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What Is a Carbon Credit? Myth vs Reality

Let’s de‑romanticise this. Reality: What a carbon credit is Most serious definitions agree: a carbon credit is a tradeable instrument that conveys a claim to one tonne of avoided or removed greenhouse gas emissions, issued under a recognised carbon‑crediting program after verification. It exists in a registry, has a unique ID, can change hands, and…

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Forest fire image

Let’s de‑romanticise this.

Reality: What a carbon credit is

Most serious definitions agree: a carbon credit is a tradeable instrument that conveys a claim to one tonne of avoided or removed greenhouse gas emissions, issued under a recognised carbon‑crediting program after verification.

It exists in a registry, has a unique ID, can change hands, and can eventually be retired by a buyer.

Myth 1: “One credit makes us carbon neutral.”

A single credit compensates for one tonne of emissions on paper. Whether that actually balances the climate books depends on:

  • Additionality (would the project have happened anyway?)
  • Permanence (does the carbon stay out of the atmosphere?)
  • Leakage (did emissions just move somewhere else?)

Without integrity, you’re just buying decorative numbers.

Myth 2: “All credits are basically the same.”

Credits differ wildly by:

  • Project type (renewables vs forest conservation vs removals)
  • Methodology and standard (Verra, Gold Standard, CDM, etc.)
  • Vintage and risk profile (reversal risk, political risk, over‑crediting)

Treating them as interchangeable is like treating all “assets” as equally good, from U.S. Treasuries to dog‑themed altcoins.

Myth 3: “Credits replace the need to cut emissions”

No. Every credible framework says the same thing: first reduce your own emissions as much as possible, then use credits for the hard‑to‑abate remainder.

If credits are Plan A, you don’t have a climate strategy; you have a PR strategy.

Done right, credits are a tool for financing real mitigation and dealing with residual emissions. Done badly, they’re just a more expensive way to lie to yourself.