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Canada's $5 Billion Carbon Pricing Revenue Sparks Debate

Canada’s federal carbon pricing policy is a pivotal component of the nation’s efforts to combat climate change. The Parliamentary Budget Officer’s latest estimates show that it will yield over $5 billion in revenue from federal sales tax over the next 7 years. 

However, concerns are raised as to why there are no specific plans to channel the revenue to climate programs. The federal government also scaled back carbon tax rebates for small businesses. 

The estimated figures come from a private member’s bill put forward last fall by Conservative MP Alex Ruff, aiming to entirely remove the sales tax from carbon pricing.

Canada’s Carbon Tax Revenue and Redistribution Framework

In an era increasingly characterized by environmental responsibility, Canada’s carbon pricing policy was initially hailed as a bold stride toward fostering a sustainable future. However, the revelation that the revenue from the tax lacks specific earmarks for environmental initiatives has sparked widespread concern. 

Critics argue that without a targeted focus on climate action represents a missed opportunity in the fight against global warming. 

According to law, revenue generated from the carbon price must be redistributed to households and businesses through rebates and granting programs. 

The PBO projected that the redistribution will amount to about $600 million in 2024-25, growing to $1 billion annually by 2030-31, alongside the increase in the carbon price itself. Over the period from April 2022 to March 2031, this could accumulate to $5.7 billion.

These projections include revenue from the 8 provinces and 2 territories subject to the federal carbon pricing system. They also include British Columbia, Quebec, and Northwest Territories, which have their own systems. Thus, the federal carbon pricing system do not apply in those 3 jurisdictions.

Canada carbon pricing system
Source: Environment and Climate Change Canada (ECCC)

Directing these funds towards climate action can help the country achieve its 2030 greenhouse gas emissions targets.

The carbon pricing framework was structured with the intention that 90% of the funds collected from consumers and smaller businesses would be allocated to individual households in the form of rebates. 

The remainder of the funds was designated for Indigenous communities, municipalities, hospitals, and schools. The ultimate goal is to facilitate energy efficiency upgrades through a range of programs.

To date, over $100 million has been disbursed through these programs. Approximately $35 million was allocated to small businesses, $60 million to schools, and around $6 million to Indigenous communities.

Scrutiny Over Carbon Tax Rebates for Small Businesses

But the scrutiny over the $5 billion income from the carbon price continues to intensify. It is further compounded by recent developments, particularly the reduction of carbon tax rebate percentages for small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs). It sparked strong reactions from business communities nationwide. 

The Canadian Federation of Independent Business (CFIB) has been particularly vocal in its opposition, launching a petition against these alterations and advocating for immediate measures to support affected businesses.

The CFIB estimates that small businesses contribute up to 40% of the government’s total carbon price revenues. However, Clean Prosperity, an economic and climate change think tank, suggests a lower estimate, placing it closer to 25%.

Small businesses were never slated to receive more than 7% of the carbon price revenues back. Moreover, this allocation is now diminishing further, dropping to 5%.

The incentives were intended to assist businesses in covering a portion of the expenses associated with acquiring energy-efficient equipment. They also cover initiatives on upgrading buildings and operations to reduce fuel consumption. The targeted businesses are in emissions-intensive and trade-exposed sectors, but these haven’t yet been defined. 

Clean Prosperity’s executive director, Michael Bernstein, commented on the issue:

“Even two years ago, we calculated that there was enough money within the HST [Harmonized Sales Tax] on the carbon tax to fund a one-percentage-point reduction in the small business tax rate in provinces where the carbon tax applied.”

Bernstein further noted that SME businesses contribute around one-quarter of Canada’s carbon price revenue, according to their estimates. Since 2019, the government has yet to disburse about $2.5 billion from this income owed to small businesses. 

Perspectives and Proposed Solutions

Dan Kelly, CFIB President and CEO, argued that businesses require assistance to mitigate the financial impact of carbon pricing. He particularly remarked that:

“The whole principle of a carbon tax is you tax carbon-based activities and you give the money back so that then people make decisions to use those dollars in lower-carbon activities.”

