China issues first tradable forest carbon credit stamps
China has issued its first batch of forest carbon credit stamps in Sanming City in southeastern Fujian Province in a move to use market mechanisms to reduce carbon emissions.
Forest carbon credits are permits for companies to emit a certain amount of carbon dioxide.
They are converted from added forest areas and the amount of carbon they can capture.
The first five stamps issued on Tuesday in Sanming offer forest owners credits for 29,715 tons of carbon dioxide.
One of the stamps, permitting 12,723 tons of carbon dioxide, was generated from approximately 213 hectares of public forest in Changkou Village, and it has guaranteed the village additional earnings of 140,000 yuan (US$21,755) through carbon trading, according to village Party Chief Zhang Linshun.
A nickel-producing company in Sanming purchased 2,723 tons worth of carbon credits from the village for 15 yuan per ton, and another company bought the remaining 10,000 tons as inventory for 10 yuan per ton.
The carbon credits can also serve as collateral for bank credit and loans.
Having purchased 18,294 tons of carbon credits from Changkou Village and two other locations, a Fujian-based company has been credited 5 million yuan by the Industrial Bank Co Ltd.
“As long as the forests are in good care, they will be sustainable sources of income for local people,” said local forest official Chen Meigao.
The forest carbon credit system harbors great potential amid China’s pursuit of peaking carbon emissions by 2030 and achieving carbon neutrality by 2060 , said Chen, adding that Sanming is exploring more market mechanisms to help lower emissions.