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Carbon as an Asset Class: A CFO's Guide to Risk and Value

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Frederic Olbert

9th Apr 2025

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Carbon credits are no longer just a corporate social responsibility tool.

Carbon as an asset class is no longer a distant idea, it’s rapidly becoming a strategic reality for finance leaders. As the pressure mounts to align corporate performance with climate commitments, CFOs are stepping into a new role: managing carbon not just as a cost, but as a financial asset.

In a joint paper by CarbonPool and EY, this shift is explored in depth, offering a clear roadmap for how CFOs can navigate the risks, regulations, and opportunities of carbon credit investments and turn climate strategy into financial strategy.

Download our paper here


How Carbon Credits Became an Asset Class for CFOs

Originally a voluntary measure, carbon credits are now central to meeting regulatory obligations and stakeholder expectations.
Driven by tightening legislation, such as the EU’s Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive (CSRD) and the SEC’s new climate disclosure requirements, businesses are under increasing pressure to publicly report on carbon liabilities and offsetting strategies.

Proactive use of carbon credits can provide a financial hedge against rising carbon costs, but it also introduces new complexities. CFOs must develop expertise in how credits are valued, accounted for, and reported to maximize strategic value​.


Navigating the New Regulatory Landscape

From Europe’s CSRD to the SEC’s ESG disclosure rules, global regulations are converging toward greater transparency around carbon credit use.
Key developments include:

  • Mandatory disclosure of purchased and retired carbon credits.

  • Verification requirements ensuring the credibility of offset claims.

  • Penalties for inaccurate reporting or unsubstantiated green claims.

In this environment, CFOs must embed compliance into their finance and risk functions, ensuring that carbon credit strategies withstand regulatory scrutiny.


Managing Risks: Beyond Due Diligence

Traditional due diligence and portfolio diversification are no longer sufficient.
Emerging risks in carbon markets include:

  • Delivery risk: Projects fail to deliver the promised volume of credits.

  • Permanence risk: Credits lose value if stored carbon is later released.

  • Market volatility: Price swings in carbon markets can erode asset value​.

Insurance solutions, particularly in-kind carbon insurance like those offered by CarbonPool, provide a critical safeguard. Unlike traditional cash payouts, in-kind insurance replaces lost carbon credits, preserving the company’s ability to meet climate commitments without exposure to spot market risk​.


Building a Carbon Credit Strategy for Asset-Class Treatment

To manage carbon credits effectively, CFOs should:

  1. Define clear investment parameters, including credit quality standards.

  2. Diversify carbon holdings across methodologies and geographies.

  3. Perform rigorous due diligence on project partners and credit verifiers.

  4. Strengthen contractual protections around delivery and performance.

  5. Integrate insurance to manage catastrophic and systemic risks​.

As the market matures, CFOs must treat carbon credits with the same rigor applied to financial instruments, balancing opportunity with careful risk management.


Conclusion: Why CFOs Must Embrace Carbon as an Asset Class

Carbon credits are becoming integral to corporate climate strategies, financial disclosures, and long-term value creation.

For CFOs, this evolution presents both a challenge and a strategic opportunity. Those who act early, building robust carbon credit management frameworks and risk mitigation strategies, will not only protect their organizations but lead them toward a more resilient, sustainable future.