Conservative spokesperson Sebastian Skamski affirmed the party’s commitment to eliminating carbon pricing. While Conservative MP Alex Ruff’s proposal to remove the sales tax from carbon pricing serves as an interim measure, the party advocates for broader exemptions and reductions to alleviate the burden on businesses.

However, Minister of Finance Chrystia Freeland’s office didn’t express openness to utilizing GST and HST revenues to bolster rebates. Katherine Cuplinskas, a spokesperson for Freeland, said that the government promises a portion of carbon price revenues to be returned to businesses. However, no specific details were provided. 

Canada’s carbon pricing policy generates significant revenue but lacks specific allocations for climate programs. Reductions in rebates for small businesses raise concerns. Balancing revenue generation, fair redistribution, and business support is crucial. Transparent communication and flexible policy frameworks are needed for effective climate action and economic stability.

The post Canada’s $5 Billion Carbon Pricing Revenue Sparks Debate appeared first on Carbon Credits.

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L’Oréal Taps 13 Global Startups to Boost Climate, Nature, and Circular Innovation

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L’Oréal Taps 13 Global Startups to Boost Climate, Nature, and Circular Innovation

L’Oréal, the global beauty giant, has unveiled its first cohort of startups participating in its new sustainable innovation program, L’AcceleratOR. The program chose 13 startups focused on climate, nature, and circularity. They were selected from nearly 1,000 applicants across 101 countries. It aims to find, pilot, and scale solutions that address key environmental challenges in the beauty industry and beyond.

The initiative is part of L’Oréal’s larger sustainability plan, called “L’Oréal for the Future.” This plan includes bold goals for climate action, resource use, and a shift to a circular economy by 2030 and beyond.

Inside L’AcceleratOR: Funding, Pilots, and Scale

L’AcceleratOR is a €100 million (about US$116 million) sustainable innovation program. The funding will be provided over a five-year period. The program helps startups and small to medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) that create sustainable solutions for L’Oréal and the beauty industry.

L’AcceleratOR is in partnership with the University of Cambridge Institute for Sustainability Leadership (CISL). Selected startups will enter an intensive support phase led by CISL. They will receive funding, expert guidance, and access to L’Oréal’s research and testing capabilities. The aim is to help these companies become pilot-ready and scale their solutions for broader use.

The accelerator focuses on key strategic themes tied to L’Oréal’s sustainability goals:

  • Next-generation packaging and materials
  • Nature-sourced ingredients
  • Circular solutions
  • Data intelligence tools to measure and reduce environmental impacts

Startups may run six- to nine-month pilots with L’Oréal and its partners. Successful pilots may be scaled across global operations if they show measurable benefits.

Ezgi Barcenas, Chief Corporate Responsibility Officer, remarked:

To accelerate sustainable solutions to market, we are being even more intentional and inclusive in our pursuit of partnerships through “L’AcceleratOR”. We are really energized to be co-designing the future of beauty with the University of Cambridge Institute for Sustainability Leadership, and these 13 change makers.”

The 13 Startups and Their Focus Areas

The selected startups and SMEs represent a range of sustainable innovations across climate, nature, and circularity. They fall into four main categories:

  • Packaging and materials
  • Nature-sourced ingredients
  • Circular solutions
  • Data intelligence
L’Oréal L’AcceleratOR, 13 Selected Startups by Category
Source: L’Oréal

These 13 startups use different ways to cut environmental impact. They focus on product design, supply chain management, and manufacturing to promote circularity.

How L’AcceleratOR Fits L’Oréal’s 2030 Strategy

L’AcceleratOR is part of L’Oréal’s broad 10-year sustainability roadmap, “L’Oréal for the Future.” The roadmap covers four main areas: climate, nature, materials circularity, and communities. It includes the 2030 goals that aim to transform operations while driving innovation in sustainable solutions.

