Establishing a forum dedicated to carbon farming Research and Innovation (R&I) within the CARBONICA platform represents a significant initiative to foster collaboration, knowledge sharing, and community building across various regions and expertise.
This forum is envisioned as an online space that gathers experts from all three Widening Countries (Cyprus, Greece, and North Macedonia) to pool their knowledge, experiences, and insights regarding carbon farming. It transcends geographical boundaries, encouraging participation from local experts and diaspora communities, fostering a diverse and global perspective on the subject.
At its core, this space is inclusive and inviting, welcoming project partners, stakeholders (such as farmers, researchers, policymakers, and environmentalists), and individuals enthusiastic about contributing to climate-resilient agriculture and carbon farming innovations.
Navigating the carbon market
Quote from eratosthenes-1 on January 8, 2025, 12:36 pmThe markets are designed to serve as incentives, but the reality isn't always that straightforward. Different places usually have different rules. This inconsistency makes it harder for businesses to navigate and plan effectively.
Regarding case studies with carbon credits in a carbon market, price volatility is an important aspect. Prices can fluctuate significantly while companies struggle to plan ahead when future costs are uncertain. This unpredictability can hinder long-term emission reduction strategies. Wealthy countries so on, might simply buy their way out of cutting emissions.
If some common ground rules are established, it could simplify the entire process. These markets might even push companies to innovate, finding clever new ways to cut emissions.
The markets are designed to serve as incentives, but the reality isn't always that straightforward. Different places usually have different rules. This inconsistency makes it harder for businesses to navigate and plan effectively.
Regarding case studies with carbon credits in a carbon market, price volatility is an important aspect. Prices can fluctuate significantly while companies struggle to plan ahead when future costs are uncertain. This unpredictability can hinder long-term emission reduction strategies. Wealthy countries so on, might simply buy their way out of cutting emissions.
If some common ground rules are established, it could simplify the entire process. These markets might even push companies to innovate, finding clever new ways to cut emissions.