The airline industry faces a significant challenge in meeting the United Nations' CORSIA framework for emissions control due to a severe shortage of eligible carbon credits.
Currently, only Guyana is selling approved offsets, but its supply of 16 million tonnes is vastly insufficient for the estimated 236 million tonnes needed for the 2024-2026 period. This scarcity is driving up credit prices, potentially costing airlines between $4 billion and $6 billion.
Non-compliance could lead to fines of up to $100 per tonne, escalating the potential financial impact to $17.5 billion. The situation is further complicated by countries' reluctance to issue credits due to their own emissions reduction targets and the uncertainty surrounding the availability of new credits or policy changes before the 2028 compliance deadline.
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