What a Carbon Credit Is
A carbon credit is a tradable certificate representing one metric tonne of carbon dioxide equivalent (tCO2e) that has been avoided, reduced, or removed from the atmosphere. It is the base unit of carbon markets: a standardized, verifiable claim that a specific action prevented or reversed greenhouse gas emissions.
The concept is simple. A solar farm in India displaces coal-fired electricity, preventing emissions. A biochar project in Kenya pulls CO2 from the atmosphere and locks it in stable carbon for centuries. A forest conservation project in Brazil prevents logging that would release stored carbon. Each of these actions can generate carbon credits, verified by independent auditors and issued by registries like CDR.fyi, Verra, or Gold Standard.
The buyer of that credit can use it to compensate for their own emissions. A company that emits 10,000 tonnes of CO2 and buys 10,000 carbon credits can claim carbon neutrality. Whether that claim is credible depends entirely on the quality of the credits purchased. That distinction between quality and quantity is the central tension in carbon markets today.
Carbon credits exist because of a fundamental economic insight: it does not matter where in the world a tonne of CO2 is reduced. The atmosphere is a single system. If it is cheaper to prevent a tonne of emissions in Vietnam than in Germany, a market mechanism that directs capital to the cheapest reduction delivers the same climate outcome at lower cost. That is the economic logic behind carbon trading. The practical challenge is making sure the credits represent real reductions.