Jim Bunch, a former managing director at Goldman Sachs Group Inc., has teamed up with law firm Linklaters and London nonprofit Scope 3 Climate Capital to pioneer an alternative approach to carbon credits.
This initiative aims to reduce dependency on carbon credits among private-sector entities striving to achieve net zero emissions.
The group is currently engaged in discussions with several multinational corporations across various industries, spanning from technology to steel production.
Their strategy centres on scrutinizing corporate supply chains, recognizing that these often account for the majority of reported emissions.
Also read: Integrity Council announces first high-integrity CCP-labelled carbon credits
By targeting supply chains, the group aims to enable institutional investors to address climate-related risks within their portfolios, which conventional diversification tactics may not effectively mitigate.
Jim Bunch, who co-founded the US-based climate consulting firm Impact Delta in 2020, underscores the importance of this approach in facilitating a transition toward sustainability.
“Pension funds with 50-year liabilities can’t diversify away carbon,” Bunch said in an interview. “So climate change is an existential threat for their entire liability on the balance sheet.”
Earlier this year, the European Union enacted legislation that compels companies to establish transition plans and obliges them to document genuine reductions in emissions.
Legal experts advising companies and financial institutions within the EU have explicitly stated that carbon credits cannot be utilized to assert a decrease in overall emissions.
This regulation underscores the EU’s commitment to fostering genuine emission reductions and discouraging reliance on carbon offsetting mechanisms.