| I'm very surprised if they're able to actually get really good quality data on what constitutes removed carbon. Most carbon offsets for example are a scam, in the sense that one of the most common 'offsets' is for example paying people to not cut down trees - that they may or may not have been planning to cut down in the first place. There's no international standard or monitoring bodies, and the registries are generally incentivized to make the people paying them (industry) look good. The whole concept is silly, we don't offset crime for instance. I can't just pay someone in advance to not punch someone so that I can do it. Offsetting is just a way of propping up existing unsustainable business models in the eyes of ESG investors. It's greenwashing. I'm not saying none of this is real, but I'm sure it varies dramatically and the data is probably epically unreliable. Here's some write-ups from Greenpeace [1], NRDC [2] to the Center for American Progress [3]. [1] https://www.greenpeace.org/international/story/50689/carbon-... [2] https://www.nrdc.org/stories/should-you-buy-carbon-offsets [3] https://www.americanprogress.org/article/the-cftc-should-rai... |
https://www.fastcompany.com/90510254/ever-been-to-a-green-sa....
I do not see a world in which all carbon emissions are eliminated, but a net zero world seems to be close. An efficient means of offsetting individual carbon expenditures is necessary for this task.