Carbon markets and climate finance are the financial architecture of global climate action. They translate the physical problem of greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions into economic instruments — prices, credits, and transfers — that incentivise emission reductions and channel money from rich to poor countries for climate adaptation and mitigation.
Why Carbon Pricing?
Greenhouse gas emissions are a classic negative externality — their costs fall on society (climate damages) but not on the emitter. The polluter pays principle demands that emitters bear the social cost of their emissions. Carbon pricing is the economic mechanism to achieve this.
Two main instruments:
| Instrument | Mechanism | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Carbon Tax | Government sets a price per tonne of CO2; emitters pay the tax | Sweden, Canada, Chile |
| Cap-and-Trade (ETS) | Government sets a cap on total emissions; companies trade allowances | EU ETS, RGGI (USA), China ETS |
Under cap-and-trade, the cap limits total emissions; the trade allows firms to buy and sell allowances, finding the cheapest route to compliance. The price of carbon is set by the market.
Carbon Credits
A carbon credit represents the right to emit (or the offset of) one metric tonne of CO2 equivalent (tCO2e). Credits are generated either:
- By a government issuing allowances within a cap-and-trade scheme
- By a project that reduces emissions below a business-as-usual baseline (carbon offset)
Carbon offset projects include: renewable energy, energy efficiency, methane capture, forestry (REDD+), cookstoves, and soil carbon sequestration.
EU Emissions Trading System (EU ETS)
The EU ETS, launched in 2005, is the world's largest carbon market and the first major international emissions trading scheme. It covers:
- Power generation, heavy industry, aviation (intra-EU)
- About 40% of EU's total GHG emissions
How it works: Firms receive or buy allowances (EU Allowances/EUAs); at year-end they must surrender allowances equal to their emissions. Firms with surplus allowances can sell them; those with deficits must buy.
Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM): Launched 2023 (transitional phase); from 2026, imports from non-ETS countries will pay a carbon border tax to prevent carbon leakage.
Kyoto Protocol Mechanisms (1997–2020)
The Kyoto Protocol (1997, entered into force 2005) created three market mechanisms under the compliance framework:
| Mechanism | Full Name | Parties | How it worked |
|---|---|---|---|
| CDM | Clean Development Mechanism | Annex I (developed) + Non-Annex I (developing) | Developed countries fund emission-reduction projects in developing countries; earn CERs (Certified Emission Reductions) |
| JI | Joint Implementation | Two Annex I countries | Developed country funds project in another developed country; earns ERUs (Emission Reduction Units) |
| ET | Emissions Trading | Annex I countries | Countries with surplus units sell to those with deficits |
India and CDM: India was one of the largest CDM host countries — over 1,600 CDM projects registered, generating millions of CERs mainly in renewable energy and energy efficiency.
Article 6 of the Paris Agreement
Article 6 establishes the international carbon market framework for the post-Kyoto era (2020 onwards). It has three sub-articles:
| Article | Mechanism | Nature |
|---|---|---|
| Article 6.2 | Cooperative Approaches / ITMOs | Bilateral — countries transfer emission reductions (Internationally Transferred Mitigation Outcomes) through bilateral agreements |
| Article 6.4 | Centralised Crediting Mechanism (replacing CDM) | UN-supervised; project-based credits; accessible to public and private actors |
| Article 6.8 | Non-Market Approaches | Capacity building, technology transfer, finance without market transactions |
COP29 (Baku, 2024) — Article 6 Breakthrough
After years of stalled negotiations, COP29 in Baku (November 2024) delivered a historic breakthrough — the full operationalisation of Article 6 of the Paris Agreement. Two key standards were adopted:
- Standards on methodologies for Article 6.4 projects
- Standards on emission removals (carbon removal credits)
A grievance mechanism and liability provisions were also established. The first issuance of Article 6.4 units (originally expected by mid-2025) was delayed; the UNFCCC Supervisory Body approved the first-ever credits on 26 February 2026 — a clean-cookstove project in Myanmar (60,000 credits). This unlocks an estimated $250 billion in savings for meeting global climate targets.
REDD+: Forests as Carbon Sinks
REDD+ stands for Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and Forest Degradation (with "+" covering conservation, sustainable management, and enhancement of carbon stocks).