L'Oréal net zero 2030 goal
Source: L’Oréal

Some of L’Oréal’s key targets under the roadmap include:

  • 100% renewable energy for all operations.
  • Sustainable sourcing of at least 90% bio-based materials in formula and packaging.
  • 100% recycled or reused water for industrial purposes.
  • Reducing virgin plastic use by 50%.
  • Sourcing 50% of packaging from recycled or bio-based materials.
  • Cutting Scope 1 and 2 emissions by 57% and some Scope 3 emissions by 28% against a baseline year.
L'Oréal net zero roadmap 2030
Source: L’Oréal

The L’AcceleratOR program expands these efforts by tapping external innovation. L’Oréal supports startups to speed up solutions that can cut environmental impacts throughout its value chain.

L’Oréal’s Scope 3 emissions are by far the largest part of its footprint, as seen below. This reflects impacts from sourcing, production inputs, logistics, product use, and end-of-life. In 2024, Scope 1 and 2 fell further to about 227,051 tCO₂e, showing continued reductions in direct and energy-related emissions. Total emissions, though, remained roughly stable at 7.41 million tCO₂e, increased with Scope 3 again the largest component.

L’Oréal Group GHG Emissions 2024
Source: L’Oréal

L’Oréal also has other sustainability initiatives. For example, its Fund for Nature Regeneration has invested more than €25 million (about US$29.1 million) in projects like forest, mangrove, and marine ecosystem restoration. This reflects L’Oréal’s commitment to nature and biodiversity alongside climate action.

Water stewardship is another strategic focus. In 2024, 53% of the water used in L’Oréal’s industrial processes came from reused and recycled sources. This was supported through water recycling systems in areas facing water stress.

Implications for the Beauty and Consumer Goods Sector

L’Oréal’s accelerator initiative reflects a larger industry trend. Many global companies are increasingly investing in sustainable technologies through partnerships, incubators, and venture funds. These partnerships aim to speed up climate, nature, and circular solutions. They combine corporate scale with startup agility.

The L’AcceleratOR program connects L’Oréal with companies that use innovation and partnerships to achieve their environmental goals. It also shows that sustainability strategies can go beyond internal changes. They can support the larger ecosystem, too. Helping startups scale can benefit whole industries, not just single companies.

This trend is important in areas like packaging, materials science, green chemistry, and digital climate tools. Packaging waste and carbon emissions from supply chains are major problems for consumer goods. This is especially true in beauty and personal care.

The beauty industry accounts for about 0.5% to 1.5% of global greenhouse gas emissions. Most of these emissions come from the value chain, not from company factories. For many beauty companies, around 90% of total emissions are Scope 3, such as raw materials, packaging, transport, and product use.

Raw material sourcing, including agricultural inputs and plastics, can make up 30% to 50% of industry emissions. Consumer use also adds a large share, especially for products that require water and heat.

beauty industry emissions

The industry produces about 120 billion beauty packaging units each year worldwide. Much of this packaging is single-use and hard to recycle. A typical beauty product can generate several kilograms of CO₂-equivalent over its life cycle, from production to disposal.

Notably, most emissions are in the value chain. So, new solutions in packaging, materials, and data tools are key to cutting the beauty sector’s climate impact. This is what L’Oréal seeks to address. By supporting solutions in these areas, it hopes to change old industry practices.

Early Expectations and Next Steps 

The 13 selected startups will now enter the pilot readiness phase of the L’AcceleratOR program. During this phase, the startups will refine their technologies with CISL guidance and L’Oréal support. The goal is to ensure their solutions are ready for real-world testing in commercial environments.

If pilot outcomes are successful, solutions may be scaled beyond initial tests. Some could fit into L’Oréal’s global operations or be used by industry partners. This would speed up sustainable progress.

L’Oréal and CISL plan future cohorts for the L’AcceleratOR program. Future rounds will create chances for more companies. They will also expand the pipeline of sustainable solutions.

By partnering with the University of Cambridge Institute for Sustainability Leadership and supporting startups across packaging, materials, ingredients, circular systems, and data tools, L’Oréal aims to fast-track real solutions that reduce environmental impacts.

The initiative boosts L’Oréal’s sustainability plan, “L’Oréal for the Future.” This plan sets bold goals for 2030, focusing on renewable energy, resource use, cutting emissions, and promoting circularity.

