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Blockchains can help reduce emissions, here’s how

Jessica Guttridge

The Government’s heavily criticised credit-based emission reduction strategy has been renewed for another year- it can do with some changes

Blockchain, the system behind bitcoin, provides an opportunity for the carbon market to be faster, more effective and more transparent, by partially decentralising the process and streamlining secondary markets, according to a new report.

Australia’s emissions are predicted to increase 8 per cent above 2005 levels by 2030, rather than the 14-17 per cent decrease required to meet Australia’s Paris Agreement target, according to the Climate Action Tracker

In 2013, The Federal Government created the Emissions Reduction Fund, which awarded money and contracts to projects that reduced carbon emissions to remedy climate change. In 2019, despite its wide criticism on costs, complex administration and effectiveness as emissions have steadily gone up, the policy has been extended as the Climate Solutions Fund

While a Federal Government review in 2017 recommended the introduction of a secondary market in which companies could trade carbon reduction credits to non-government clients if they exceed their carbon reduction target, the current policy limits its potential. The report notes that Blockchain technology could solve these issues by removing burden from the regulator, and automatically tracking the carbon credits as they are bought and sold.

Blockchain is a secure digital ledger that can be accessed and verified by all its’ participants. The information is all shared and transparent, and without the need of a third party. 

In a peer-to-peer market, blockchain would be able to verify reductions and allow participants to see that no credits were double counted. Additionally, it would be able to introduce smart contracts that are enabled when certain conditions are met, awarding the credits once claims have been verified. 

Projects that are currently contracted to Climate Solutions Fund could also have an extension added that awards the credits automatically.  

There is a lot of potential for cost reduction, as well as frustration, in using blockchain: with reducing the burden on administrative teams and improving the speed of project cash flow. 

In a report by researchers from the University of Melbourne’s Sustainability Science Lab, a partially decentralised model is proposed to implement these changes. 

The report evaluated and characterised different approaches to blockchain carbon market models around the world into four distinct approaches, with the authors’ proposing that Australia picks up elements from each.

  • Networked carbon – Connecting national carbon markets to one large global market
  • Industry 4.0 - Using smart devices, such as sensors to support monitoring, reporting and verification in carbon markets, automating processes through digitisation 
  • Technolibertarian – Privacy focused approach to convince reluctant participants to join, with an open, public blockchain, featuring decentralised consensus
  • Voluntary Offset – Uses Decentralised Autonomous Organisations (DAOs) to house voluntary offset projects, run by smart contracts. In this model, Universities create and voluntary projects which can be verified by other Universities before carbon credits are issued.
With Australia falling behind in meeting its emissions reductions target from the Paris Agreement, the report’s authors say that blockchain is something the Federal Government needs to consider.
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