In Short : Investing in carbon allowances involves purchasing permits to offset emissions within regulated limits. Carbon offsets are investments in projects that reduce equivalent greenhouse gases, promoting carbon neutrality. Research project credibility, additionality, permanence, and co-benefits to ensure impactful and ethical climate investments.
In Detail : KraneShares has a climate suite of ETFs, providing access to both carbon allowances and carbon offsets investments.
Investments in Carbon Allowances
A carbon allowance is sometimes known as a carbon credit. It is a government-issued permit, representing the legal right to emit one metric ton of carbon dioxide or equivalent greenhouse gas. Furthermore, carbon allowances are the cap-and-trade programs enacted by individual economies.
Carbon allowances are issued to companies and organizations participating in a mandatory national or international carbon market. They are generally either purchased by regulated emitters or allocated for free based on forecast carbon emissions, per KraneShares.
Carbon allowances should rise in value as demand remains consistent but supply is reduced over time.
Out of the three funds, KRBN provides the broadest exposure to carbon allowances, tracking all major global cap-and-trade programs. These programs include the European Union Allowances (EUA), California Carbon Allowances (CCA), and the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative (RGGI).
Meanwhile, KEUA offers targeted exposure to the European Union Allowances (EUA) program. The EUA program is the world’s oldest and most liquid carbon allowance market.
Conversely, KCCA offers targeted exposure to the California Carbon Allowances (CCA) cap-and-trade carbon allowance program. The CCA program is one of the fastest-growing carbon allowance programs globally.
Carbon Offsets
On the other hand, a carbon offset is generally outside of an emission trading scheme (ETS) or can be imported into an ETS, according to KraneShares. Like carbon allowances, carbon offsets represent one ton of carbon dioxide or equivalent greenhouse gas.
Carbon offsets are generated by a reduction in emissions made by a voluntary project designed specifically for that purpose, according to KraneShares. Carbon offset projects include building wind turbines or solar farms, supporting methane reduction projects, planting a tree, or preserving forests.
The KraneShares Global Carbon Offset Strategy ETF (KSET) provides broad coverage of the voluntary carbon market by tracking carbon offset futures contracts. The fund tracks carbon offset futures contracts comprising Nature-Based Global Emission Offsets (N-GEOs) and Global Emission Offsets (GEOs).