-
Where does Iraq stand as US turns up heat on Iran?
-
Vietnam designer makes history as Paris Haute Couture wraps up
-
Denmark hails 'very constructive' meeting with US over Greenland
-
US border chief says not 'surrendering' immigration mission
-
EU to put Iran Guards on 'terrorist list'
-
Pegula calls herself 'shoddy, erratic' in Melbourne semi-final loss
-
All hands on deck: British Navy sobers up alcohol policy
-
Sabalenka says Serena return would be 'cool' after great refuses to rule it out
-
Rybakina plots revenge over Sabalenka in Australian Open final
-
Irish Six Nations hopes hit by Aki ban
-
Britain's Starmer hails 'good progress' after meeting China's Xi
-
Parrots rescued as landslide-hit Sicilian town saves pets
-
Gold surges further, oil jumps on Trump's Iran threat
-
No handshake as Sabalenka sets up repeat of 2023 Melbourne final
-
Iran's IRGC: the feared 'Pasdaran' set for EU terror listing
-
EU eyes migration clampdown with push on deportations, visas
-
Umpire call fired up Sabalenka in politically charged Melbourne clash
-
Rybakina battles into Australian Open final against Sabalenka
-
Iran vows 'crushing response', EU targets Revolutionary Guards
-
Northern Mozambique: massive gas potential in an insurgency zone
-
Gold demand hits record high on Trump policy doubts: industry
-
Show must go on: London opera chief steps in for ailing tenor
-
UK drugs giant AstraZeneca announces $15 bn investment in China
-
US scrutiny of visitors' social media could hammer tourism: trade group
-
'Watch the holes'! Paris fashion crowd gets to know building sites
-
Power, pace and financial muscle: How Premier League sides are ruling Europe
-
'Pesticide cocktails' pollute apples across Europe: study
-
Ukraine's Svitolina feels 'very lucky' despite Australian Open loss
-
Money laundering probe overshadows Deutsche Bank's record profits
-
Huge Mozambique gas project restarts after five-year pause
-
Britain's Starmer reports 'good progress' after meeting China's Xi
-
Sabalenka crushes Svitolina in politically charged Australian Open semi
-
Turkey to offer mediation on US–Iran tensions, weighs border measures
-
Mali's troubled tourism sector crosses fingers for comeback
-
China issues 73 life bans, punishes top football clubs for match-fixing
-
Ghana moves to rewrite mining laws for bigger share of gold revenues
-
South Africa drops 'Melania' just ahead of release
-
Senegal coach Thiaw banned, fined after AFCON final chaos
-
Russia's sanctioned oil firm Lukoil to sell foreign assets to Carlyle
-
Australian Open chief Tiley says 'fine line' after privacy complaints
-
Trump-era trade stress leads Western powers to China
-
Gold soars towards $5,600 as Trump rattles sabre over Iran
-
Russia's Petrosian skates in Valieva shadow at Milan-Cortina Olympics
-
China executes 11 linked to Myanmar scam compounds
-
Germany to harden critical infrastructure as Russia fears spike
-
Colombia plane crash investigators battle poor weather to reach site
-
Serena Williams refuses to rule out return to tennis
-
Vietnam, EU vow stronger ties as bloc's chief visits Hanoi
-
New glove, same fist: Myanmar vote ensures military's grip
-
Deutsche Bank logs record profits, as new probe casts shadow
UN aims to set standards for scandal-hit carbon markets
Governments could finally approve new UN standards for countries and companies wanting to trade carbon credits, a long-awaited decision some hope can bring credibility to a scandal-ridden sector.
Carbon credits are generated by activities that reduce emissions, like tree planting or replacing polluting coal with renewable energy, but buyers have long relied on unregulated markets shaken by high-profile scandals.
At this month's COP29 climate summit in Azerbaijan, the UN hopes to approve rules and a verification system years in the making to provide some certainty for governments and businesses exchanging carbon credits.
In carbon markets, one credit equals a tonne of carbon dioxide prevented from entering, or removed from, the atmosphere.
The UN's proposed standards mostly relate to countries -- mainly wealthy polluters -- seeking to offset their emissions by purchasing credits from nations that have cut greenhouse gases above what they promised.
Climate negotiators have been mulling the idea since the 2015 Paris Agreement.
Observers say the November 11-22 UN talks could see a breakthrough, with a supervisory body expected to put fresh proposals for verifying carbon credits on the table.
"Most countries don't want it to be delayed any further," said Jonathan Crook, an expert with Carbon Market Watch, adding that there was "a lot of pressure" for the UN-backed carbon marketplace to get up and running.
Countries have already started to trade in carbon directly.
Earlier this year Switzerland bought credits from Thailand linked to emissions reduced by converting buses in Bangkok to electric power.
Observers say a regulated carbon market could provide much-needed additional revenue for developing countries to slash their own emissions without taking on more debt.
- Fraud claims -
An earlier UN foray into the regulation of carbon markets, known as Article Six, was rejected in Dubai in 2023 by the European Union and developing nations for being too lax.
This time around the supervisory body, which has spent months canvassing NGOs and specialists, say the rules are much more rigorous, and give local people the right to challenge credit-generating activities on their territory.
The new proposals include guidelines for future certification to ensure that a project either avoids the release of CO2 by human actions, or acts to remove the planet-heating gas from the atmosphere and store it over an extended period of time.
For example, owning an existing forest that naturally stores CO2 would not be credited, but efforts to protect it from a genuine threat of deforestation could be.
The plans set monitoring standards -- to check that trees are actually planted, or that the risks of a forest being ravaged by fire are properly taken into account.
The UN proposal includes plans for a fund, modelled on mutual insurance, which would see a percentage of each project's credits set aside in the event it fails to store carbon as promised.
The proposed rules still need to be approved at COP29.
This year, instead of giving negotiators the option of modifying the proposal texts, the specialist body has already adopted them for delegates to take or leave for another year.
Observers say it is possible that the text laying out standards for the voluntary system could pass more easily than decisions covering country-to-country carbon trading.
It follows collapsing confidence in the unregulated voluntary carbon market, where the credibility of many credits has come under scrutiny after allegations many did not deliver any benefit for the climate.
Some projects have been accused of fraud, while other forest-based initiatives have gone up in wildfire smoke, prompting an exodus of big corporate brands using these credits to claim carbon neutrality.
- 'New benchmark' -
The voluntary market, for its part, is eagerly awaiting a UN decision.
"We do expect that (it) will evolve to become a new benchmark for quality in the whole market," Karolien Casaer-Diez, an expert with South Pole, a consultancy that develops emission-reduction projects to sell credits.
That could boost standards across the board, she said, predicting "close and rapid alignment" with the new UN system from Verra and Gold Standard, the main private certifiers of carbon credits.
Crook said important provisions in the proposals include ensuring credits are not allocated to existing carbon stocks -- an unthreatened patch of forest, for example -- and that projects can show they do actually boost emission reductions.
But he said ambiguity remains in the wording that could leave texts open to interpretation, notably over tricky issues like estimating CO2 pollution over long periods of time.
"We know that the world is not perfect and that accurate risk assessments are complicated, if not impossible for many project types," he said.
The real test, he added, will come in putting the proposals into action.
T.Egger--VB