Xpansiv, a leading climate technology company, is gaining worldwide attention for its work in carbon and environmental data systems. The company was recently chosen in the first stage of the Financial Innovation category at the Tokyo Financial Award. It was also selected by the State of New York to build the state’s new greenhouse gas (GHG) reporting platform.
These two milestones show how Xpansiv is expanding its global role in climate finance and sustainability data. They show how the company links digital finance to environmental reporting. This is important in today’s fast-changing market.
A Growing Global Reputation
The Tokyo Financial Award celebrates companies that introduce fresh ideas in financial services. It also values sustainability and transparency. Xpansiv’s selection in this category shows its success in creating trusted digital tools for carbon markets.
Founded in 2017, Xpansiv manages systems worldwide. These systems track and trade carbon credits, renewable energy certificates, and other environmental assets. Its technology helps buyers, sellers, and regulators follow every transaction safely and in real time.
The company runs key platforms like XMarkets Exchange and the Environmental Portfolio Management System (EPMS). It also runs the Open Exchange (OX) for spot trading. Additionally, it hosts registries for renewable energy and carbon offset projects. Together, these systems process tens of millions of environmental credits and data entries each year.
In recent years, banks, regulators, and large corporations have turned to Xpansiv for reliable climate data. Japan’s financial sector recognizes that digital systems are crucial for transparency and efficiency in global climate finance.
Building New York’s Digital Backbone for Climate Action
Xpansiv reached another major milestone in the United States. It was selected by the State of New York to power a new platform that will track and report GHG emissions. This project backs the state’s Climate Leadership and Community Protection Act (CLCPA). It is one of the most ambitious climate laws in the nation.
The platform will allow businesses to record, verify, and report their emissions across different industries. It will also link with carbon markets, letting companies use verified data when buying or retiring carbon credits.
This system is one of the first large-scale examples of a state using private digital technology for public climate reporting. It aims to make compliance easier and improve access to emissions data for both regulators and citizens.
Officials expect the system to go live by 2026. It will help thousands of companies in New York. It could also be a model for other states that want to update their climate data systems.
Katie Doyle, Senior Vice President, Registries, at Xpansiv commented:
“New York is again setting a national precedent by introducing a comprehensive, tech-enabled emissions reporting platform. We’re proud to support the state’s leadership in developing actionable climate policy through digital infrastructure.”
Turning Climate Data into Digital Currency
Accurate data is essential for real climate action. Governments, investors, and businesses need reliable information. This helps them measure emissions and track their progress toward goals.
Xpansiv’s platform turns verified project data, like power generation, carbon capture, or factory emissions, into Digital Environmental Assets (DEAs). These are standardized data units that can be traded, reported, or analyzed.

The company’s system offers:
- Audit-ready records for full transparency.
- Integration tools (APIs) to link to carbon registries and reporting systems.
- Data checks and verification are similar to blockchain tracking.
By digitizing this information, Xpansiv replaces paper-based or disconnected systems. This helps avoid errors, duplication, and confusion. The result is faster, clearer, and more trustworthy data. This is vital for governments, companies, and investors. It all helps scale up global decarbonization.
Riding the Wave of the $2 Trillion Energy Transition
The global clean-energy finance market is expanding fast. The International Energy Agency (IEA) and BloombergNEF estimate that investment in energy transition technologies hit $2.1 trillion in 2024. This marks a nearly 25% increase from the previous year.

More funding is now directed to systems for measuring, reporting, and verifying (MRV) emissions. This is where Xpansiv works.
Analysts predict the digital carbon infrastructure market will hit $100 billion by 2030. This growth comes as more governments and companies invest in improved data systems.
Xpansiv partners with big banks, trading exchanges, and registries in North America, Europe, and Asia. It links voluntary and compliance carbon markets. This makes it easier to transfer verified carbon credits between systems.
Global demand for reliable climate data is rising. Xpansiv is ready as a platform operator and data provider. This role sets the stage for future growth.