Scope:
- REDD: Reducing emissions from deforestation
- REDD+: Additionally covers forest degradation, conservation of forest carbon stocks, sustainable management of forests, enhancement of carbon stocks
- REDD++: Comprehensive land use, land-use change and forestry (LULUCF)
UN-REDD Programme: A collaborative initiative of FAO, UNDP, and UNEP supporting developing countries to build capacity for REDD+ implementation.
India and REDD+: India has been developing its National REDD+ Strategy. India's forests store significant carbon; forest-based carbon credits could generate finance for forest conservation.
India's Carbon Credit Trading Scheme (CCTS)
India's domestic carbon market is established under the Energy Conservation (Amendment) Act, 2022, which provides the legal basis for a carbon market. The Carbon Credit Trading Scheme (CCTS), 2023 was notified in June 2023.
Structure of the Indian Carbon Market (ICM)
| Component | Details |
|---|---|
| Administrator | Ministry of Power + MoEFCC; Bureau of Energy Efficiency (BEE) as scheme administrator |
| Registry | Grid-India manages the carbon credit registry |
| Compliance Mechanism | Mandatory for energy-intensive industries; GHG emission intensity targets set |
| Voluntary Mechanism | Non-obligated entities can register emission-reduction projects for Carbon Credit Certificates (CCCs) |
| Covered Sectors (Phase 1) | 9 sectors: Aluminium, Cement, Chlor Alkali, Fertiliser, Iron & Steel, Pulp & Paper, Petrochemicals, Petroleum refinery, Textiles |
Timeline: Phase 1 (2024–2025) involves setting emission intensity targets and establishing the registry. First compliance-based trades expected by October 2026.
Replaces: The PAT (Perform, Achieve, and Trade) scheme, India's earlier energy efficiency trading mechanism.
Green Bonds and Sovereign Green Bonds
A green bond is a fixed-income financial instrument where proceeds are used exclusively for green/climate projects — renewable energy, energy efficiency, clean transport, sustainable water management.
SEBI Green Bond Framework: SEBI has specified requirements for labelling, eligible project categories, disclosure, and reporting for green bonds in India.
India's Sovereign Green Bonds: The Government of India issued its first-ever Sovereign Green Bonds in January 2023:
- First tranche: ₹8,000 crore (US$1 billion) — 25 January 2023 — 5-year and 10-year bonds
- Second tranche: ₹8,000 crore — 9 February 2023
- Total: ₹16,000 crore (US$2 billion) in FY 2022–23
- First tranche was oversubscribed by 4x
- Proceeds used for green infrastructure: renewable energy, green transport, sustainable water management
Climate Finance Architecture
The $100 Billion Promise
At COP15 (Copenhagen, 2009), developed countries pledged to mobilise $100 billion per year by 2020 for climate finance to developing countries. This pledge was inadequately fulfilled and sparked persistent tensions in negotiations.
Green Climate Fund (GCF)
| Parameter | Details |
|---|---|
| Established | 2010 (Cancun); operational from 2015 |
| Headquarters | Incheon, South Korea |
| Mandate | Finance mitigation and adaptation in developing countries |
| GCF-1 (2019) | ~$10 billion pledged (32 countries) |
| GCF-2 (2023) | ~$10.6 billion pledged (33 countries); US$9.75 billion confirmed |
| Balance | Equal split between mitigation and adaptation |
Adaptation Fund
Established under the Kyoto Protocol; resourced from a 2% levy on CDM CERs. Funds adaptation projects directly implemented by developing countries. Under the Paris Agreement, the Adaptation Fund also serves the Paris Agreement.
New Collective Quantified Goal (NCQG) — COP29 Outcome
At COP29 (Baku, November 2024), a new climate finance goal replaced the $100 billion pledge:
- Core goal: Developed countries to mobilise US$300 billion per year by 2035 for developing countries
- Broader ambition: Scale up total climate finance from all sources to US$1.3 trillion per year by 2035
- Sources: public, private, bilateral, multilateral, and alternative sources
- China and Gulf states encouraged to make voluntary contributions
This was criticised by developing countries (including India) as far below the estimated need of $1.3–1.5 trillion/year.
