S&P 500 5,235.18 +1.02%EUR/USD 1.0840 +0.21%GBP/USD 1.2710 +0.14%USD/JPY 149.50 −0.18%BRENT $82.40 −0.81%BTC $67,800 −0.21%GOLD $2,341 +0.55%NASDAQ 16,420.55 +0.74%S&P 500 5,235.18 +1.02%EUR/USD 1.0840 +0.21%GBP/USD 1.2710 +0.14%USD/JPY 149.50 −0.18%BRENT $82.40 −0.81%BTC $67,800 −0.21%GOLD $2,341 +0.55%NASDAQ 16,420.55 +0.74%
A daily business newspaper · Founded in 2026

Money Talk

Finance and markets: business, quotes, gold, energy and releases.

Hess Corporation’s $250 Million Bet on Carbon Credits

Hess Corporation has retired 12.5 million carbon credits purchased from Guyana in a deal valued at $250 million. While carbon markets have long faced skepticism regarding their effectiveness, this transaction marks a rare, large-scale transfer of capital from the fossil fuel industry directly into nature-based climate preservation.

Hess Corporation’s $250 Million Bet on Carbon Credits

The significance of this move lies in the retirement of the credits. In a market frequently criticized for trading empty promises, retiring a credit removes it from circulation permanently, ensuring the climate benefit is realized rather than merely pledged. By shifting a quarter of a billion dollars from hydrocarbon extraction to forest conservation, the company has provided a concrete example of the 'polluter pays' principle in action.

The Economic Shift of Carbon

This transaction serves as a bellwether for how carbon is being integrated into global financial systems. Developing nations have long struggled to protect biodiversity when logging and agriculture offer immediate, if destructive, economic returns. By assigning a clear price to the carbon stored in Guyana’s forests, the deal demonstrates how conservation can function as a viable development pathway. While debates persist regarding the quality and verification of such credits, the broader trend is undeniable: carbon is transitioning from an ignored environmental byproduct into a recognized economic asset. As private capital is mobilized to bridge the funding gap that governments cannot fill alone, the energy transition is moving beyond a purely engineering challenge and becoming a fundamental shift in how global markets value the planet's natural resources.

Share article
TelegramXFacebook

When reusing this material a link to Money Talk is required.

Comments (0)

Leave a comment

No comments yet. Be the first!