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How are carbon credits traded and monitored ?
Carbon credits are a crucial component in the global fight against climate change. They represent a certificate indicating that one tonne of CO2 (or its equivalent in other greenhouse gases) has been either reduced, avoided, or sequestered from the atmosphere. The trading and monitoring of carbon credits involve several key steps and players, ensuring that the reductions are real, measurable, and verifiable. Trading platforms include centralized exchanges like the European Energy Exchange (EEX) and Chicago Climate Exchange (CCX), over-the-counter (OTC) markets for direct transactions between two parties, and brokers who facilitate buying and selling by matching buyers with sellers. Monitoring and verification processes include project registration and approval, third-party audits, issuance of credits, transaction recording, and retirement of credits. Key players involved in the process include governments, project developers, verifiers, registrars, brokers and traders, and compliance entities. Challenges and considerations include standardization, double-counting, persistence, transparency, and environmental integrity.