The Carbon Neutral Myth

Offset Indulgences for your Climate Sins
February 2007
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Carbon offsets are the modern day indulgences, sold to an increasingly carbon conscious public to absolve their climate sins

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Carbon offsets are the modern day indulgences, sold to an increasingly carbon conscious public to absolve their climate sins. Scratch the surface, however, and a disturbing picture emerges, where creative accountancy and elaborate shell games cover up the impossibility of verifying genuine climate change benefits, and where communities in the South often have little choice as offset projects are inflicted on them.
This report argues that offsets place disproportionate emphasis on individual lifestyles and carbon footprints, distracting attention from the wider, systemic changes and collective political action that needs to be taken to tackle climate change. Promoting more effective and empowering approaches involves moving away from the marketing gimmicks, celebrity endorsements, technological quick fixes, and the North/South exploitation that the carbon offsets industry embodies. >Download PDF

Introduction
1 Corrupting the Climate Change Debate
2 The Rise and Fall of Future Forests
3 The problems with trees and light bulbs
4 Three Case Studies in the Majority World
- India - "Rock Band Capitalist Tool For Cutting CO2"
- Land rights in Uganda
- Energy efficient light bulbs in South Africa
5 Celebrities and Climate Change
6 Positive responses to climate change
Appendix - Offsets and "future value accounting"
Notes
Contact kevin [at] carbontradewatch.org

Pages: 
80pages
ISSN: 
9789071007187

Team member of Carbon Trade Watch

Kevin Smith has been working with the environmental justice project at TNI since 2005, although he has been more informally involved since it started out as Carbon Trade Watch in 2002. He has a degree in Human Sciences. He used to be the editor of the Green Pepper magazine and in 2003 he helped to establish Escanda, a residential project in Northern Spain that combines sustainable living with political engagement at local and international levels. He currently lives in London works part time at Platform. He has been active in climate justice issues since the COP 6 in Den Haag in 2000 and participates in the international Durban Network for Climate Justice.

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