The pilot and scaling opportunities in the program can help new technologies join global supply chains. This support will aid L’Oréal and its partners in tackling climate, nature, and circular economy challenges towards its net-zero goals.

The post L’Oréal Taps 13 Global Startups to Boost Climate, Nature, and Circular Innovation appeared first on Carbon Credits.

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Microsoft (MSFT) Signs 2.85 Million Soil Carbon Credit Deal With Indigo in Landmark Regenerative Agriculture Move

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microsoft

On January 15, Indigo Carbon PBC announced one of the largest soil carbon transactions to date, marking a major milestone for regenerative agriculture in the voluntary carbon market. Under a 12-year agreement, Microsoft will purchase 2.85 million soil carbon credits generated through the Carbon by Indigo program, a large-scale, U.S.-based initiative focused on delivering high-integrity carbon removals.

This agreement underscores the increasing confidence of large corporate buyers in nature-based carbon removal pathways, particularly those that integrate climate impact with tangible on-the-ground benefits for farmers and ecosystems.

Third Transaction Strengthens Microsoft’s Carbon-Negative Path

Microsoft’s FY24 climate data reflects a 23.4% increase in overall emissions compared to its base year, largely due to rapid business expansion. Despite this, Microsoft retired 595,922 metric tons of carbon removals to meet its annual carbon-neutral target.

The latest purchase represents the third carbon credit transaction between Microsoft and Indigo. It follows earlier deals for 40,000 tonnes of credits in 2024 and 60,000 tonnes in 2025. Together, these agreements underscore Microsoft’s long-term strategy to meet its commitment to become carbon negative by 2030.

Looking ahead, Microsoft has contracted for nearly 22 million metric tons of carbon removals to be delivered over the next 15 years or more. This includes 2.8 million tons expected in FY30, the company’s carbon-negative target year, with additional volumes planned beyond FY31.

microsoft carbon emissions carbon removal
Source: Microsoft

READ MORE: 

Indigo Ag Strengthens High-Integrity Carbon Removal Supply

The broader regenerative agriculture market continues to gain momentum.

  • Research showed that, valued at $1.52 billion in 2025, the market is projected to grow from $1.76 billion in 2026 to around $5.77 billion by 2034, reflecting a CAGR of 15.97%.

Practices such as cover cropping, rotational grazing, reduced tillage, and compost application improve soil carbon levels and microbial diversity. As voluntary carbon markets mature, regenerative agriculture is emerging as a durable climate solution and a scalable economic opportunity for farmers.

For Indigo, the deal further cements its leadership in scaling verified soil carbon removals, demonstrating that regenerative agriculture can deliver credits at volumes large enough to meet enterprise-level demand.

regenerative market
Source: Precedence Research

Regenerative Agriculture: Climate Impact Plus Farm Productivity

Governments and climate institutions increasingly recognize regenerative agriculture as a powerful carbon removal tool.

  • Research suggests these practices could remove more than 3.5 gigatons of CO₂ equivalent annually, while also improving soil health, increasing crop resilience, and stabilizing yields.

Beyond carbon, regenerative practices deliver critical co-benefits. They enhance water infiltration, reduce erosion, and support water conservation—key advantages as drought and water scarcity intensify across agricultural regions. These outcomes also strengthen rural economies by improving long-term farm productivity.

New Revenue Streams for Farmers

At a time when farmers face rising costs, climate volatility, and market uncertainty, the Microsoft-Indigo agreement delivers meaningful financial incentives. By rewarding farmers for adopting regenerative practices, the deal improves farm resilience while creating new, non-government revenue streams.

Indigo currently works with farmers across more than eight million acres and has paid $40 million through its programs to date. These payments are independent of government subsidies, offering farmers greater financial flexibility and stability.

High-Integrity Credits Meet ICVCM Core Carbon Principles

Credit integrity is a defining feature of the agreement. It is among the first soil carbon deals to include credits approved under the Integrity Council for the Voluntary Carbon Market’s (ICVCM) Core Carbon Principles.

