FT EM SOVCM 2019 Report MarketOverview+Respondents Web
FT EM SOVCM 2019 Report MarketOverview+Respondents Web
FT EM SOVCM 2019 Report MarketOverview+Respondents Web
Supporters
About Forest Trends’ Ecosystem Marketplace
Ecosystem Marketplace, an initiative of the non-profit organization Forest Trends, is a leading global source of
information on environmental finance, markets, and payments for ecosystem services. As a web-based service,
Ecosystem Marketplace publishes newsletters, breaking news, original feature articles, and annual reports
about market-based approaches to valuing and financing ecosystem services. We believe that transparency is
a hallmark of robust markets and that by providing accessible and trustworthy information on prices, regulation,
science, and other market-relevant issues, we can contribute to market growth, catalyze new thinking, and spur the
development of new markets and the policies and infrastructure needed to support them. Ecosystem Marketplace
is financially supported by a diverse set of organizations including multilateral and bilateral government agencies,
private foundations, and corporations involved in banking, investment, and various ecosystem services.
Forest Trends works to conserve forests and other ecosystems through the creation and wide adoption of a
broad range of environmental finance, markets and other payment and incentive mechanisms. Forest Trends
does so by 1) providing transparent information on ecosystem values, finance, and markets through knowledge
acquisition, analysis, and dissemination; 2) convening diverse coalitions, partners, and communities of practice
to promote environmental values and advance development of new markets and payment mechanisms; and 3)
demonstrating successful tools, standards, and models of innovative finance for conservation.
For up-to-date information on environmental markets, sign up for our newsletters here:
http://www.ecosystemmarketplace.com/newsletters/
December 2019
Authors
Stephen Donofrio
Patrick Maguire
William Merry
Steve Zwick
Disclaimer
Ecosystem Marketplace is an initiative of Forest Trends.
This document was based upon information supplied by participants in a market survey. Forest Trends’ Ecosystem
Marketplace does not represent or warrant the accuracy, suitability, or content of the survey responses or the
results of that survey as set out herein. It is the sole responsibility and obligation of the reader of this report to
satisfy himself/herself as to the accuracy, suitability, and content of the information contained therein. Forest Trends’
Ecosystem Marketplace (including its respective affiliates, officers, directors, partners, and employees) makes no
warranties and shall have no liability to the reader for any inaccuracy, representation, or misrepresentation set out
herein. The reader further agrees to hold Forest Trends’ Ecosystem Marketplace harmless from and against any
claims, loss, or damage in connection with or arising out of any commercial decisions made on the basis of the
information contained herein. The reader of this report is strongly advised not to use the content of this report in
isolation, but to take the information contained herein together with other market information and to formulate his/
her own views, interpretations, and opinions thereon. The reader is strongly advised to seek appropriate legal and
professional advice before entering into commercial transactions.
Acknowledgments
Attribution
Please cite this work as follows: Forest Trends’ Ecosystem Marketplace. Financing Emission Reductions for the
Future: State of Voluntary Carbon Markets 2019. Washington DC: Forest Trends, 2019.
Acknowledgments
This report is a compilation of the insights of a wide range of individuals across several continents. It would not be
possible without the hundreds of individuals who shared critical information about their organizations.
This report is publicly available thanks to the generous financial contributions from our institutional supporter
sponsors, including: 3Degrees; American Carbon Registry, an enterprise of Winrock International; Arbor Day
Foundation; Cool Effect; Livelihoods Fund; and Verra.
A number of people offered insights on market dynamics and regional trends through conversations with our
team. We extend our grateful thanks to Ricardo Bayon, Todd Berkinshaw, Guillaume Bouculat, MaryKate Bullen,
Antoine Diemert, Julian Ekelhof, Peter Flottmann, Mary Grady, Michael Greene, Kelley Hamrick, Stephanie Harris,
Nadia Kähkönen, Edit Kiss, Donna Lee, Sarah Leugers, Olivier Levallois, Marco Magini, Jeremy Manion, Chris
Stephenson, Ben Stuart, Naomi Swickard, Nicole Teitzel, and Lisa Walker.
Foreword
There is something in the wind! Forest Trends’ Ecosystem Marketplace has tracked voluntary carbon markets every
year since 2006. By surveying what would otherwise be an opaque market, we’ve helped answer fundamental
questions about the size, scope, and direction of voluntary offsets. The markets have had a tumultuous 13 years.
