Carbon Financing

Carbon financing means funding or investment used to support projects that reduce greenhouse gas emissions, remove carbon from the atmosphere or help organisations meet climate related goals.

Climate Or Carbon Project

Funding Or Investment

Emissions Reduction Or Carbon Removal

Measurement & Verification

Carbon Credits, Climate Claims Or Project Outcomes

Carbon Financing

Funding used to support emissions reduction, carbon removal or climate related projects.

Carbon Credits

Tradeable units representing claimed emissions reductions or removals.

Carbon Markets

Systems where credits, allowances or carbon related instruments are bought and sold.

Carbon Financing

Carbon financing is the use of money, investment, grants, loans, carbon markets or other financial mechanisms to fund activities that reduce emissions, remove carbon or support climate transition. It can include funding renewable energy, tree planting, peatland restoration, soil carbon projects, low emission farming practices, energy efficiency, carbon removal and other climate related work. Carbon financing is connected to carbon credits and carbon markets, but it is not the same thing. Carbon finance is the funding mechanism; carbon credits are one possible output or instrument within that system.

What Carbon Financing Means

Carbon financing is a broad term for the way climate related projects are funded.
The basic idea is that reducing emissions or removing carbon usually costs money. Farmers may need funding to change land management. Businesses may need capital to reduce emissions. Governments may need to support infrastructure. Project developers may need upfront finance before a carbon project produces any credits. Carbon financing is the umbrella term for the money that helps make those changes possible.
Carbon financing can come through public funding, private investment, grants, loans, blended finance, voluntary carbon markets, compliance markets, development finance or corporate climate programmes.
The World Bank describes carbon pricing as a policy approach where governments place a price on carbon emissions, either through carbon taxes or emissions trading systems. Its State and Trends of Carbon Pricing work tracks carbon pricing instruments and carbon credit markets globally.
For BFFD, carbon financing matters because it is increasingly connected to land, agriculture and food production. When money flows into carbon projects, it can affect how land is used, how farmers are paid, what food is produced and how businesses communicate environmental claims.

Carbon Financing and Carbon Credits

Carbon financing and carbon credits are connected, but they are not identical.

For example, a land based project might receive funding to plant woodland, restore peatland or improve soil carbon. If the project follows a recognised carbon standard, it may later generate carbon credits. Those credits can then be sold to buyers, creating another financial return.
The UK Government’s voluntary carbon and nature market integrity principles state that credits should be used in addition to ambitious action within value chains, not instead of real emissions reduction. This distinction matters because carbon financing should support genuine change, not become a way to avoid reducing emissions directly.
Carbon financing can therefore happen before, during or after carbon credits are created. It may fund the work that creates credits, purchase credits once issued, or support climate projects that never issue credits at all.

Carbon Financing and Carbon Markets

Carbon markets are one part of carbon financing.

A carbon market is a system where carbon related units are bought, sold or traded. This may involve voluntary carbon credits, compliance allowances or other emissions related instruments.

There are two broad types:

Voluntary carbon markets
Businesses or organisations buy carbon credits voluntarily to support climate claims or offset residual emissions.

Compliance carbon markets
Regulated organisations buy, trade or surrender allowances as part of a legally binding emissions trading scheme.

The OECD has examined the interplay between voluntary and compliance carbon markets, including their environmental integrity implications and the different ways these markets can interact.

In simple terms, carbon financing can include carbon markets, but it is wider than carbon markets. It can also include public funding, private investment, bank lending, corporate funding, development finance and land based environmental payments.

Carbon Financing and Food Systems

Carbon financing can shape food systems in several ways.

It can influence what farmers grow, how land is managed, how food businesses report emissions, how retailers choose suppliers and how products are marketed to consumers. It can also affect prices if reporting, verification, consultants, audits or compliance costs move through the supply chain.

In simple terms, carbon financing can include carbon markets, but it is wider than carbon markets. It can also include public funding, private investment, bank lending, corporate funding, development finance and land based environmental payments.

There is a risk that carbon financed food systems become more complex, more centralised and harder for ordinary people to understand. A food product may carry a carbon claim, but that does not automatically tell shoppers whether it is local, seasonal, nutritious, affordable, fair to producers or connected to good provenance.

Why Carbon Financing Exists

Carbon financing exists because climate related change requires money. Reducing emissions, improving land, changing energy systems, protecting peatland, restoring woodland, measuring carbon, verifying claims and reporting progress all need funding. Without finance, many climate projects would remain ideas rather than practical work.
The OECD describes finance and investment as critical to climate goals, including aligning financial markets, budgets and investment with environmental and wellbeing outcomes. Carbon financing is therefore presented as a way to move money towards activities that reduce emissions, remove carbon or support climate adaptation
However, the quality of that finance matters. Money can support real transition, but it can also create weak claims, poor incentives, land pressure or over complicated systems that benefit intermediaries more than farmers, producers or communities.

What Carbon Financing Can Mean for Farmers

Carbon financing can create opportunity, but it can also shift control.

A farmer may be offered money to change land management, measure soil carbon, plant trees, create habitat or enter a carbon scheme. That money may help fund useful work. It may also come with obligations that last for years.

Innovate UK Business Connect has noted that carbon schemes can aim to make farming more sustainable while providing an additional income stream for farmers, including soil carbon schemes that reward soil improvement and carbon credits earned through practices that reduce emissions.

