Tanzania locks in carbon cash, eyes climate credibility

Tanzania wants measurable gains from carbon trading that line up with its climate goals, and Prof Peter Msoffe from the Vice President's office said the country needs transparent systems backing its national climate pledges. Officials in Dodoma ran a workshop analyzing policy frameworks under Article 6 of the Paris Agreement, and the Integrated Assessment for Article 6 project is hitting Tanzania alongside Peru and Sri Lanka to review governance structures.

The assessment covers stakeholder coordination and existing regulations while recommending upgrades to national plans for grabbing carbon market benefits. Implementation falls under the Office of the Vice President, working with the National Carbon Monitoring Institute, UNEP Copenhagen Climate Centre, CAN-Tanzania, Climate Analytics from France, and Perspective Climate Research out of Germany. Results should strengthen procedures for meeting the Environmental and Climate Resilience Pillar in Tanzania's 2050 development vision.
 

Attachments

  • Tanzania locks in carbon cash, eyes climate credibility.webp
    Tanzania locks in carbon cash, eyes climate credibility.webp
    24 KB · Views: 46

Trending content

Sponsored

Top