But this year’s report finds voluntary carbon offsets at the tipping point we’ve been long waiting for.
From their inception, the voluntary markets have served as both a tool for individuals to reduce their carbon
footprints and as an incubator for larger-scale corporate action. Markets evolved slowly throughout the 1990s
and early 2000s: it was an age of experimentation. Standards were created, voluntary platforms like the Chicago
Climate Exchange and registries such as APX emerged, and the move to carbon neutrality gained momentum
among companies, environmental organizations, and even countries. Our first major Forest Trends Katoomba
event in 2000 near Sydney, Australia was co-hosted by the Sydney Futures Exchange, which was preparing to
launch the world’s first Carbon Futures Exchange. There was tremendous excitement and optimism that we would,
in short order, have a global price on carbon. (The Katoomba Group projection at the time was $36 a metric ton).
Towards this end, projects were being developed under the Kyoto Protocol’s Clean Development Mechanism
(CDM), a worldwide compliance market that in turn spawned the European Union Emissions Trading System (EU
ETS) when the Kyoto Protocol came into force in 2005. It seemed, for a moment, that a mandatory price on carbon
was going to drive exactly the changes we needed. Ecosystem Marketplace began tracking prices and trends in
voluntary carbon that year.
As too few countries kept their Kyoto promises, compliance prices began to slide — and then fell off a cliff after the
world failed to reach an agreement at year-end climate talks in Copenhagen in 2009. By the early 2010s, prices
for Certified Emission Reductions (CERs) and Emission Reduction Units (ERUs) generated under the CDM were
below $1 per metric ton. But prices for offsets created for the voluntary markets held their own (see Time Capsule,
page 2). Buyers, it turned out, had come to trust the new voluntary methodologies. So had the state of California,
which announced it would recognize a number of voluntary offsets in its new compliance cap-and-trade program.
In 2014, Norway, Germany, and the United Kingdom stepped into the marketplace with bilateral payments to
reduce emissions from deforestation — activities that we covered in a separate State of Forest Carbon Finance
report. Meanwhile, voluntary markets continued to innovate and evolve.
Now, as the world gears up for the official implementation of the Paris Climate Agreement in 2021, it feels like the
wind is at our backs for the first time in a long time. As massive climate change-induced storms and fires wreak
havoc across the world, companies are listening to demands from investors, employees, and consumers who want
to reduce their own climate impacts and liabilities. Companies with forest-risk commodities like palm oil and soy in
their supply chains are feeling pressure to demonstrate they’re not contributing to tropical deforestation, a major
source of greenhouse gas emissions.
There has been a significant uptick in voluntary carbon market activity in 2018, as borne out by the data herein,
and similarly positive anecdotal evidence for 2019 from those interviewed for this report, that runs parallel to these
new signals. It feels very different from the market fluctuations we have weathered these last two decades. Major
new sources of demand have materialized, and more are on the horizon (Exhibit A: the International Civil Aviation
Organization). A proliferation of national, state, provincial, and municipal carbon programs have emerged globally.
Forests are back in favor and are a dominant project category again as the world has woken up to the realization
that nature-based climate solutions are credible and available to us today. And the distinction between compliance
(regulated) and voluntary carbon seems to be blurring.
So fasten your seat belts. What we’ve long hoped for is now happening — fast. But the Kyoto-style single global
carbon market we envisioned back in 2000 isn’t the future anymore. Instead, the future is a “global bazaar” —
many unique markets, many diverse players, and many kinds of deals. That means there is tremendous need for
ii Financing Emissions Reductions for the Future
smart accounting, for sophisticated registries, for improved monitoring and measuring, and for more equitable
ways of distributing pain and profit.
We can’t wait to see what next year brings. I encourage all of our readers to work with us and our collaborators:
we all need to step up to help ensure the carbon marketplace delivers the climate and community benefits it has
promised for so long.
Michael Jenkins
Founding President and CEO
Forest Trends
A FOREST TRENDS I N I T I AT I V E
We at Ecosystem Marketplace take our work seriously and are proud to be a fixture in the global carbon
markets. We embarked on the journey of revisioning our sponsorship program at the end of 2018 and have
had a humbling learning experience about how our work is valued, perceived, and put to use. We are
immensely grateful for the financial and institutional support provided by our inaugural group of strategic
sponsors. With this support, we can continue to build upon our:
• Proven track record of more than a decade tracking voluntary carbon markets, engaging with
stakeholders, collecting confidential data, providing guidance and insights, and advising market
participants.