Indigo has issued 927,296 carbon removal and reduction credits under CAR1459 using the Climate Action Reserve’s Soil Enrichment Protocol. The company relies on peer-reviewed science, field data, remote sensing, and machine learning to measure and verify soil carbon outcomes.

To address permanence risks, Indigo has added safeguards across the 40-year durability period agreed with Microsoft, complementing the protocol’s 100-year monitoring and reversal compensation requirements.

On an end note, Meredith Reisfield, Senior Director of Policy, Partnerships, and Impact at Indigo, said:

“Microsoft’s purchase highlights the transformative power of regenerative agriculture to support watersheds, support farming communities, and advance global net-zero goals. Indigo is a proud catalyst of today’s soil carbon market, with our long-standing history of farmer collaboration and proven impact, already saving 64 billion gallons of water and issuing nearly one million tonnes of CO2e carbon removal credits since 2018.”

The post Microsoft (MSFT) Signs 2.85 Million Soil Carbon Credit Deal With Indigo in Landmark Regenerative Agriculture Move appeared first on Carbon Credits.

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eBay Maps Out Path to Net-Zero by 2045 with Science-Based Climate Plan

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eBay Maps Out Path to Net-Zero by 2045 with Science-Based Climate Plan

eBay has released its first Climate Transition Plan, outlining how the company will reduce emissions and reach net‑zero greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions by 2045. The plan covers actions across eBay’s operations and its broader business ecosystem. It also sets near‑term milestones and embeds climate action into corporate governance and planning.

The strategy was validated by the Science Based Targets initiative (SBTi), aligning it with climate science and the Paris Agreement’s 1.5°C goal.

The Climate Transition Plan reflects eBay’s commitment to sustainable commerce. It builds on years of progress in cutting emissions, scaling renewable energy, and driving circular economy practices.

The plan also shows how the company will cut emissions in its operations and value chain. This includes transportation, logistics, and the marketplace. At the same time, it aims to grow its global business.

eBay’s Climate Transition Plan: Sustainable Commerce at the Core

eBay’s Climate Transition Plan is a detailed roadmap for climate action through 2045. It identifies both climate risks and opportunities for the business. The plan focuses on four main areas: sustainable commerce, emissions reduction, governance integration, and value chain collaboration.

eBay net zero actions
Source: eBay

Sustainable Commerce

The plan emphasizes eBay’s circular marketplace model, which extends the life of products and reduces waste. This model supports resale and reuse, helping customers make more sustainable choices. The company has framed this as a way to grow while cutting environmental impact.

Clear Path to Net Zero

eBay has outlined science‑aligned pathways to reach net‑zero GHG emissions by 2045. These pathways include near-term targets for 2030 and long-term goals for 2045. The SBTi validates them to ensure they align with climate science.

Governance and Planning

Climate action is now embedded into how eBay governs and plans its business. The company has strengthened oversight by senior leadership and aligned climate goals with financial planning. eBay says this integration helps ensure climate‑related decisions influence business outcomes.

Value Chain Collaboration

eBay will partner with carriers, suppliers, policymakers, and its buyers and sellers to cut emissions beyond its own operations. The focus is on expanding low-carbon delivery options. It also aims to reduce emissions from shipping and logistics.

eBay’s Net Zero Targets: 2030 Milestones and Beyond

eBay’s climate goals cover both emissions cuts and long‑term net‑zero targets. These goals are science‑based and validated by the Science-Based Targets initiative. This validation shows that the targets match the reductions needed. They aim to keep global warming below 1.5°C above pre-industrial levels, which aligns with the Paris Agreement.

Net‑Zero by 2045: eBay has committed to achieving net‑zero GHG emissions across its entire value chain by 2045. This means cutting total emissions by 90% from 2019 levels. Also, we will use strong, lasting carbon removals to offset any emissions left between 2030 and 2045.

2030 Near‑Term Targets: To support the long‑term net‑zero goal, eBay set interim targets for 2030:

  • Reduce absolute Scope 1 and 2 emissions by 90% compared with 2019.
  • Reduce Scope 3 emissions from downstream transportation and distribution by 27.5% compared with 2019.

