The newly launched Carbon Removal Registry Isometric made its debut on Monday, issuing its first credits to the Frontier fund led by Stripe.
While the quantity of tons verified by Isometric remains modest compared to conventional carbon offset registries, this development signifies a potential stride toward rectifying an industry recently marred by controversy.
Isometric’s initial verified removals originate from Vaulted Deep, a company employing slurry injection technology to sequester carbon-rich organic waste underground.
Isometric founder and CEO Eamon Jubbawy disclosed that several other firms, including Equatic and Charm Industrial, have entered agreements with Isometric and are presently undergoing the verification process.
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“We’re seeing a big revolution in the voluntary carbon markets because the vast majority of traditional carbon credits in the offset, in the avoidance side, are coming under real scrutiny,” Vaulted Deep CEO Julia Reichelstein told Bloomberg Green.
“A lot of buyers that I talked to have net-zero goals, and they want to meet those goals in a high-quality way. They do not want to buy junk,” Reichelstein added.
Jubbawy expresses assurance that Isometric can navigate past some of the challenges encountered in the offset market. Departing from the customary approach of carbon registries, Isometric adopts a model where buyers, instead of suppliers, bear the cost for its services.
Moreover, the company receives a fixed fee rather than charging per credit issued. According to Jubbawy, this strategy resolves certain misaligned incentives that historically led to excessive crediting.