
Real Time Emissions Monitoring: The Foundation of a Blockchain Enabled Carbon Economy
Author(s) -
P Nielsen
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
petroleum and petrochemical engineering journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2578-4846
DOI - 10.23880/ppej-16000265
Subject(s) - greenhouse gas , transparency (behavior) , environmental economics , business , blockchain , government (linguistics) , corporate governance , computer science , computer security , finance , economics , ecology , linguistics , philosophy , biology
With 49% of the world’s GDP under net zero goals, the global community is changing in how it treats emissions and carbon releases, with shareholders, stakeholders and investors demanding transparency on current performance and strategies to reduce or offset emissions. High frequency, reliable data empowers an organisation to strategically optimise and track emissions to reach committed goals from the asset level to the board room and across direct, indirect and supply chain sources (Scope 1, 2 and 3). A carbon footprinting solution, which provides a holistic view of total greenhouse gas emissions, requires a combination of carbon accounting, control system integration, emissions monitoring and greenhouse gas reporting software, to deliver an automated, reliable and verifiable real-time emissions/carbon reporting solution. This solution is also critical in providing managed data which can be utilised in the carbon economy and when combined with a Blockchain platform, results in a holistic data transfer chain for emissions reporting which is secure, transparent and trusted throughout industry and government. The role of comprehensive, connected environmental monitoring will be explored in the role of effective emissions offset and carbon trading economies with Blockchain supported technologies being presented as an enabling aspect of the overall solution. Smart contracts embedded within a Blockchain solution could automate trading mechanisms however require quality emissions monitoring data as a foundation for successful implementation. The role of quality emissions monitoring and governance in this process will be presented together with implications for industry and government for the carbon economy.