Greenwashing in the carbon credit market refers to the deceptive practice of overstating or fabricating environmental impact by purchasing low-quality or unverifiable carbon offsets.
Greenwashing in the carbon credit market refers to the deceptive practice of overstating or fabricating environmental impact by purchasing low-quality or unverifiable carbon offsets. This undermines legitimate climate action efforts and erodes public and investor trust in sustainability claims. To maintain environmental credibility and regulatory alignment, carbon credit buyers must take specific steps to avoid greenwashing—especially in light of increasing scrutiny from ESG reporting frameworks such as CDP, ISSB, and GRI.
| Greenwashing Risk | Due Diligence Action |
|---|---|
| Buying unverified offsets | Use registry-verified credits (e.g., Verra, Gold Standard) |
| Double-counting in claims | Confirm host country NDC alignment under Article 6 |
| Overstating net-zero compliance | Align public claims with VCMI Claims Code |
| No buffer for reversal risks | Require permanence strategies and buffer reserves |
| No retirement of credits | Demand registry retirement documentation |
Low-quality carbon credits may result from outdated methodologies, unverifiable emissions data, or poor oversight. Examples include credits tied to logged forests, double-counted renewable projects, or those issued without rigorous third-party verification. Tools like the Carbon Credit Quality Initiative (CCQI) and Carbon Market Watch help identify high-risk projects.
Buyers should rely on leading integrity benchmarks such as the Integrity Council for the Voluntary Carbon Market (ICVCM) and the Voluntary Carbon Markets Integrity Initiative (VCMI). These frameworks provide criteria to assess credit quality, prevent greenwashing, and ensure alignment with emerging disclosure mandates.
Procurement and ESG teams should watch for:
Green Carbon Corp supports corporate buyers in sourcing verified carbon credits that meet global best practices for environmental integrity and transparency. Through platform integrations and technical reviews, the firm helps ESG teams avoid reputational risk while maxing climate outcomes.
| Greenwashing Risk | Due Diligence Action |
|---|---|
| Buying unverified offsets | Use registry-verified credits (e.g., Verra, Gold Standard) |
| Double-counting in claims | Confirm host country NDC alignment under Article 6 |
| Overstating net-zero compliance | Align public claims with VCMI Claims Code |
| No buffer for reversal risks | Require permanence strategies and buffer reserves |
| No retirement of credits | Demand registry retirement documentation |