Carbon credit market intelligence

Independent carbon market intelligence, PRA standard

Trace the markets, shape the future

Carbon credit markets are testing how decisions are made

Carbon credit markets are no longer defined by price alone. Decisions now depend on who is buying, how demand is evolving, where eligibility applies, and which credits can be used for compliance.

Fastmarkets Carbon delivers carbon credit market intelligence that combines independent pricing with company insights, demand analytics, regulatory context, and forward-looking outlooks. Together, these capabilities help market participants understand how carbon credit markets are clearing today and where pricing and eligibility risks are likely to emerge.

All analysis is produced by specialist price reporters under transparent, published methodologies and grounded in verified engagement across the global carbon credit value chain.

This brochure explains how Fastmarkets brings pricing, demand, company, and regulatory intelligence together to understand how carbon credit markets are clearing. It shows how these insights support pricing decisions, procurement planning, and eligibility assessment across voluntary and compliance pathways.

Complete the form to download the carbon brochure.


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Read the latest insights into carbon markets authored by our internal carbon experts​

CORSIA Phase 1 carbon credit prices are weakening as expanding eligible supply collides with still-uncertain mandatory demand from airlines. Recent actions by the International Civil Aviation Organisation (ICAO), aimed at improving market liquidity, have so far outweighed the first structural signals of compliance-driven demand.

During the lead up to COP30 in Belem, Brazil, 29 new Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs) were submitted, covering over 45% of global emissions. Key updates from China, Indonesia, and Türkiye reveal mixed progress toward 2035 climate goals, with varying alignment to IPCC’s 1.5°C pathway.

Major announcements at COP30 in Belém, Brazil are reshaping expectations for global climate finance, forest protection and international carbon markets, with governments, multilateral lenders and corporates signalling new levels of ambition.

The United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCC) has approved its first methodology under Article 6.4, also known as the Paris Agreement Crediting Mechanism (PACM), the UNFCC announced on Thursday October 30.