The important point is that farmers should not treat carbon financing as free money. It is finance attached to obligations, measurement and claims.

Before entering a scheme, farmers should ask:
For BFFD, this matters because farmers should not be pushed into complex carbon deals without understanding the long term trade off.

Carbon Financing and Land Use

One of the biggest concerns around carbon financing is land use.

If land can earn money from carbon storage, tree planting or habitat restoration, that may be positive in the right place. But it can become a problem if productive food land is moved away from feeding people without proper thought.
Land has many roles. It produces food. It stores carbon. It supports biodiversity. It manages water. It holds communities, livelihoods, culture and rural identity. Carbon financing can be helpful when it respects that full picture. It can be harmful when carbon becomes the only value that matters.
For BFFD, this is a central concern. Food systems should not be redesigned only around carbon spreadsheets. Farmers still need to produce food. Communities still need affordable access. Britain still needs local supply, skills, resilience and real food production.

Carbon matters, but does it matter as much as food production?

Carbon Financing, Green Claims and Trust

A business may fund a carbon project, purchase credits or support land based carbon work, then make claims about being carbon neutral, climate positive, net zero aligned or sustainable.
Those claims need to be clear.
The UK’s Green Claims Code says environmental claims must be truthful, clear, unambiguous, accurate and not misleading. It also explains that broad terms such as green, sustainable or eco friendly are more likely to mislead if they are not properly explained and substantiated.
For food and farming, this matters because environmental claims can quickly become marketing language. A carbon financed product or business should not hide weak provenance, poor transparency, high food miles, poor producer returns or inflated prices behind a green claim.

Trust depends on clarity.

EXAMPLES OF ENTITIES THAT CAN PROVIDE CARBON FINANCING

Farm Carbon Project

Funding supports soil carbon, hedgerows, trees, peat restoration or low emission farming changes.

Business Climate Finance

A company funds carbon related projects as part of a wider climate strategy.

Public or Development Finance

Governments, banks or institutions fund climate mitigation and adaptation projects

Benefits of Carbon Financing

Carbon financing can have benefits when it is used carefully.
It can help fund environmental work that might otherwise be unaffordable. It can support soil improvement, peatland restoration, woodland creation, nature recovery, lower emission farming, renewable energy and better measurement of environmental outcomes.
It can also create new income routes for farmers and land managers if schemes are fair, transparent and well designed.
The UK Government has said it sees a clear and appropriate role for the responsible voluntary use of high integrity carbon and nature credits by companies. However, its consultation also focuses heavily on integrity, trust, governance and the use of credits alongside action within companies’ own value chains.
That is the balance BFFD should reflect: carbon financing can help, but only if integrity, fairness and food production are protected.

Risks of Carbon Financing

Carbon financing also carries risks.

A carbon project can be poorly measured. Credits can be low quality. Claims can be exaggerated. Farmers can sign contracts they do not fully understand. Land use can shift away from food production. Middlemen can profit while producers carry obligations. Consumers can be misled by vague sustainability language.

Trust depends on clarity.
The World Bank’s State and Trends of Carbon Pricing notes that credit prices vary and that higher perceived quality can command premiums, which reinforces that carbon finance is not a single simple market. Quality and integrity matter.

Carbon Financing and Consumers

Most consumers will not deal directly with carbon financing, but they may still feel its effects.

They may see food products with carbon labels. They may see businesses claiming carbon neutrality. They may pay higher prices if carbon reporting and offsetting costs are passed along. They may be encouraged to choose food based on carbon scores.

This creates an important question: does the carbon information help the shopper understand the food, or does it distract them from more practical issues?

A low carbon claim does not automatically mean a food is local, affordable, seasonal, nutritious or fair to the producer. A carbon financed project does not automatically make the final product better.
Consumers should treat carbon claims as one piece of information, not the whole story.

Common Misunderstandings About Carbon Financing

LEARN MORE ABOUT CARBON CREDITS

PURCHASE OF CARBON CREDITS

CARBON CREDIT PRICE

FAQ

What are carbon credits?

Carbon financing means funding or investment used to support projects that reduce greenhouse gas emissions, remove carbon from the atmosphere or help organisations meet climate related goals.
No. Carbon financing is the funding mechanism. Carbon credits are tradeable units that may be generated by some carbon financed projects.
Carbon financing usually funds a climate related project, such as emissions reduction, carbon removal, land restoration, renewable energy or soil carbon work. The project may then produce verified outcomes, credits or climate claims depending on the scheme.
Carbon financing can offer farmers new income for land based environmental work, but it can also create risks around contracts, land use, carbon ownership, future claims and food production.
Some carbon finance sits within regulated systems, while some sits in voluntary markets. The UK Government is working on voluntary carbon and nature market integrity principles to improve trust and governance.
It can contribute to costs if farmers, processors, retailers or brands face new reporting, verification, consultancy, compliance or offsetting costs. The effect depends on the scheme and who carries the cost.
It can be, if projects are high integrity, properly measured, additional and well governed. Poor quality carbon financing can lead to weak claims, greenwashing or bad incentives.
BFFD cares because carbon financing can affect land use, food production, farm income, food prices and consumer trust. BFFD believes food systems should remain transparent, practical and connected to real producers.

Understand Carbon Before It Shapes Food

Carbon financing is becoming part of the conversation around farming, land and food. BFFD is being built to help people understand food, farming and local supply with clearer links between producers, products, place and trust.