Gilbertson, TamraReyes, Oscar2019-09-252019-09-252010-10-152009-111654-4250http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12424/175675"Carbon off sets are not emissions reductions. Each off set that is developed in the South allows pollution from fossil-fuelled power stations or heavy industry in the global North to continue over and above reduction limits while the same companies and industrialised countries claim compliance with paltry reduction targets on paper. To date, the UN’s Clean Development Mechanism (CDM) has actually resulted in an increase of CO2 emissions worldwide – displacing emissions cuts in the North in favour of off set projects that have already awarded billions in free subsidies to some of the world’s most polluting industries.[...]", p. 53engWith permission of the license/copyright holdertradecarbon dioxideclimate changeresponsibilityEconomic ethicsEnvironmental ethicsTrade ethicsResources ethicsCarbon Trade: Regenerating responsibility [Chapter 4 of "Critical Currents", issue 7, Nov, 2009, "Carbon Training - How it works and why it fails"]Article