• Reputation for high-quality data, analysis, and reports. EM generates dependable, decision-making
information used by carbon market participants and policymakers worldwide.
• Diligence in ensuring our mission is credible, confidential, and neutral. EM maintains strict
confidentiality of individual responses, and do not favor any specific standards or projects.
As 2020 approaches, we recognize that there’s much more to do. We look forward to continued engagement
with this growing group of strategic sponsors, and welcome others to join us.
For market actors who have not yet shared 2017 or 2018 transaction data
If you received the survey but did not submit your 2017 or 2018 data, or if you’re a project developer,
retailer or broker and were not contacted in 2019, it’s not too late to further enrich our dataset by
visiting www.forest-trends.org/sovcm2019 to download the survey and submit data. Even as we move
into 2020, we will continue to conduct analysis with historical data, so please let us know if you have
requests or would like to discuss additional analysis you’d like to see.
Stephen Donofrio
Director, Ecosystem Marketplace
State of the Voluntary Carbon Markets 2019 iii
Our Supporters
3 Degrees
At 3Degrees, our business is our mission. We make it possible for businesses
and their customers to take urgent action on climate change. As a certified B
Corporation, we provide renewable energy and emission reduction solutions
to Fortune 500 companies, utilities, universities, green building firms, and
other organizations. Headquartered in San Francisco, 3Degrees serves
clients around the world.
Cool Effect
Cool Effect is a San Francisco Bay Area 501(c)(3) nonprofit dedicated
to reducing carbon emissions around the world by allowing individuals,
businesses, organizations and universities to create a tangible impact on
climate change by funding the highest quality carbon reduction projects
that are verifiably and measurably reducing global warming emissions. The
organization was founded by Dee and Richard Lawrence on their passionate
belief that support of carbon offset projects will create a cumulative effect that
will reduce and prevent carbon pollution. Like the Butterfly Effect, The Ripple
Effect, and others, a single action can have global impact.
iv Financing Emissions Reductions for the Future
Livelihoods Fund
With a first Carbon Fund launched in 2011, the Livelihoods investment funds
are supported by private companies committed to generating impact while
offsetting their carbon footprint or transforming their supply chains. Our mission?
Design and implement large-scale projects with strong social, environmental
and economic impact, for the benefit of rural communities in Africa, Asia and
Latin America. We build performance-driven coalitions with public institutions,
NGOs, experts and rural communities to co-create and implement solutions
that create value for all: improved livelihoods for rural communities, public
goods (nature and water conservation, CO2 sequestration), sustainable
sourcing and high-quality carbon credits for businesses.
Verra
Verra develops and manages standards that help the private sector, countries,
and civil society achieve ambitious sustainable development and climate
action goals. Verra’s global standards frameworks serve as linchpins for
channeling finance towards high-impact activities that tackle some of the most
pressing environmental issues of our day. One of Verra’s standard programs,
the Verified Carbon Standard (VCS) program allows certified projects to turn
their greenhouse gas (GHG) emission reductions and removals into tradable
carbon credits. Since its launch in 2006, the VCS Program has grown into
the world’s largest voluntary GHG program. There are currently almost 1,600
registered projects in over 70 countries that have generated more than 380
million carbon credits.
If you’d like to collaborate with us on this effort, please contact EM’s Director, Stephen Donofrio
(sdonofrio@forest-trends.org).
State of the Voluntary Carbon Markets 2019 v
Table of Contents
Foreword i
Our Supporters iii
Introduction 1
The EM Time Capsule 2
Market Overview: Insights & Key Findings from 2017 and 2018 5
Boxes
Box 1: A Note on Methodology and 2017 Data 5
Box 2: Trending Demand for Natural Climate Solutions 6
Box 3: Peru “Nests” REDD+ With an Eye on the Sky 7
Tables
Table 1: Transacted Voluntary Carbon Offset Volume, Value, and
Weighted Average Price by Project Category, 2017 and 2018 6
Market Overview
State of the Voluntary Carbon Markets 2019 1
Introduction
Between 2006 and 2018, Forest Trends’ Ecosystem Marketplace (EM) annually distributed surveys to our network of
project developers, investors, retailers, and brokers to collect confidential information about their voluntary carbon
offset market transactions. They kindly provided us with detailed information about the offsets sold, including
project type, location, and standard.
