Excellent and thought-provoking article. Two comments
1. On the private-equity side, I sense an opportunity to create a 'basket' of climate-gas reducing technologies. My background is in regenerative ag. A lot of resources are sitting on the sidelines because the more common carbon reduction schemes (see tree planting) have such a long pa…
Excellent and thought-provoking article. Two comments
1. On the private-equity side, I sense an opportunity to create a 'basket' of climate-gas reducing technologies. My background is in regenerative ag. A lot of resources are sitting on the sidelines because the more common carbon reduction schemes (see tree planting) have such a long payback in terms of quantifiable carbon reductions. PE is unwilling to provide upfront payments and so many players in the space are struggling to realize enough meaningful revenue to stay afloat before the trees mature. Bundling the long-term carbon reducing power of tree planting with shorter-term methane reducing technologies mentioned here would serve to diversify both risk and payback horizon.
2. I'd love to see the data in the FAO chart broken down by weights depending on whether the reductions are anticipated in Industrialized nations or in the Global South. This information would be meaningful as few developers operate within both spheres.
Excellent and thought-provoking article. Two comments
1. On the private-equity side, I sense an opportunity to create a 'basket' of climate-gas reducing technologies. My background is in regenerative ag. A lot of resources are sitting on the sidelines because the more common carbon reduction schemes (see tree planting) have such a long payback in terms of quantifiable carbon reductions. PE is unwilling to provide upfront payments and so many players in the space are struggling to realize enough meaningful revenue to stay afloat before the trees mature. Bundling the long-term carbon reducing power of tree planting with shorter-term methane reducing technologies mentioned here would serve to diversify both risk and payback horizon.
2. I'd love to see the data in the FAO chart broken down by weights depending on whether the reductions are anticipated in Industrialized nations or in the Global South. This information would be meaningful as few developers operate within both spheres.