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Europe's climate chief under pressure over Denmark's 'missing ...
26 May 2010 EUR5bn fraud investigation centres on Danish carbon registry, where carbon trading abuses were suspected last summer. Connie Hedegaard failed to act promptly, allege critics
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Industry hits carbon leakage jackpot
25 May 2010 A new report from Corporate Europe Observatory, which highlights how Lafarge and ArcelorMittal have engaged in extensive lobbying to secure free allowances in the third...
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Point Carbon guide to UN climate talks in Bonn (pdf)
25 May 2010 A 12-page supplement to "Trading Carbon" magazine, which includes a summary of how REDD+ could be linked into a global carbon market
(application/pdf 0MB )
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Industry threats to relocate over carbon targets exposed as 'misleading'
24 May 2010 New report suggest cement and steel industry threats over 'carbon leakage' from EU are misleading
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Another ETS carbon trade fraud raid reveals stash of firearms, piles of cash
21 May 2010 In the early hours of Friday morning, UK tax authorities raided a series of homes and businesses nabbing four men that are believed to be...
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International governors meet in Aceh to prioritize carbon trade
20 May 2010 The five-day Governors' Climate and Forest (GCF) forum opened in Banda Aceh on Monday to discuss and formulate a number of policies to fight for...
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UK power sector backs plans for carbon price floor to boost nuclear
17 May 2010 The newly-installed British Prime Minister, David Cameron, says he wants to create "the greenest government ever", but experts are warning that his plans to put...
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People's Bank of China: Carbon emissions-trading market urgent
17 May 2010 China should speed up the establishment of carbon emissions-trading market, says Zhang Jianhua, director of the research bureau of People's Bank of China (PBOC)
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Emitter Use of UN Credits in EU Carbon Trade Was Steady in 2009
16 May 2010 Factories and power stations in the European Union used about 82 million metric tons of their United Nations offset credits last year, European Commission regulator...
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New book exposes dangers of carbon market ahead of Bolivia climate summit |
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Monday, 19 April 2010 |

As up to 15,000 people gather in Bolivia to advance grassroots responses to the climate crisis, a new book exposes the failings of global climate policy and lays out numerous ways forward without the carbon market system that lies at its heart.
Carbon Trading: How it works and why it fails provides a devastating critique of both the theory and practice of carbon trading, and exposes its disastrous track record since its adoption as part of the Kyoto Protocol. It shows how the European Union Emissions Trading Scheme, the world’s largest carbon market, has consistently failed to ‘cap’ emissions, while the UN’s Clean Development Mechanism (CDM) routinely favours environmentally ineffective and socially unjust projects.
Free download here
“Anyone who still thinks that creating a carbon casino can solve our climate crisis owes it to themselves to read this book. The most convincing and concise challenge to the green profiteers yet.”
Naomi Klein, author, The Shock Doctrine
“The transition to a post-oil model is inevitable but instead of starting this process, it is delayed by barriers and traps such as the carbon market. This book teaches us how this barrier works and what there is behind this new trap of green capitalism. It is obligatory reading for all who fight for a post-oil civilisation.”
Ivonne Yanez, Oilwatch South America
"This book is an invaluable contribution to understanding the pitfalls of relying on the carbon markets to save the world's poor and the planet."
Meena Raman, Third World Network
The book includes original research with compelling case studies of CDM projects in Brazil, Indonesia, India and Thailand that have proved to be fraudulent, based on dispossession and human rights abuses, and led to strong resistance from communities in the Global South.
The book reveals how carbon trading is only a very recent invention by business and political elites that undermines existing environmental legislation and diverts from planning a rapid transition away from current fossil fuel expansion. It points to a plethora of ways forward without carbon trading - from subsidy shifting to regulation – based on local knowledge and political organising if climate change is to be addressed in a just manner.
The authors, Tamra Gilbertson and Oscar Reyes, are both researchers with Carbon Trade Watch. The project combines high quality research and integration with social movements worldwide, which has made it a respected commentator on global climate policy and climate justice since 2002.
The book will be launched at the World People's Conference on Climate Change and the Rights of Mother Earth.
For interviews and comments:
Tamra Gilbertson +34 625 498 083 or
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Oscar Reyes (in English) +27 791 682 998 or
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Joanna Cabello +31 681 389 805 or
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(in Bolivia 16-24 of April. Local number: +591 705 435 49)
To obtain a printed copy, contact Joanna Cabello through
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or local number.
Download the book
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