruple the use of sustainable fuels by 2035, but the right policy signals and can help drive growth in the emerging sector, experts said during mid-year UN climate talks.
Read MoreSB64: “At least” 14 more projects to receive host party approval by end of month -official
“At least” 14 additional projects, but hopefully more, will receive host party approval (HPA) to transition to Paris Agreement Crediting Mechanism (PACM) from the Clean Development Mechanism (CDM) by the deadline at the end of this month, a UN official said on Tuesday.
Read MoreANALYSIS: Kenya’s limit on ITMO sales highlights Article 6 supply constraints, and may force developers back onto VCM
Kenya’s recent announcement that it will limit Article 6 transfers to 10 million Internationally Transferred Mitigation Outcomes (ITMOs) between 2026 and 2030 surprised many market participants, particularly given the scale of the country’s existing carbon project pipeline, and may signal a fundamental shift for project developers relying on voluntary prices currently languishing in single-digit figures.
Read MoreINTERVIEW: Cooling sector could generate Paris credits at scale, with legal caveats
The cooling sector has great potential to generate Paris Agreement carbon credits – especially in the Middle East, North Africa, and Turkiye (MENAT) – but projects must respect the boundaries set by other treaties, said the co-author of a recent report.
Read MoreSB64: Vulnerable nations accuse negotiators of ‘de-linking’ science as finance pact risks being ‘dead on arrival’
Small islands and least developed countries accused some parties of attempting to weaken the role of science and sideline the 1.5C goal, warning that progress towards key climate finance commitments was faltering ahead of COP31 in Turkiye.Â
Read MoreSB64: Developing countries unite in pushback on unilateral trade measures
A wide range of developing country negotiating blocs – from middle-income and fossil fuel-rich, to the poorest and smallest – voiced concerns and opposition to unilateral trade measures, like border carbon fees, in one of the UN’s first dialogues on climate-related trade issues.Â
Read MoreSB64: Santa Marta can help overcome fossil fuel transition “deadlock”, Colombian official says
The landmark Santa Marta process on transitioning away from fossil fuels can help overcome the “deadlock” in UNFCCC talks, a Colombian official said during mid-year talks in Bonn on Monday.
Read MoreVCM REPORT: CORSIA benchmark future settle below $10, SBTi recognises voluntary carbon credit use in new corporate standard
CORSIA futures were little changed last week, with benchmark contracts on ICE slipping below $10/tonne mark after stabilising in recent weeks following a prolonged decline.
Read MoreSB64: FEATURE – Pitfalls in Article 6.2 reporting lead negotiators, observers to ask about iterative review
Negotiators and observers are questioning how the UN’s process of assessing Article 6.2 initial reports could become more iterative and better at isolating major concerns, as common reporting pitfalls have led UN teams to declare inconsistencies in every review to date.
Read MoreSB64: EU hopes CORSIA will use PACM as guide to ensure Paris alignment, advisor says
The EU is hopeful that the UN’s CORSIA offsetting scheme for airlines will look at the Paris Agreement Crediting Mechanism’s (PACM) direction of travel and explore potential revisions, a policy advisor to the European Commission said Friday, as aviation stakeholders await a decision on whether the bloc will expand its ETS to cover extra-European flights.
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