Mexico’s AMLO Says Carbon Offsets Need Oversight After BP Revelations
(Bloomberg) -- Mexican President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador called for regulation of the country’s carbon offset market in response to a Bloomberg Green investigation that showed oil giant BP Plc is paying subsistence farmers a fraction of market rate.
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BP paid just $4 per ton to more than a dozen Mexican communities under an agreement signed in 2021. The project’s own research showed buyers were willing to pay more than double that for offsets, which are now worth an average of $12 to $16 on the market.
Asked at his morning press conference Thursday if the market needed regulation to ensure better pay for landowners, Lopez Obrador replied “Yes, of course,” and said his administration would also look into BP’s project for paying “too little.”
A day after the investigation was published, government officials met with carbon offset standards bodies and called for a “just distribution of benefits.”
Read More: BP Paid Rural Mexicans a “Pittance” for Wall Street’s Favorite Climate Solution
After learning about the pay disparity from Bloomberg’s reporting, community members in Coatitila confronted one of the program’s contractors. Weeks later, they were told that BP would be increasing their pay. Leading Mexican environmental nonprofit Pronatura, which runs the project for BP, said they will use a model where the oil giant takes a cut of market rate and the rest goes to the community, but declined to give specific figures.
BP said in a statement Thursday that its intention is to “create conditions that help landowners to generate income through the protection, restoration and sustainable management of forests.” The company said prices had gone up since it signed the contract last year and it is now restructuring its payment mechanism to ensure communities get fair income.
(Updated in sixth paragraph with statement from BP.)
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