Loss and Damage Fund
| Event | Outcome |
|---|---|
| COP27 (Sharm el-Sheikh, 2022) | Historic agreement to establish a fund for loss and damage from climate change |
| COP28 (Dubai, 2023) | Fund formally operationalised — World Bank hosts as a financial intermediary for 4 years; initial pledges of US$700 million |
Loss and damage refers to the irreversible climate harms that cannot be prevented through mitigation (reducing emissions) or adapted to — such as sea-level rise threatening small island states, glacial retreat, and extreme weather events.
CBDR-RC Principle
Common But Differentiated Responsibilities and Respective Capabilities (CBDR-RC) is the foundational equity principle in international climate law (Article 3, UNFCCC, 1992).
Meaning:
- Common responsibility: All countries share responsibility for addressing climate change
- Differentiated responsibilities: Developed countries (historically large emitters) bear greater obligations — must act first and finance developing countries
- Respective capabilities: Each country acts according to its means
This principle underpins all climate finance obligations: the reason developed countries fund the GCF, NCQG, and Adaptation Fund.
Just Transition
The Just Transition concept recognises that moving to a low-carbon economy must be equitable — workers and communities dependent on fossil fuels (coal miners, thermal power workers) should not bear disproportionate costs.
For India, just transition in coal-dependent regions (Jharkhand, Chhattisgarh, Odisha, Vidarbha) involves:
- Retraining and alternative employment
- Social protection during transition
- Financing for clean energy alternatives
Blended finance (mixing public/concessional money with private finance) is a key mechanism to de-risk clean investments in developing countries.
Recent Developments (2024–2026)
India's Carbon Credit Trading Scheme (CCTS) — Implementation 2024–2026
The Carbon Credit Trading Scheme (CCTS) was notified by the Ministry of Power under the Energy Conservation (Amendment) Act 2022 in June 2023. In July 2024, the Bureau of Energy Efficiency (BEE) published the Detailed Procedure for Compliance Mechanism (version 1.0), establishing the technical framework for Carbon Credit Certificate (CCC) issuance and trading.
The CCTS starts with a gradual transition from the Perform, Achieve, and Trade (PAT) scheme beginning in FY 2025–26. Seven energy-intensive sectors (aluminium, cement, chlor-alkali, fertilisers, iron and steel, petrochemicals, pulp and paper) are notified for the compliance mechanism. Carbon Credit Certificates will be traded through India's power exchanges (IEX and PXIL). The CCTS represents India's first mandatory compliance carbon market — distinct from the existing voluntary carbon market under the Bureau of Energy Efficiency.
UPSC angle: CCTS, BEE's role, covered sectors, PAT-to-CCTS transition, Article 6 Paris Agreement linkages, and India's domestic carbon market architecture are Mains GS-3 content.
COP29 Article 6 Breakthrough — International Carbon Markets 2024
COP29 (Baku 2024) formally adopted the operational rules for the Paris Agreement's Article 6.4 mechanism — the new UN-supervised international carbon market that replaces the Clean Development Mechanism (CDM) under the Kyoto Protocol. The Article 6.4 mechanism allows countries and private entities to trade internationally transferred mitigation outcomes (ITMOs).
India could be a major supplier of carbon credits through afforestation/reforestation, renewable energy, and waste management projects generating ITMOs. However, India and other developing countries pushed back against provisions allowing project "removal" credits (for carbon sequestration) to count equivalently to "avoidance" credits (for not emitting), arguing it could undermine emissions reduction incentives.
UPSC angle: Article 6.4 mechanism, ITMOs, CDM successor framework, and India's potential as carbon credit supplier are Mains GS-3 content; Prelims may ask about Article 6 provisions.
Green Climate Fund and Climate Finance Flows — Replenishment 2024
The Green Climate Fund (GCF), the world's largest dedicated climate fund, completed its second formal replenishment (GCF-2) with approximately $10.6 billion pledged from 34 countries and one region for 2024–2027 — a modest improvement from GCF-1 (~$10 billion), but far below what developing countries need. India has received GCF funding for several adaptation and mitigation projects, including the Madhya Pradesh Climate Resilience Watershed Management Project.
