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Volume 1, Number 1/2
January/February 2008
Carbon Markets and Consulting & Engineering
This edition introduces readers to the CCBJ segmentation of the Climate Change Industry and focuses in depth on both the regulated carbon market and the voluntary offset market. Current unit and price estimates and growth forecasts from a range of sources are discussed. CCBJ Newsletter broadens the picture with scenarios for future growth. Analysis of the 2007 market shows regulatory uncertainty is no barrier to the rapid growth of emissions trading, and new schemes are emerging to satisfy market demand for credits and offsets. This snapshot of the carbon market characterizes all major players in the segment—emission generators, credit and offset providers, traders, exchange operators, carbon fund managers, etc.—and summarizes various business models and approaches to the market.
In this edition
- CantorC02e counts on combined history in environmental services and greenhouse gas trading to bring buyers and sellers together in greenhouse gas emissions trading;
- Consultants report dramatic surge in climate change business, developing carbon commerce practices and emissions trading expertise as global warming moves center stage: SAIC, CH2M Hill, ICF International, Stratus
- Consulting, ERM, Eastern Research Group, Environ International and others describe their evolving practices and outline their strategies;
- EcoSecurities’ performance illustrates an exploding market for carbon brokerage services
Profiles of voluntary offset suppliers: Ecosystem Restoration Associates, CarbonZero, The Climate Trust and co2balance.
- Verifiers are a critical link in the emissions trading value chain. Experts compare U.S. and European approaches to verifying greenhouse gas emissions reductions;
- Guide to emissions trading and glossary of carbon market terminology;
Who’s playing in the global carbon market? ICF International’s Executive VP identifies a range of suppliers in the climate change business;
- Agr. and Forestry Offsets: Lack of standardization, low prices hamper commercial forestry offsets; voluntary market enters growth phase
This edition is $295 for non-subscribers. If you are a subscriber and would like to purchase additional copies or an electronic version of this edition please call EBI.
CCBJ edition are NOT a downloadable item. Electronic versions of each CCBJ edition are available only to corporate CCBJ subscribers that have registered and signed a license agreement. If you order this edition as a non-subscriber, you will receive a paper copy by mail.
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