Estimated Carbon

Guilt-Free Consumerism

Companies that advertise their commitment to become carbon-neutral typically plan on meeting those targets by buying carbon offsets. Purchasing these credits is much easier than actually curtailing operations or transitioning entirely to renewable energy sources. The only problem is that the companies, and organizations that sell carbon offsets, have a vested interest in overestimating how much carbon they are removing from the atmosphere. The organizations putting these credits on market are the same ones responsible for calculating their size and impact. How long is the project going to run for, how certain are we that it will reach its goals, will there be any confounding effects (e.g. release of methane), what will truly happen under the status quo, how likely is the baseline scenario? These are the types of questions that need to be answered before a project can be packaged off and sold – yet all these variables are based on assumptions.

In effect, the sellers of carbon credits get to charge for something they make out of thin air, through theoretical modeling. It's a bit like financial derivatives, where profits are booked upon their creation, not on the ultimate outcome. Organizations pitching these projects get to will their "product" into existence, through the sheer power of assumptions. If this was any other good or service, the credits couldn't be sold until their true effectiveness could be determined, by collecting and analyzing evidence. However with carbon credits, they get to be purchased in advance of their measurement, regardless of the projects' ultimate ability to combat climate change. Organizations that fail to be realistic in their projections reap greater rewards. In turn, most market participants are overstating the amount of good they are actually doing in the world (and turning a blind eye to any contradictory evidence)!

But don't take our word for it, here's someone who summarizes this carbon offset mirage very nicely:

The real challenge we have globally is that mankind produces 4,000 times as many emissions as we did in the pre-industrial era. And most of these carbon offset projects are about planting trees. There is not room on the planet to plant 4,000 times as many trees. That simply cannot be the answer and the problem with it is it's the easy solution; it is the solution that if you're sitting in the C-suite, you can write a check and check the box, and have a marketing message that I've offset all my carbon, but you really haven't done anything.

And who is this 'commie pinko' that dares criticize the futility of the current system for buying and selling carbon credits? Well, it's none other than United Airlines CEO Scott Kirby (Bloomberg Live3, 17-May-21), someone who is himself playing the game of "going green"! He is the first to admit that his company emits an awful lot of carbon dioxide and that the greenwashing he's doing is mainly for show, but he doesn't have a choice because not doing anything makes his company look evil in the eyes of consumers that don't know any better (or can't be bothered to ask questions regarding the details).

Fact Check

Kirby makes a valid point: Where are all these new trees going to go? Bloomberg confirms that "there's only about 500 million hectares of land left that can be dedicated to new forest for carbon capture". And yet, a whole lot of long-term carbon offsetting plans involve planting trees.

Some Ugly Examples

Does this message make you all warm and fuzzy? That's the goal. This company, YepYou (we are purposefully not linking to their site), is offering a chance to offset your breathing, which as you may have guessed it, releases carbon in the atmosphere. For a mere $17 a year, you can free your guilty conscience1. Needless to say, of all human activity, exhaling is probably the least damaging to the environment. It's everything else that we need to change!

The owners of this forest in Brazil sold their carbon credits on the promise they wouldn't cut down the trees. Then, a company found diamonds on the site and the forest was cut down in a heartbeat, despite the pre-sold carbon offsets. At that point it was too late, the purchasers of those credits already had their PR departments "taking credit" for their good deeds (e.g. FIFA)2.

Conclusion

The lesson here isn't that we shouldn't try to make the world a better place. But rather, we should create a system of checks and balances to counter the human instinct to game any system if given a chance. Denying the possibility for abuse isn't doing justice to this worthwhile cause!

Notes

1 : Last Week Tonight With John Oliver, S09E21, HBO.

2 : Wendover Productions on YouTube.

3 : Scott Kirby, CEO, United Airlines, told Brooke Sutherland, columnist at Bloomberg, that climate change is “the biggest issue that faces our generation". In all fairness to him, he claimed his company is planning to going "100% green by 2050 without relying on carbon offsets". We will believe it when we see it, as the airline industry is a significant source of carbon emissions in the world today.

Source: https://www.bloomberglive.com/blog/event-highlights-from-the-bloomberg-businessweek-may17/

Video: https://www.bloomberg.com/news/videos/2021-05-17/united-airlines-ceo-on-sustainability-video