Progress to Date: eBay has already achieved significant cuts in operational emissions:

eBay emission reductions scope 1 and 2
Source: eBay
  • The company has achieved a 92% reduction in Scope 1 and 2 emissions relative to 2019.
  • It has reached 100% renewable electricity for all offices, data centers, and authentication centers ahead of its original 2025 target.
eBay Electricity Supply from Renewable Energy Sources
Source: eBay
  • Downstream transportation and distribution emissions have fallen 21% compared with 2019, moving toward the 27.5% 2030 target.

These results show that eBay is ahead in some areas and making progress in others as it works toward its future climate goals.

Scope 3 Challenges: The largest portion of eBay’s emissions comes from Scope 3, particularly shipping. Shipping accounts for almost 84% of Scope 3 emissions, making it the toughest category to decarbonize. eBay is focusing on partnerships with carriers and low‑carbon options to reduce these emissions over time.

eBay carbon emissions 2024
Source: eBay

eBay’s Broader Sustainability Initiatives

eBay goes beyond reducing greenhouse gases. It takes various sustainability steps that link climate goals to its business strategy.

  • Renewable Energy

eBay achieved its goal of sourcing 100% renewable energy for its operations in 2024, one year ahead of schedule. This renewable energy covers electricity for offices, data centers, and related facilities.

  • Circular Economy and Recommerce

eBay focuses on recommerce. This means used and refurbished goods are bought and sold. In 2024, this recommerce activity:

    • Generated about $5 billion in positive economic impact.
    • Helped avoid 1.6 million metric tons of carbon emissions.
    • Prevented 70,000 metric tons of waste. These figures show how extending product life can reduce environmental impact.

eBay aims to build on these results by encouraging resale and reuse as mainstream shopping choices. The company views a circular business model as a climate tool and a way to create value for its users.

  • Tracking and Transparency

eBay tracks its environmental performance through frameworks like the Task Force on Climate‑Related Financial Disclosures (TCFD). It also takes part in the CDP Corporate Questionnaire.

These actions help ensure the e-commerce’s transparency and accountability in climate reporting.

Leading by Example

eBay’s climate goals align it with other tech and retail companies. They have set science-based net-zero targets and interim reduction goals. For example, other e‑commerce and tech firms like Amazon and Alibaba have also set long‑term climate targets. However, their timelines and scopes differ.

Validating targets through the SBTi adds credibility and aligns eBay with companies that aim to match the most ambitious climate science benchmarks. The SBTi’s validation process makes sure that reduction goals are clear. They follow a framework that aims to keep global temperature rise to 1.5°C.

In addition, eBay’s focus on shipping emissions highlights a common challenge for online retail platforms. Many companies are exploring low-carbon logistics. They are using consolidated delivery, local pickup, and shifting modes, like moving from air to ground transport. These steps help cut supply chain emissions.

eBay GHG Emissions by Category, 2024
Source: eBay

eBay focuses on circular commerce and sustainable logistics in its transition plan. This aligns environmental efforts with business trends that value resource efficiency and low-carbon operations.

Low-Carbon Innovation for the Future

eBay’s Climate Transition Plan sets a clear and science‑based path to net‑zero GHG emissions by 2045. The plan includes near‑term and long‑term targets that have been validated by the Science Based Targets initiative.

The e-commerce company has already achieved major milestones, such as a 92% reduction in direct emissions and 100% renewable electricity by 2024. It also continues to invest in renewable energy, promote reuse and resale, and engage partners to cut emissions across its value chain.

The plan further shows eBay’s goal to include climate action in its strategy, governance, and financial planning. It also illustrates how sustainable commerce and circular economy practices can support long‑term environmental and business goals. As shipping and logistics remain the largest emissions source, future efforts will focus on creative and low‑carbon solutions to meet eBay’s ambitious climate goals by 2045.

The post eBay Maps Out Path to Net-Zero by 2045 with Science-Based Climate Plan appeared first on Carbon Credits.

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