The broader NCQG debate at COP29 revealed structural weaknesses in climate finance: much "climate finance" counted by developed countries includes private sector investment (which requires returns), export credits, and market-rate loans — not grants. India, Brazil, and South Africa have pushed for a shift in climate finance accounting to count only public grants and concessional loans.
UPSC angle: GCF replenishment amounts, climate finance definition debate (grants vs loans), CBDR principle, and India's GCF projects are Mains GS-2/GS-3 content.
Indian Carbon Market Portal Launch — CCTS Compliance Goes Live (March 2026)
Power Minister Manohar Lal Khattar formally launched the Indian Carbon Market (ICM) Portal on 21 March 2026 at the Prakriti 2026 International Conference on Carbon Markets, New Delhi — marking the operational commencement of India's mandatory carbon market. As of January 2026, compliance obligations are in force for seven of nine sectors (aluminium, chlor-alkali, cement, petrochemicals, petroleum refineries, pulp and paper, and textiles), with GHG emission intensity targets for FY 2025–26 and FY 2026–27. Final targets for iron and steel and fertilisers are pending.
The 740+ covered entities represent over 700 million tonnes CO₂e — placing India's CCTS among the largest ETS systems globally by coverage scope, comparable to the EU ETS. Carbon Credit Certificates (CCCs) will trade on IEX and PXIL. The compliance mechanism is set alongside a voluntary offset mechanism, enabling non-covered entities to generate offset credits. India's CCTS differs from the EU ETS in being intensity-based (not absolute cap-based), aligning with India's NDC approach of reducing emissions intensity of GDP rather than absolute emissions.
UPSC angle: ICM Portal launch (21 March 2026), seven sectors in compliance, January 2026 targets in force, intensity-based vs absolute cap design distinction, and Article 6 Paris Agreement linkage are Mains GS-3 and Prelims content.
Exam Strategy
For Prelims:
- 1 carbon credit = 1 tonne CO2 equivalent
- EU ETS launched 2005 — world's largest carbon market
- CDM: developed countries fund projects in developing countries, earn CERs
- Article 6.4 = new crediting mechanism (replacing CDM); operationalised at COP29 (Baku, 2024)
- India CCTS: notified June 2023; under Energy Conservation Amendment Act 2022; BEE administers
- India Sovereign Green Bonds: January 2023; ₹16,000 crore total; RBI auction
- NCQG (COP29 2024): $300 billion/year by 2035; broader goal $1.3 trillion/year by 2035
- Loss and Damage Fund: established COP27 (2022), operationalised COP28 (2023), World Bank hosts
- GCF-2: ~$10.6 billion pledged (34 countries + 1 region, 2024–2027 period)
- REDD+: Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and Forest Degradation
For Mains (GS3):
- Article 6 operationalisation at COP29 — significance for India, opportunities for CCTS linkage
- CBDR-RC vs "enhanced transparency framework" — equity debates in climate negotiations
- India's CCTS — design challenges, PAT to CCTS transition, sector coverage
- Climate finance gap — $300 billion NCQG vs actual needs; India's position in negotiations
- Loss and damage — ethical/legal debate; SIDS and LDCs perspective
Previous Year Questions (PYQs)
Prelims
- With reference to 'Carbon Credits', which of the following statements is/are correct? — (1 credit = 1 tonne CO2 equivalent; CDM generates credits in developing countries)
- REDD+ mechanism is related to: — Forests; reducing emissions from deforestation and degradation
- Which of the following is the correct description of 'cap-and-trade' as applied to climate change? (UPSC 2011)
- With reference to the 'Green Climate Fund', it was established at: — COP16 Cancun, 2010
Mains
- "The New Collective Quantified Goal (NCQG) agreed at COP29 is a step forward but falls far short of developing countries' needs." Critically analyse India's position in climate finance negotiations. (GS3, 250 words)
- What is Article 6 of the Paris Agreement? Discuss the significance of its operationalisation at COP29 for India's Carbon Credit Trading Scheme (CCTS). (GS3, 150 words)
- Explain the concept of 'Just Transition' in the context of India's coal-dependent economy. What policy measures are needed to make India's energy transition equitable? (GS3, 250 words)
BharatNotes