Blockchain’s full potential cannot be forecast with certainty. Yet, in a messy world where various parties struggle to gain enough good faith to work together on solutions, systems that engender trust will lay the foundation for progress.
Blockchain’s full potential cannot be forecast with certainty. Yet, in a messy
world where various parties struggle to gain enough good faith to work together
on solutions, systems that engender trust will lay the foundation for progress.
Unless you're a member of the current US administration, you likely agree that
climate change is one of the most pressing threats to humanity. The transition
to net zero emissions by mid-century will require collaboration on an
unprecedented scale. This tremendous global challenge coincides with the
emergence of blockchain technology — or, more generally, distributed ledger
technology.
Blockchain has been touted by some as a panacea for the climate crisis. This is
overblown. What it can do is bring transparency where it's most
needed,
providing a strong scaffolding for climate solutions — from where action happens
to how outcomes are tracked, reported and rewarded.
Certainty of climate impact
Blockchain can play a crucial role in an ecosystem of digital technologies that
includes remote sensors, internet of things, big
data
and artificial
intelligence
that can revolutionize how climate mitigation and adaptation outcomes are
measured, reported and verified (MRV). Used in conjunction with rigorous
standards and requirements, these technologies can provide assurance of impact
in real time and at lower costs.
However, it’s critical to maintain high standards for measuring climate impact
in the first place. New blockchain platforms that lean on the mystique of
blockchain yet take short cuts on environmental integrity might provide an
immutable record, but is the impact they’re tracking credible?
Transparent carbon accounting and trading
Registries and tracking systems are key to assessing progress toward global
climate goals. The decentralized nature of the Paris Agreement — compared to
the Kyoto Protocol — requires new, transparent tracking systems to handle
heterogeneous approaches to accounting and reporting for carbon emissions and
reductions; and to allow for trusted, networked carbon markets.
Traceable, decentralized climate finance
With the urgency and scale of the climate crisis, every dollar invested needs to
be channeled as effectively as possible and reach those most affected by climate
change. As data records on a blockchain are immutable, the technology can bring
trust to peer-to-peer transactions, particularly in weak regulatory settings
where investments were previously considered too risky. Smart contracts —
applications that can automatically execute the terms specified in a contract on
a blockchain — increase efficiency and reduce transaction costs.
Blockchain technology combined with new fingerprint, iris or face recognition
technology can allow individuals who lack identity documents or bank accounts to
access climate finance in micro credits, subsidies or other payments, for
mitigation or adaptation. In the developed and developing world alike,
blockchain systems can serve as the backbone of new, decentralized markets for
clean
energy,
where individual “prosumers” are empowered to produce and store their own
renewable energy and trade with their neighbors.
Despite its myriad applications, blockchain technology is not the silver bullet
to put the world on track to meet a 1.5° target — a digital ledger cannot
disabuse climate deniers of their positions or convince fossil fuel states to
accelerate a move to renewables. We need more information from use cases on the
ground and to solve challenges such as high power consumption, limited storage
space and time lag, where progress is being made but not resolved.
As an emerging, disruptive technology, blockchain’s full potential cannot be
forecast with certainty. Yet it's clear that, in the messy world where various
parties — north and south, financiers and implementers, climate polluters and
those suffering climate casualties — struggle to gain enough good faith to work
together on solutions, systems that engender trust will lay the foundation for
progress.
Gold Standard is a member of the Climate Ledger
Initiative, working to accelerate the momentum
for climate action under the Paris Agreement by systematically strengthening the
intersection between the field of climate change and blockchain / distributed
ledger technology.
Published Sep 17, 2019 8am EDT / 5am PDT / 1pm BST / 2pm CEST
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