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Japans purchases of foreign bonds in the week ending March 20 amounted to -¥635.3 billion, compared to a revised -¥986.9 billion in the previous week (originally -¥992 billion).Foreign investors net outflowed 2,509.7 billion yen from Japanese stocks in the week ending March 20, compared with a revised figure of -1,772.5 billion yen for the previous week (originally -1,772.6 billion yen).U.S. House committees will consider a comprehensive aviation security bill on Thursday.The UAE Ministry of Defense says it is responding to drone and missile attacks from Iran.1. All three major U.S. stock indexes closed higher. The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 0.66% to 46,429.49 points, the S&P 500 rose 0.54% to 6,591.9 points, and the Nasdaq Composite rose 0.77% to 21,929.83 points. Sherwin-Williams and Merck rose more than 2%, leading the Dow Jones gains. The Wind U.S. Tech Giants Index rose 0.8%, Amazon rose more than 2%, and Nvidia rose nearly 2%. The Nasdaq China Golden Dragon Index rose 1.86%, JD.com rose more than 8%, and Canadian Solar rose nearly 8%. 2. All three major European stock indexes closed higher. The German DAX rose 1.41% to 22,957.08 points, the French CAC40 rose 1.33% to 7,846.55 points, and the UK FTSE 100 rose 1.42% to 10,106.84 points. 3. International precious metals futures generally closed higher, with COMEX gold futures rising 2.30% to $4,503.30 per ounce and COMEX silver futures rising 2.70% to $71.44 per ounce. 4. The most active US crude oil contract closed down 1.15% at $91.29 per barrel; the most active Brent crude oil contract fell 2.18% to $98.04 per barrel.

Canada Introduces Carbon Offset Certificates to Combat Emissions

Haiden Holmes

Jun 09, 2022 11:19

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Canada began a credit system for greenhouse gas offsets on Wednesday, a significant component of its goal to reduce carbon emissions, beginning with a set of rules outlining how projects might create tradable credits by absorbing landfill gas.


The government reported that guidelines for four additional areas, including agriculture and forest management, are in development. This summer, it will also begin creating rules for carbon capture technology, on which Canada's highly polluting oil industry is relying to reduce emissions.


The Liberal government of Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has vowed to reduce climate-warming emissions by 40-45 percent below 2005 levels by 2030. 7 percent of Canada's total carbon output comes from greenhouse gas emissions from trash, including landfills.


The greenhouse gas offset credit system is designed to enable a domestic carbon offset trading market, and the government has stated that it will generate new economic opportunities for businesses and municipalities that reduce emissions.


Participants may register projects and earn one tradable offset credit for each tonne of emissions reduced or removed from the environment, provided their initiatives adhere to the federal offset regulations that specify which activities qualify.


The credits can subsequently be sold to others, such as big industrial polluters obligated to limit carbon pollution or businesses voluntarily offsetting their emissions.


"Beginning with landfills, we are implementing a market-based framework to encourage firms and municipalities to invest in pollution-reducing technology and innovations," stated Environment Minister Steven Guilbeault.


The government anticipates that the price of carbon credits would closely mirror Canada's carbon pricing, which is presently set at C$50 per tonne and will increase to C$170 per tonne by 2030.


However, environmental groups cautioned that enabling polluters to purchase offset certificates rather than reducing their own emissions could jeopardize climate goals.


Greenpeace Canada spokesman Shane Moffatt stated, "Offsetting does not prevent carbon from entering the atmosphere and warming our planet; it merely keeps it off the books of large polluters who are accountable."