The verified carbon market is witnessing a fundamental change as the focus shifts toward high-integrity carbon assets. A landmark development in Nigeria has set a new precedent: for the first time, the US-based standard Verra has issued carbon units (also known as carbon credits) that carry the Integrity Council for the Voluntary Carbon Market’s (ICVCM) Core Carbon Principles (CCP) quality label.
This CCP label serves as a mark of quality, providing business owners and sustainability officers with the assurance that these carbon assets meet rigorous global benchmarks for transparency and environmental impact. The units were generated under the VM0050 methodology for a project (VCS2673) developed by Nigeria-based UpEnergy.
The project focuses on a significant upgrade to local infrastructure by replacing traditional charcoal stoves with modern, energy-efficient units. These stoves are manufactured locally in Nigeria, supporting the regional economy while delivering substantial environmental benefits. Current projections indicate the project will prevent over 1.6 million tonnes of CO2 equivalent from entering the atmosphere every year.
Anantha Rajagopalan, Vice President at UpEnergy, emphasised the technical progress represented by this milestone: 'This CCP-labelled issuance reflects the continued strengthening of methodologies, more precise impact measurement and increased conservativeness.'
While this is a first for Verra, the adoption of the CCP label is gaining momentum globally. The Switzerland-based Gold Standard has already implemented this high-integrity tag for projects in other regions:
For project developers and investors, this issuance confirms that the 'CCP-approved' tag is becoming an essential tool for verifying the validity of environmental claims and building trust in the project-linked carbon market.