Last year, we surveyed the market and introduced a report covering the first quarter of 2018, and we are pleased
to follow this with the State of Voluntary Markets 2019, which includes data collected for calendar years 2017 and
2018. Also included are insights compiled through interviews with a diverse set of market participants covering
trends through late 2019.
It’s worth underscoring that the figures and trends described in this report focus on transactions of carbon offsets
for voluntary purposes. Although the lines between compliance and voluntary markets are blurring, with standards
once established for voluntary transactions increasingly being considered for inclusion in compliance markets,
all data herein relates to voluntary transactions. Simply put, if the credit is being used to satisfy a regulatory
requirement, it is not considered voluntary and not covered in this report.1 This report does, however, discuss the
evolution of certain compliance markets, such as the Carbon Offsetting and Reduction Scheme for International
Aviation (CORSIA), and certain national and subnational markets, to the extent that they form the boundaries of and
influence what is considered “voluntary.”
EM was initially created to improve transparency and price discovery in the voluntary space, as there is no centralized
system for transacting voluntary carbon credits. We’ve produced this report over the past 13 years by aggregating
and anonymizing confidentially submitted details of individual transactions, providing all market participants, from
small project developers to large corporate buyers to policymakers, a comprehensive view of market conditions.
When we piloted a quarterly report format in 2018, market feedback was loud and clear: the data and trends revealed
in a comprehensive annual report are highly valued by the broader market. While this report is being released in
December 2019, Forest Trends’ Ecosystem Marketplace will be issuing our 2020 carbon survey in the first quarter
of next year and will continue to publish these reports on an annual basis to inform the ever-evolving carbon market.
This year’s report offers a streamlined structure, beginning with a brief timeline of major milestones in carbon
markets over the past 30 years and findings from the past 13 years of State of Voluntary Carbon Markets reports.
This is followed by a summary of Key Findings from this year’s report. We will also be releasing two additional
sections of the Key Findings on Monday, December 9th to coincide with a side event at COP25. These sections are
the result of a series of interviews with key market participants and focus on “Market Dynamics in 2019” and “Market
Direction in 2020”. Further analysis and key charts and tables will be released in in a series of appendices later in
December 2019 and include background information such as a list of acronyms, a glossary, FAQs, categorization
of project types, and a supplier’s directory. These appendices will be available as separate downloads at
ecosystemmarketplace.com/carbon-markets/.
We sincerely thank this year’s survey respondents for taking the time to share data and insights. We also are
very grateful for our growing group of strategic supporters, interviewees, and report reviewers, that together
tremendously strengthen our efforts to ensure delivery of timely and robust analysis of carbon pricing. If you’d like
to collaborate with us on this effort, please contact EM’s Director, Stephen Donofrio (sdonofrio@forest-trends.org).
Other reports such as the World Bank’s State and Trends of Carbon Pricing 2019 track the compliance markets, the value of
1
In 1992, transactions picked up when negotiators from around the world signed the United Nations Framework
Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC). Transactions accelerated in 1997, when those same negotiators
signed the Kyoto Protocol, for which the United States was a key country in its development. The Kyoto Protocol
was a global pact for action on climate change that unfortunately failed to include a mechanism to finance activities
that work to address tropical deforestation. A cornerstone of the Protocol was the Clean Development Mechanism
(CDM), which was conceived as a global compliance market for offsetting emissions.
After the United States (US) withdrew from the Kyoto Protocol, the Chicago Climate Exchange (CCX) was initially
developed as a pilot program for the US in 2003 to be an “international rules-based greenhouse gas emission
reduction, audit, registry and trading program,” in which “industrial, governmental and academic sectors execute
legally binding commitments to meet annual emission reduction goals of 4% below baseline for 2006 and 6%
below baseline by 2010.” It was also the world’s first large-scale platform for registering and trading voluntary
offsets.
In 2005, Europe launched the EU ETS to trade CDM offsets, and the global compliance market was born. While
attention shifted to compliance markets, innovation continued on voluntary projects, where new methodologies
could be developed, tested, and then either adopted, adapted, or abandoned — leading to rapid evolution that
seemed to be happening out of sight of the rest of the world.
