As companies face growing regulatory and stakeholder pressure to meet net-zero targets, clear decisions around carbon offsets are critical. Yet many still ask:
When it comes to carbon offsets in the voluntary carbon market (VCM), most projects fall into two categories:
1. Carbon Avoidance
Avoidance projects work by preventing greenhouse gas emissions that would otherwise occur. This includes activities like protecting forests from deforestation, reduce methane emissions from landfills, or shifting to renewable energy sources. While these projects don't remove existing carbon from the atmosphere, they play a crucial role in slowing the pace of climate change and safeguarding existing carbon sinks.
Benefits and impacts of avoidance:
• Cost-effective, especially in the Global South
• Immediate impact on emissions trajectory
• Supports biodiversity and ecosystem protection (e.g., through forest conservation)
• Often easier to scale quickly
❗ Limitation: Measurement and additionality can be more complex, as they rely on predicting avoided future emissions.
2. Carbon Removal
Removal projects actively extract CO₂ from the atmosphere and store it in biomass, soils, oceans, or geological formations. Nature-based methods like reforestation, soil carbon sequestration, and wetland restoration are complemented by emerging technologies such as direct air capture and mineralization. These solutions are essential for addressing residual emissions and achieving net-zero, particularly for sectors with unavoidable emissions.
Benefits and impacts of removal:
• Essential for net-zero and beyond (net-negative emissions)
• Long-term or permanent carbon storage is possible
• Suitable for offsetting hard-to-abate emissions
• Often comes with co-benefits (e.g., soil health, reforestation, job creation)
❗ Limitation: Typically more expensive and slower to scale.
Nature-Based Solutions (NbS) use ecosystems to avoid or remove carbon—while also restoring biodiversity, supporting water cycles, and strengthening community resilience.
NbS projects can include:
Here are some frequently asked questions (FAQs) and insights to guide your climate strategy:
Not sure where to start? Here’s a phased roadmap that aligns with your climate maturity level:
Step 1: Define Your Climate Target
Decide what target you want to achieve with the investment in high-quality carbon credits. In case of a net zero target, only carbon removal counts. For climate neutrality targets or contribution targets both, avoidance and removal credits are eligible.
Step 2: Build a Blended Portfolio for Today
Select a removal only portfolio to achieve net zero emissions or build a mixed portfolio of avoidance and removal that is cost-effective, credible, and future-aligned.
Step 3: Plan Ahead with Removals
Increase your share of removal credits and integrate engineered removal to future-proof your carbon strategy and secure early access to limited supply.
Here’s what leading research tells us:
Avoidance buys us time.
Removal solves the long-term problem.
Nature-based solutions offer the best of both.
The smartest companies are using both to get ahead — because offsetting is no longer about ticking a box. It’s about building resilience, trust, and real impact.