Kenya is planning to create a carbon credit trading market in order to help drive greenhouse-gas emissions reduction activity within the country and across Africa.
The government is creating a carbon offset trading platform to help kick-start foreign investment in renewable energy and forestry projects under the UN’s CDM mechanism.
Kenya’s largest forest and water areas, the Mau and Aberdares, are believed to have the potential to deliver billions of dollars in avoided deforestation credits for preserving and restoring these natural assets. The Mau forest has been reduced by 40 per cent in recent decades due to logging and land-clearing, and carbon credit trading will help reduce this.
The UN CDM has seen more than 5000 projects developed around the developing world over the last six years, but Africa has largely missed out with less than 150 getting off the ground. Kenyan authorities say the trading platform could make Nairobi a carbon trading hub in such projects for the whole continent.
The government has established a carbon finance unit in the Ministry of Finance and says the country’s public debt could be paid off with carbon revenues in six years, according to the head of the Carbon Financing Unit, Erastus Wahome.
For more information about carbon trading, speak to one of our consultants at 360 Invest Group today.
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