Thus emerged the need for a comprehensive survey of the voluntary market space. Enter Ecosystem Marketplace,
which in 2007, teamed up with New Carbon Finance to survey these markets to produce the first-ever EM report,
the State of Voluntary Carbon Markets 2007: Picking Up Steam. This report uncovered rapidly evolving markets
that had reduced global emissions by the equivalent of at least 110 million metric tons of carbon dioxide, and
probably much more.
Here is a year-to-year breakdown of findings from our reports, which are all available for download at
ecosystemmarketplace.com/carbon-markets/.
In 2007, we tracked transactions for calendar year 2006 of 31.6 million 2006 Volume: $31.6 MtCO2e
metric tons of carbon dioxide equivalent (MtCO2e) valued at $111.3 Market Value: $111.3M
million. Surprisingly, we found that only 10.3 MtCO2e were transacted Average Price: $4.10
on CCX. The bulk (21.3 MtCO2e) were transacted “over the counter”
15 active standards have already
(OTC) and in accordance with at least 15 standards that had emerged
emerged to ensure quality.
to ensure the emission reductions were real, measurable, and verifiable.
To track the offsets, eight registries were either operational or in the
works, and at least 60 intermediaries were active in the sector — ranging 2007 Volume: 69.8 MtCO2e
from NGOs to online startups to deep-pocketed bank-backed brokers. Market Value: $359.0M
The United States, having failed to join the Kyoto Protocol, was both the Average Price: $6.10
biggest buyer and the biggest supplier of voluntary offsets, while online
platforms marketing to individuals were the fastest-growing segment of The first clean cookstove project
the markets. Project types were evenly divided between forestry and issues credits.
land-use sequestration (36%), renewable energy (33%), and industrial
gases (30%). Average price: $4.10 per metric ton.
2008 Volume: 134.5 MtCO2e
Market Value: $790.2M
Average Price: $7.34
Market Overview: Insights & Key Findings from 2017 and 2018
Market Overview
Near All-time High for Voluntary Offsets Tracked by 2019 EM Carbon Survey
Forest Trends’ Ecosystem Marketplace (EM) tracked transactions of voluntary carbon offsets for 2018 representing
emission reductions equivalent to 98.4 MtCO2e2 with a market value of $295.7 million. This represents a 52.6%
increase in volume and a 48.5% increase in value over 2016. It is also very nearly the highest volume of purely
voluntary offsets (not counting CCX or pre-compliance offsets) ever tracked, with the exception of 98.8 MtCO2e
tracked in 2011.
Cumulative volume has now exceeded 1.2 billion metric tons (GtCO2e) transacted since Ecosystem Marketplace
began tracking voluntary markets. This is roughly equivalent to the average annual emissions of Japan.3
BOX 1
Our methodology is to report only what survey respondents report to us and not what we believe we can
extrapolate from the data. Our volume figures are always conservative as a result. In 2019, we requested market
participants provide data for both 2017 and 2018, in our survey. Approximately 20% more responses were
received for 2018 than for 2017. Given this noticeable difference in the number of responses, this report makes
more historical comparisons between 2016 to 2018, over those from 2017 to 2018 (see “Volume of Offsets
Transacted” in Appendix 1, to be released in late December at ecosystemmarketplace.com/carbon-markets/.
The volume of offsets generated through Forestry and Land Use activities increased 264% between 2016 and
2018, growing from 13.9 MtCO2e to 50.7 MtCO2e, while volume in all other offset types by comparison grew just
21% (see Table 1).
Within the Forestry and Land Use category, volume from REDD+ projects, focused on forest conservation, increased
187%, from 10.6 MtCO2e in 2016 to 30.5 MtCO2e in 2018, with almost all of the increase concentrated in Peru (see
2
MtCO2e refers to Millions of metric tons of carbon dioxide equivalent. The numbers presented throughout this report are measured
in (millions of) metric tons of carbon dioxide equivalent. A metric ton is also often referred to as a “tonne” in the literature.
3
National Greenhouse Gas Inventory Report of JAPAN 2019, National Greenhouse Gas Inventory Report of JAPAN 2019 §
(2019). http://www.cger.nies.go.jp/publications/report/i144/i144.pdf.
Within voluntary carbon markets, NCS drives demand for several project types — specifically: Afforestation, Reforestation and
4
Revegetation (ARR), Afforestation/Reforestation (A/R), Agricultural Land Management (ALM), Improved Forest Management
(IFM), Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and forest Degradation (REDD), Avoided Conversion of Grasslands and
Shrublands (ACoGS), Wetlands Restoration and Conservation (WRC), and REDD+ (REDD plus elements of other activities
that enhance carbon stocks).
