Understanding High-Integrity Carbon Removal
A buyer’s plain-language guide to Clo Carbon Cymru’s Biochar Standard
1. Carbon Dioxide Removal (CDR)
What it means:
Carbon Dioxide Removal refers to activities that physically remove CO₂ from the atmosphere and store it durably.
Why it matters:
CDR is required to address residual emissions that cannot be eliminated, even after deep decarbonisation.
Context:
Biochar production removes atmospheric CO₂ via plant growth and stores it in a stable carbon form (biochar), qualifying as durable CDR, not an offset (avoided emissions or accounting substitutions).
2. Carbon Removal vs Carbon Sequestration
Removal:
- The act of taking CO₂ out of the atmosphere.
- Measured at the point carbon is captured and stabilised.
Sequestration:
- The ongoing storage of that removed carbon over time.
Context:
Biochar achieves both removal (during biomass growth) and sequestration (through long-term carbon stability in soils).
Credits represent verified removals, not avoided emissions.
3. Durability vs Permanence
Durability:
- How long carbon is expected to remain stored, based on scientific evidence.
- Expressed in years (e.g. >100 years).
Permanence:
- The confidence that stored carbon will not be reversed, supported by monitoring, verification, and governance.
Context:
- Biochar meets durability thresholds of 100–1,000+ years, aligned with Carbon Direct and Isometric criteria.
Permanence is reinforced through independent verification and registry controls.
4. Carbon Insetting vs Carbon Offsetting
Offsetting:
- Compensating for emissions elsewhere, often disconnected from a company’s value chain.
- Historically associated with low-integrity credits.
Insetting
- Investing in carbon removals within a defined supply chain or regional economy.
In this Standard:
Clo Carbon Cymru operates a carbon insetting model, linking investment directly to Welsh land management, biodiversity, and rural economies.
5. Biochar
What it is: Biochar is a carbon-rich solid produced by heating biomass in a low-oxygen environment (pyrolysis).
Why it matters: Biochar locks atmospheric carbon into a stable form that resists decomposition for centuries.
Context:
- Biochar is produced from sustainably managed woodlands, hedgerows, and agroforestry.
Its carbon content is independently measured and verified before conversion to a CO2 equivalent
6. Carbon Lock Origin Certificate (CLOC)
What it is: A verified unit of carbon removal, where one CLOC equals one tonne of CO₂ permanently removed.
What makes it different:
- Backed by ISO-aligned MRV
- Linked to physical biochar production
- Retired transparently to prevent double counting
7. Nature-Based Solutions (NbS)
What it means: Actions that protect, restore, or manage ecosystems while addressing climate change and supporting biodiversity.
Context: Clo Carbon Cymru’s Biochar Production Standard aligns with the IUCN Global Standard for Nature-Based Solutions, ensuring carbon removal delivers real ecological and social benefits.
8. Verification
What it means: Independent assessment by qualified third parties to confirm that carbon removals are real, measurable, and permanent.
Context: All CLOCs are verified under ISO 14064-3 and aligned with ICVCM Core Carbon Principles.
9. What You’re Buying:
Carbon Lock Origin Certificates (CLOCs)
Each CLOC represents one tonne of CO₂ permanently removed.
Every certificate is:
- Measured and verified under ISO standards
- Linked to physical biochar production
- Transparently recorded and retired
- Aligned with ICVCM Core Carbon Principles
Why this matters for buyers
Clo Carbon Cymru biochar removals offer:
- High-integrity carbon removal, not offsets
- Long-term climate impact, not short-lived storage
- Transparent verification, not self-reported claims
- Biodiversity and community benefits, not extractive finance
- High-integrity carbon removal, not offsets