Saudi Arabia Launches Carbon-Trading Market Platform to Finance to High Quality Climate Projects

A general view of Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. (SPA)
A general view of Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. (SPA)
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Saudi Arabia Launches Carbon-Trading Market Platform to Finance to High Quality Climate Projects

A general view of Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. (SPA)
A general view of Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. (SPA)

Saudi Arabia launched on Tuesday a carbon-trading market, a day after climate negotiators secured a major breakthrough by agreeing rules for a UN-administered global emissions market.

In a statement, Saudi Arabia's Regional Voluntary Carbon Market Company (RVCMC) said 22 Saudi and international businesses are participating in the platform. They are Alpha Star, Aramco Trading Company, Eastern Province Cement Company, Energroup Limited, flynas, Gulf International Bank (GIB), Golf Saudi, International Islamic Trade Finance Corporation (ITFC), Saudi Aramco Base Oil Company Luberef, Ma’aden, the Public Investment Fund (PIF), Red Sea Global (RSG), SAB, SABIC, Saudi Top Plastic Factory, SCB Environmental Markets SA, Saudi Electricity Company (SEC), SNB, SOCAR, Valitera, Yamama Cement Company and Yanbu Cement Company.

The launch of the platform is a major milestone in Saudi Arabia’s ambition to become one of the largest voluntary carbon markets in the world by 2030.

Its first voluntary credits auctioned will be from projects in the Global South, including Bangladesh, Brazil, Ethiopia, Malaysia, Pakistan and Vietnam.

The platform aims to scale up the supply and demand of high-quality carbon credits across the Global South and beyond, driving funding to climate projects that require finance, supporting the transition to global net zero emissions, the statement said.

To mark the launch, RVCMC is hosting inaugural transactions on the exchange platform starting Tuesday, auctioning over 2.5 million tons of high-quality carbon credits, it added.

The basket of credits connects buyers with 17 climate projects from across the world and to support Saudi Arabia’s carbon neutrality goals.

The platform is designed to meet market requirements for a transparent, scalable and increasingly liquid marketplace, by offering institutional grade infrastructure, to enable fast and secure transactions, price and data discovery for carbon credit projects, key to growing the market globally and providing a price signal on projects from MENA regions, open market connectivity, integrated with leading global registries, scope to develop specialized infrastructure for trade in carbon credits to enable Islamic Finance and auction market, RFQ and block trade functionality today, followed by spot market and other functions launching in 2025.

Speaking at the COP29 United Nations Climate Change Conference in Baku, Riham ElGizy, RVCMC’s Chief Executive Officer, said: “The message coming into COP is clear: To accelerate global decarbonization we must unlock financial flows to critical climate projects on an enormous scale.”



Crown Prince: Saudi Arabia Has Contributed $6Bln to Support 200 Development Projects in 60 Countries

Prince Mohammed bin Salman bin Abdulaziz, Saudi Crown Prince and Prime Minister, (C-R) stands with French President Emmanuel Macron (C-L) for a group photo together with other heads of state participating in the One Water Summit in the capital Riyadh on December 3, 2024. (AFP)
Prince Mohammed bin Salman bin Abdulaziz, Saudi Crown Prince and Prime Minister, (C-R) stands with French President Emmanuel Macron (C-L) for a group photo together with other heads of state participating in the One Water Summit in the capital Riyadh on December 3, 2024. (AFP)
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Crown Prince: Saudi Arabia Has Contributed $6Bln to Support 200 Development Projects in 60 Countries

Prince Mohammed bin Salman bin Abdulaziz, Saudi Crown Prince and Prime Minister, (C-R) stands with French President Emmanuel Macron (C-L) for a group photo together with other heads of state participating in the One Water Summit in the capital Riyadh on December 3, 2024. (AFP)
Prince Mohammed bin Salman bin Abdulaziz, Saudi Crown Prince and Prime Minister, (C-R) stands with French President Emmanuel Macron (C-L) for a group photo together with other heads of state participating in the One Water Summit in the capital Riyadh on December 3, 2024. (AFP)

Prince Mohammed bin Salman bin Abdulaziz, Saudi Crown Prince and Prime Minister, said on Tuesday that the Kingdom has contributed USD6 billion in supporting 200 water-related projects in over 60 developing countries around the world.

He spoke at the One Water Summit in Riyadh that was attended by French President Emmanuel Macron, Kazakhstan’s President Kassym-Jomart Tokayev and several ministers and officials.

The summit is jointly chaired by Saudi Arabia, France and Kazakhstan, and president of the World Bank. It underscores Saudi Arabia’s pioneering international role in confronting water challenges across the world and its commitment to sustainable environment issues.

The Kingdom has for decades demonstrated its pioneering role in producing, transporting and distributing water and coming up with innovative solutions to address challenges related to it.

Crown Prince Mohammed noted that the world is facing growing water problems given the rise in drought levels. Water scarcity will lead to several crises, such as desertification, which may threaten human life and societies.

He therefore stressed the need for joint work to set plans to ensure sustainable sources of water.

The Kingdom is preparing to host the 11th round of the World Water Forum in 2027 in cooperation with the World Water Council, he remarked. The council has already set up its global headquarters in Riyadh with the aim to develop and integrate international efforts to tackle challenges in a more comprehensive way.

Moreover, Crown Prince Mohammed noted that the One Water Summit is being held while Saudi Arabia is hosting the 16th session of the Conference of the Parties (COP16) of the United Nations Convention to Combat Desertification (UNCCD).

The One Water Summit aims to contribute to the ongoing United Nations discussions and process to boost global water governance, accelerate action on SDG6 on water and sanitation, building on the momentum of the UN Water Conference in 2023. It also aims to act as an incubator for solutions, in preparation for the next UN Water Conference in 2026.

The One Water Summit’s ambition is to scale-up projects by stimulating partnerships between states, international organizations, local authorities, development and private banks, businesses, philanthropies, scientific experts, NGOs and civil society, in line with previous One Planet Summits.