Experts agree that accurate and verifiable data will be key to meeting net-zero goals. Without it, both voluntary and compliance carbon markets risk losing credibility.
Xpansiv’s Next Frontier: Linking Policy, Finance, and Data
Xpansiv’s recognition in Japan and its work with New York State show a growing link between finance and climate data worldwide.
Industry analysts see several ways the company could expand:
- Public partnerships: more states and countries may adopt similar digital reporting systems.
- Corporate integration: Big companies could use Xpansiv’s technology to meet the disclosure rules set by the International Sustainability Standards Board (ISSB) and the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC).
- Standardization: With the rising need for consistent carbon data, platforms like Xpansiv can link various markets into a single global system.
The company’s main focus areas—Asia, North America, and Europe—represent over 80% of carbon market activity worldwide.
Governments are tightening climate rules, and investors now want clear proof of sustainability claims. As a result, digital platforms that verify emissions data will play a larger role in both compliance and investment decisions.
A New Chapter in Climate Data
Xpansiv’s achievements in Japan and the U.S. show how technology and finance are working together to drive climate transparency.
Its platforms turn complex environmental data into reliable digital assets. These assets help connect markets, regulators, and companies in new ways.
As global climate policies evolve, accurate reporting will become even more important. The world needs systems that can measure, verify, and trade environmental data quickly and securely.
Xpansiv’s journey reflects this shift. Climate action now goes beyond cutting emissions. It’s also about tracking them clearly and connecting that data to financial systems. In this way, Xpansiv is helping to build a more transparent and accountable future for climate finance and environmental markets.
The post From Tokyo to New York: Xpansiv Strengthens Global Role in Climate Data and Carbon Market Innovation appeared first on Carbon Credits.
Carbon Footprint
How to improve Scope 3 data accuracy for CSRD
For most businesses, the emissions that matter most sit outside their own walls. Scope 3 emissions, everything generated across your value chain, from the suppliers who make your inputs to the customers who use your products, typically make up the majority of a company’s total carbon footprint. Under the Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive (CSRD), those value-chain emissions now have to be measured and disclosed with a rigour that spend-based estimates alone struggle to satisfy. This guide sets out how to improve Scope 3 data accuracy for CSRD: the calculation methods open to you, how to move from estimates to verified supplier data, and how to govern that data so it holds up to audit.
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Carbon Footprint
How community stewardship makes carbon credits durable
A carbon credit is a commitment that extends well into the future. The tonne of CO₂ compensated for today from a nature-based carbon project must remain out of the atmosphere for good, which means the forest behind the credit has to remain standing long after the transaction is complete. For any buyer, this raises a defining question: What ensures that the forest endures?
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Carbon Footprint
Why Conventional Carbon Offsets Are Losing Boardroom Credibility
What replaced the cheap REDD credit on the boardroom slide deck, and why procurement is leading the rewrite.
Three years ago, a corporate slide showing a portfolio of cheap REDD+ credits could carry a board meeting. The number was big, the price was low, and the press release wrote itself. Today, that same slide gets sent back with questions. The questions are uncomfortable, the answers are unclear, and your general counsel is suddenly in the room.
Conventional carbon offsets are not dead. The voluntary carbon market retired 202 million tonnes in 2025, and the Morgan Stanley Institute for Sustainable Investing survey published in January 2026 confirmed that interest from corporate buyers remains substantial. What changed is the credibility threshold. The integrity floor has risen, the disclosure scrutiny has tightened, and the buyer profile has shifted. This article tracks what changed, what sophisticated buyers now ask before signing, and what serious corporates are putting on the board slide instead.
What boards used to buy, and why it stopped working
The 2020 to 2022 model was simple: buy a large tranche of avoidance credits at low single-digit prices, retire them against the company footprint, announce the carbon-neutral claim, and move on. Most of those credits came from REDD+ projects, renewable energy installations in countries where the renewable energy was already economic, or methane projects with thin documentation.
