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Forestry share of voluntary carbon market slumps

An international survey of the voluntary carbon market that includes data from Australian and New Zealand firms has found forestry projects have slumped from being the major source of offset credits in 2006, with the mantle now passing to renewable energy projects.



But the voluntary carbon market is booming overall, the report says. And, with more and more companies developing carbon offset strategies, 2008 is likely to see even more rapid growth.


What to ask when buying carbon credits; plus when do greenhouse emissions 'cause' an impact?

Companies looking to buy credits to reduce or neutralise their carbon footprint need to be clear about the product and rights they are buying, Blake Dawson senior associate Lisa Moore has told a national conference of environmental lawyers.



Meanwhile, Blake Dawson's Meredith Gibbs says a legal concept of causation could be the best way to determine whether greenhouse gas emissions from a project might have an impact on matters of national environmental significance that would trigger EPBC Act assessment.



We can show the world's emissions trading schemes how to count wood, ABARE told

Designers of emissions trading schemes seem unable to see the wood products for the trees, NSW government research officer Fabiano Ximenes has told ABARE's Outlook 2008 conference.



Although carbon sink forests are recognised as offsets, no scheme in the world yet recognises carbon stored in timber. Yet research by Ximenes shows much of this carbon remains stored for "at least 100 years". He says Australia's emissions trading scheme should value this major benefit and a new research project could show how to do it.


Tasmania to legislate 60% cut, establish state offsets scheme; Garnaut paper delayed

Premier Paul Lennon yesterday laid out in state parliament a climate change strategy which will see Tasmania become the second Australian state to mandate a 60% emissions cut by 2050 and which will also introduce a state-based carbon offsets scheme.



Meanwhile, the Garnaut Review has put back by one week the release of its emissions trading paper and rescheduled Professor Garnaut's speech on trading.




News in brief, January 30, 2008

Only 2% of large businesses confident of their emissions data * ACF says company cars set to guzzle $2 billion a year in tax revenue, urges federal 'green' Budget * Woolies and grocery association contemplate carbon labelling * Allens findings on Gunns mill 'not credible', say researchers *



Regulator praises Sydney Water's conservation efforts * Major economies meeting to air concerns on 50% target, as Bush flags US$2 billion clean technology fund * U.S. watchdog agency urged to look at carbon offset claims *


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