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Home / Environment / Kenyan Carbon Project Struggles as Offset Market Plummets

Kenyan Carbon Project Struggles as Offset Market Plummets

6 Nov

•

Summary

  • Kasigau carbon project in Kenya once received millions in funding, now faces uncertain future
  • Over 90% of forest protection offsets did not represent genuine carbon reductions
  • Collapse of carbon market has wiped out funding for successful deforestation-slowing projects
Kenyan Carbon Project Struggles as Offset Market Plummets

In 2025, the Kasigau carbon project in Kenya, once a shining example of successful forest conservation efforts, finds itself struggling to survive as the carbon offset market has dramatically collapsed. Just two years ago, this project was the basis of a multibillion-dollar boom, with companies like Netflix and Shell purchasing millions of credits to offset their emissions.

However, a series of investigations have revealed that the overwhelming majority of forest protection offsets approved by the leading certifier, Verra, massively overstated their impact. Independent research published in 2023 found that more than 90% of these offsets did not represent genuine carbon reductions. This revelation has led to a market downturn that has wiped hundreds of millions off the value of the carbon credit market, and with it, the funding for projects that were successfully slowing deforestation, including Kasigau.

For the communities living within the Kasigau project area, the loss of this funding has been devastating. Over the lifetime of the scheme, $70 million had flowed to local people, paying for schools, healthcare, and water storage. But now, with the project's future in doubt, that support has dried up, leaving many struggling. Locals fear that without the project, the forests of Kasigau will be lost to charcoal burning and subsistence agriculture.

While efforts are underway to reform the carbon credit system and restore credibility, the future remains uncertain. The collapse of the green agenda in the corporate world has further compounded the challenges, with companies like Ryanair scrapping the use of offsets altogether. As the climate movement grapples with these setbacks, the fate of successful conservation projects like Kasigau hangs in the balance.

Disclaimer: This story has been auto-aggregated and auto-summarised by a computer program. This story has not been edited or created by the Feedzop team.
The Kasigau carbon project in Kenya, which once received millions in funding as part of a multibillion-dollar carbon offset boom, now faces an uncertain future as the carbon offset market has dramatically collapsed.
Investigations found that over 90% of forest protection offsets approved by the leading certifier, Verra, did not represent genuine carbon reductions, leading to a market downturn that has wiped out funding for successful deforestation-slowing projects like Kasigau.
The loss of $70 million in funding that had previously flowed to the Kasigau community has been devastating, with locals fearing that without the project, the forests will be lost to charcoal burning and subsistence agriculture.

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