6 Financing Emissions Reductions for the Future
Box 3). This rapid growth in REDD+ enabled it to regain the spot as the top project type in terms of volume that it
had relinquished to wind farms back in 2015. Offsets from tree-planting projects (e.g., A/R) increased 342% from
less than 2 MtCO2e in 2016 to 8.4 MtCO2e in 2018 and were distributed around the world.
Market Overview
The increased volume in Forestry and Land Use would appear to be driven by buyer enthusiasm for Natural
Climate Solutions, but it’s unclear at this point how much of the surge in volume for Forestry and Land Use relative
to other project types represents shifting buyer preferences versus the expansion of domestic policy into activities
previously covered in the offset space.
BOX 2
First, in 2017, widely cited research published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences showed
that the climate mitigation potential of NCS had been vastly underestimated. In 2018 the Intergovernmental
Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) Lands Report identified carbon sinks, especially from NCS, as critical to
meeting the Paris Climate Agreement’s target of keeping global warming below 2° Celsius. Nongovernmental
organizations (NGOs) and United Nations agencies used this to launch awareness-raising campaigns around
NCS, and media outlets ratcheted up their coverage of NbS, especially tree-planting. Market actors tell us
these campaigns have influenced their purchasing decisions, and fossil fuel companies like Royal Dutch
Shell and BP have incorporated NCS into their mitigation strategies.
TABLE 1
Transacted Voluntary Carbon Offset Volume, Value, and Weighted Average Price by Project Category, 2017 and 2018
2017 2018
VOLUME AVERAGE VOLUME AVERAGE
VALUE VALUE
MtCO2e PRICE MtCO2e PRICE
FORESTRY AND LAND USE 16.6 $3.4 $63.4 M 50.7 $3.2 $171.9 M
Market Overview
share ballooning from 13% in 2016 to 37% in 2018.
Within Latin America, Peru’s volume transacted leaped from 1.5 MtCO2e in 2016 to 21.2 MtCO2e in 2018. This
accounts for 86% of the overall 22.8 MtCO2e increase in volume from Latin America. Furthermore, nearly all of Peru’s
growth came via REDD+ projects. Without Peru, global REDD+ volume would have been virtually unchanged in the
2016-2018 period (see Box 3 for one possible reason why).
Africa’s share of the markets increased slightly from 2016-2018, from 11% to 15% of overall global volume.
BOX 3
“Nesting” is a long-discussed (by carbon market standards) but only recently executed practice of embedding
individual REDD+ projects into national or sub-national programs that aim to reduce greenhouse gas
emissions by reducing deforestation. Nesting programs are designed to ensure both environmental integrity
and economic fairness by making sure that all activities that contribute to emissions reduction are properly
identified and accounted for while reducing uncertainty associated with leakage.
Peru’s nesting program was piloted with projects verified under both VCS and CCB in the country’s Natural
Protected Areas (NPA), which are National Parks, National Reserves, and Communal Reserves, and has
recently been extended to all REDD+ carbon projects in the country. It makes it possible for the country to
deduct a project’s exported emissions reductions from the national inventory in the future. This serves two key
domestic constituents: developers of Peruvian REDD+ projects seeking to sell offsets into either the voluntary
market or compliance programs such as Carbon Offsetting and Reduction Scheme for International Aviation
(CORSIA) and Peruvian jurisdictions seeking funding from government-to-government programs (this will be
addressed in a section entitled “The Jurisdictional Juggernaut Could Steamroll Projects — or Tuck Them into
a Nest,” to be released December 9).
One thing remains clear: average prices for voluntary offsets remain well below average prices in compliance
markets around the world, and lower still than the $40-$80 per metric ton range that the World Bank estimates
to be necessary to achieve the goals of the Paris Agreement. Despite growing demand and positive signals for
future growth in the market discussed in this report, the surplus of voluntary credits — i.e., the gap between annual
Weighted average takes into account the varying degrees of importance of the numbers in a data set. In calculating a weighted
5
average, each number in the data set is multiplied by a predetermined weight before the final calculation is made. (Source:
Investopedia). In the case of this data, sales prices are weighted by their corresponding volumes for each transaction to
determine an overall volume-weighted average.