Several things broke that model. Academic research published in 2023, including a widely cited Science paper, found that the majority of REDD+ credits issued under the most common methodologies did not represent additional reductions when tested against rigorous counterfactuals. The Voluntary Carbon Markets Integrity Initiative published its Claims Code of Practice, which sets requirements for what companies can credibly claim from credit use. The European Union finalised its Green Claims Directive, restricting how companies can describe products as climate-neutral. France’s Décret 2022-539 already restricts carbon neutrality advertising. California’s AB 1305 imposes disclosure requirements on any company making net-zero or carbon-neutral claims while doing business in the state.
The collective effect: the cheap credit no longer buys the announcement, and the announcement now carries litigation risk.
The integrity reset: ICVCM, VCMI, and what changed
The Integrity Council for the Voluntary Carbon Market published the Core Carbon Principles in 2023 and began assessing methodologies against them in 2024. The first methodologies received the CCP label later that year. The point of the label is to give corporate buyers a defensible quality screen they can cite in disclosure.
The Voluntary Carbon Markets Integrity Initiative complements this on the demand side. Its Claims Code of Practice defines what a buyer can say (Silver, Gold, or Platinum claims, with associated requirements) based on the quality of credits used and the underlying decarbonisation strategy. Together, CCP and VCMI build a quality stack: CCP on the supply, VCMI on the claim, with the science-based target sitting underneath both.
The reset is not a ban on offsets. It is a ratchet. Credits that meet the new bar continue to clear; credits that do not, do not. The Morgan Stanley survey found that 61% of current buyers like the CCP label concept but that supply of labelled credits remains limited. That supply constraint is now visible in pricing.
What sophisticated buyers ask before they sign
The questions on the procurement scorecard have changed. A 2022 buyer might have asked about price, vintage, and project type. A 2026 buyer asks five different questions before any of those.
- What does the counterfactual look like, and who validated it.
- What is the permanence regime, and what is the buffer pool exposure.
- What is the leakage risk, and how is it mitigated.
- What rating has the project received from the independent ratings agencies (Sylvera, BeZero, Calyx Global), and what was the rationale.
- What is the documentation discipline that survives an audit four years from now when the procurement team that signed the contract has moved on.
If the vendor cannot answer those five questions on a first call, the conversation ends. Conversely, if the vendor can answer them with documented specificity, the conversation often expands beyond a single transaction toward a multi-year engagement.
Where this leaves your near-term commitments
You probably have near-term commitments that pre-date the integrity reset. Public targets to be carbon neutral by 2025 or 2030. Product-level claims that ran in last year’s marketing. Disclosed reduction trajectories that assumed continued access to cheap credits.
You have three workable paths. The first is to re-baseline your strategy, replacing the most exposed credits with higher-quality alternatives and adjusting the public language to match what you can defend. The second is to shift the underlying spend from offsetting outside your value chain to investing inside your value chain, where reductions count against Scope 3 directly and the audit trail is cleaner. The third is to keep the strategy and absorb the risk, which is increasingly the most expensive option once you price in litigation, restatement, and reputational exposure.
Most serious buyers are choosing the second path. It moves the carbon spend from a compliance cost to a procurement and resilience investment, and it removes the central failure point of the legacy model: the disconnect between where the emissions occurred and where the reductions sat. Nature-based supply chain investments, structured under the GHG Protocol Land Sector and Removals Standard and aligned to the SBTi FLAG Guidance, are the asset class that fits this brief. They generate inventory-grade reductions, they produce audit-grade documentation, and they survive the new claim restrictions because the carbon math sits inside the value chain that the disclosure already covers.
If you are reassessing a carbon strategy under the new integrity bar, or rebuilding a board narrative that has to survive a more skeptical audience, the carbon and sustainability experts at Carbon Credit Capital can help. The Dual-Value Model gives you a defensible alternative to legacy offset purchases, with the documentation and operational integration that survives the procurement scorecard and the audit. Schedule a consultation.
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