Restoring ecosystems and enhancing biodiversity is one of many regulatory ambitions under the European Green Deal. The motivations to do so include, but are not limited to, enabling carbon removal by capturing and storing carbon dioxide from the atmosphere in land. The business model of such schemes is to help the EU and its Member States meet their climate obligations whilst safeguarding biodiversity, and when relevant, enable sustainable agricultural practices by creating transferable carbon credits awarded to land managers pursuing such practices. The idea of introducing market-based mechanisms in the management of ecosystem services is not a novelty, but the increasing prominence of carbon removals in the European Green Deal and its related legislative actions warrants careful consideration of legal quandaries about how such removals are to be carried out, why, where and by whom.
Carbon removals, ecosystems and the European Green Deal
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Research theme(s)
Policy, business & governance Societal engagement and responsible innovation
Policy, business & governance Societal engagement and responsible innovation
Publication type
Article
Article
Author(s)
Sanja Bogojević
Sanja Bogojević
Publication date
August 12, 2024
August 12, 2024
Publisher
European Law Open
European Law Open