8 Financing Emissions Reductions for the Future
issuances and retirements (see Appendix 1, to be released in late December) — appears to have kept a lid on
prices in 2018.
Prices were higher for low-volume transactions and lower for high volume transactions, as evidenced in the higher
Market Overview
median6 prices reported of $5.43 in 2018 and $6.12 in 2017. The median price in 2016 was $5.32. (See Figure 4 in
the Appendix 1, to be released in late December).
Prices for REDD+ offsets fell 47% from $4.40 per metric ton in 2016 to $2.35 per metric ton in 2018, and several
respondents suggested this reflects project developers clearing out inventory of older vintages before they are
perceived as out of date. Prices for A/R offsets fell 30%, from $8.10 per metric ton in 2016 to $5.70 in 2018, while
Improved Forest Management (IFM) projects, although low in volume, drew the highest price per metric ton of any
project type in 2017 and 2018, at $9.32 and $8.15, respectively.
Transacted volume of VCS+CCB-certified offsets increased 325%, from 7.7 MtCO2e in 2016 to 32.7 MtCO2e in 2018,
with 76% of the increase concentrated in Peru. These increases further underscore both the rise in forestry offset
transactions and the apparent preference for projects that generate co-benefits, because VCS+CCB exclusively
covers forestry projects with clear co-benefits.
The rise in VCS+CCB certified offsets lifted total VCS volume 88.6%, from 33.4 MtCO2e in 2016 to 63.0 MtCO2e in
2018. Last year, VCS’s overall market share stood at 73%: 38% for VCS+CCB and 35% for VCS alone. The second
highest volume standard, Gold Standard, had a market share of 15%.
Despite (or, perhaps, because of) the strong volume, the price of VCS+CCB offsets in 2018 fell below that of offsets
certified under VCS alone. The price of VCS+CCB offsets fell from $3.90 in 2016 to $2.49 in 2018, while the price
of offsets certified under VCS alone increased from $2.30 to $2.71. This counter-intuitive price differential appears
to flow from a combination of transaction size, location, and project mix. Specifically, the VCS+CCB segment saw
several large transactions in 2017 and 2018, and these took place at a lower than average price. Furthermore,
VCS+CCB verification only applies to the Forestry and Land Use category, while projects verified under this
combination tend to be located in lower-income countries. Finally, he VCS+CCB verified projects reported in 2018
were 82% REDD+ by volume, a segment where developers are believed to have held ageing inventory that they
sold at a discount. Meanwhile, VCS-only projects covered a wider range of project types, almost half of which were
renewables, 18% A/R (which command a price premium), and just 5% REDD+.
Another popular project type for buyers seeking positive social co-benefits are offsets generated by the distribution
of clean-burning cookstoves. Transaction volume for these offsets increased 113%, from 2.3 MtCO2e in 2016 to 4.9
MtCO2e in 2018. Average prices held relatively steady at $5.10 in 2016, $6.17 in 2017, and $5.00 in 2018, when
the market value topped $24.8 million.
6
Median price, which is defined as the value of separating the higher half from the lower half of a data sample, therefore means
that that half of the transactions in 2018 were for less than $5.43/metric ton, and half were more.
State of the Voluntary Carbon Markets 2019 9
Of the five largest standards, the CDM was the only one to see a decline in volume — from 4.8 MtCO2e in 2016
to 2.2 MtCO2e in 2018, a drop of 54%. The CDM was initially created as a compliance standard under the Kyoto
Protocol, but the program faces an uncertain future that will be decided by two key upcoming negotiations around
Article 6 of the Paris Agreement and CORSIA. Voluntary buyers have also steered clear of CDM-certified projects,
Market Overview
largely due to additionality concerns, the exception being those that reduce emissions by distributing clean-
burning cookstoves. Nonetheless, many CDM project developers have turned to the voluntary markets to try and
find buyers.
Appendix
III Financing Emissions Reductions for the Future
Appendix
State of the Voluntary Carbon Markets 2019 IV
Appendix
The Family of
Pioneering Finance for Conservation
Forest Trends Initiatives
Biodiversity Initiative
Forestrade
T & Finance
Communities and Territorial Governance Initiative
Bringing sustainability to trade and financial
investments in the global market for forest products
Ecosystem Marketplace
Building capacity for local communities and governments
to engage in emerging environmental markets
Supply Change
Learn more about our programs at
www.forest-trends.org
Water Initiative