Mission
In recent years, businesses and investors have become increasingly aware of climate change and are now taking positive action to stop it. A great example is Microsoft's initiative to become carbon neutral and eventually carbon negative. For these initiatives to succeed, multiple parties including institutional investors, major corporations, supply chain partners, environmentalist groups, government regulators, and the general public must now work together, sometimes for the first time. This new collaboration in turn requires exchanging data and building trust across traditional boundaries.
Today, this is simply not possible. Some data, such as utility bills or shipping records, are held in those institutions' data siloes and are tedious to get. Most data, though, is just not available. Most products involve multiple materials and activities to manufacture and distribute, and the data for the carbon footprint of their raw materials and activities are not available. As a result, we're forced to rely on broad aggregates of economic output and do not have reliable carbon emissions data for any particular product.
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Meetings
We will be part of the Hyperledger Climate Action and Accounting SIG Meetings – See you there!
Scope
The current scope of this working group includes:
- Identifying standards for corporate climate accounting and certifications.
- Providing recommendations on how DLT's could complement or improve current industry processes .
- Implementing open source DLT software for climate accounting and certifications.
- Promoting awareness and positive action in the larger Hyperledger and DLT community.
- Educating other stakeholders on the value of DLT's and Hyperledger in climate change.
Ongoing Work
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- Auditing their greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions.
- Establishing a plan for reducing the company's own emissions over time.
- Purchasing carbon offsets to offset current emissions to achieve carbon neutrality.
- Obtaining a carbon neutrality certification from a certifying entity.
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In this case, a permissioned blockchain such as Hyperledger Fabric allows a company to share its data for independent verification by trusted parties. Thus, it could provide transparency and protect privacy at the same time. For example,
- A private channel could be set up for a company, its trusted data sources, and certifying entities.
- The data sources could include tokens of carbon emissions from utilities, suppliers, shippers, and other sources. By turning emissions data into tokens, they become standardized accounts of emissions that could be transferred across different organizations.
- One or more certifying entities could have access to the data and use smart contracts to calculate the company's emissions based on the data on the private channel.
- The result could then be signed and published to a more public blockchain, for example as a token.
Hyperledger Fabric channels and chain code allow additional parties to audit a company's emissions without compromising any proprietary data. For example, if an environmentalist group has questions about a company's reported emissions, it could develop its own smart contract for auditing emissions. It could then ask that they be deployed, possibly by a neutral third party service provider, to the company's private channel. The smart contract could audit the data and report its results without sharing the company's data.
Once the climate action claim has been verified, it could be tokenized on a public blockchain or passed along in another permissioned chain as an asset. This allows the climate action claim, whether it's the GHG emissions of a product or a company's certified carbon neutrality, to be passed down the supply chain to its customers and made visible to the general public.
Why Open Source
Today, there are a lot of different environmental certifications, and the general public often doesn't know which one they could trust. Thus, some consumers feel that any business which makes a pro-environment claim is "greenwashing," while many businesses feel that no matter what they do, it's not good enough.
But what if we opened up the certifications process by creating open source software for verifying climate action based on data? Then anybody could study a certification and understand how it works. We could run several certifications on the same company, or even conduct studies comparing the certifications on a range of companies.
Furthermore, if the code for the certifications are open source, then anybody could extend an existing certification. So if you feel that a certification process is too lax, make a better one yourself: Take an existing certification, add your enhancements, and publish it. If people believe that your certification is better, then they could ask companies to run your code on their climate data channel.
Thus, open source not only helps reduce the cost of certifications but also make it possible for them to become open and transparent, so that investors, consumers, and the general public could finally trust in the climate actions that businesse are taking.
How to Get Started
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