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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 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.
Fastmarkets Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and Forest Degradation (REDD+) BeZero assessments have highlighted an overall correlation between price and ratings within the category. But some project specific factors at play have led to some projects being priced above or below ratings bands.
The Integrity Council for the Voluntary Carbon Market (ICVCM) has approved ACR’s Afforestation and Reforestation of Degraded Lands, v 1.0-1.2 Afforestation, Reforestation and Revegetation (ARR) methodology under its Core Carbon Principles (CCP), ICVCM announced on Thursday July 17.
Combined nature-based and durable carbon dioxide removal (CDR) offtakes totaled at least 61.5 million tonnes of carbon dioxide equivalent (tCO2e) in the first half of 2025, according to data compiled by Fastmarkets, with technology giants continuing to drive the bulk of demand.
The EU Commission has proposed an amendment to the EU Climate Law, which would allow the use of “high-quality” Article 6 carbon credits from 2036 as part of its 2040 climate target, it announced on Wednesday July 2. Up to 3% of 1990 EU net emissions would be allowed to be covered by these credits.