Nature Carbon Ton ($NCT)

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Development History

Toucan Protocol

The $NCT pool is derived from millions of Verra carbon credits which were tokenized in Fall of 2021, right before the most recent crypto bubble popped. The drive to digitize these tokens through Toucan Protocol (onto the Polygon Blockchain) made up an estimated 25% of demand for Verra's carbon credits in 2021.

Klima DAO + $BCT

This demand was driven by Toucan Protocol's launch partnership with Klima DAO, which was originally exclusively backed by Toucan's token credits and marketed as a carbon-backed currency. New $KLIMA tokens were issuable through a bonding process which created demand for Toucan's credits.

At the time of launch, $NCT tokens were a part of the larger Base Carbon Ton ($BCT) pool. Today, xxx $NCT tokens are used as backing for $KLIMA.

Separation of $NCT

In January of 2022, a stealth operation was conducted to separate out nature-based carbon tokens from the $BCT pool and create a new pool with these tokens, the $NCT pool.

Regen Network

Regen Network's guide to Nature Carbon Ton: <https://regennetwork.notion.site/A-Guide-to-Nature-Carbon-Ton-NCT-8204ea9d20d0436281f49b8fd1b3fbd2>

Toucan-Regen Bridge

In March 2022, Regen Network Development announced a partnership with Toucan Protocol to bring $NCT tokens from the Ethereum Blockchain ecosystem (specifically the Layer-2 Blockchain Polygon) to the Cosmos Blockchain Ecosystem (specifically the Regen Ledger and Osmosis decentralized exchange).[1]

Premium Quality Guarantee

RND describes the Nature Carbon Ton as: "a premium digital carbon basket of nature-based projects" consisting of "nature-based carbon credits that have verifiable ecological, social, and economic benefits" that were "selected by Regen Network for their premium quality."[2]

All of RND's NCT tokens were selected from Verra[3] under the NCT token standard developed (from Oct '21 - Feb '22) by RND along with Toucan Protocol, BICOWG, and Moss.Earth.[4][5]

Project Directory

Florestal Santa Maria

Pacajai

Mai Ndombe

North Pikounda

Cordillera Azul National Park

The government of Peru declared Cordillera Azul a national park in May 2001, after a year of working with the Chicago Field Museum. The next year, CIMA signed an agreement with the government to manage the park.

Fossil Financing

In 2008, the Park's REDD Project was launched by CIMA along with the Chicago Field Museum, catalyzed by a $1.5 million investment from U.S. fossil fuel giant Exelon.[6]

In the decade since, additional funding has been received from The Nature Conservancy, USAID, Blue Moon Fund, New Venture Fund, and Fondo de Las Americas.

Above all, ~3/4 of new funding was provided by a loan from the Althelia Climate Fund - established by two investment bankers from BNP Paribas, one of the world's largest funders of fossil fuels.[7] The €8.55 million loan is to be repaid through the sale of millions of carbon credits.[8]

In 2018, the Poseidon Foundation used blockchain technology to facilitate the sale of these credits as offsets for Ben & Jerry's ice cream.[9]

Colonialism

On July 1, 2021, the Kichwa Indigenous Community of Puerto Franco announced that it was taking CIMA and the Peruvian State to court in defense of its territory which is claimed and encompassed by the park.

As reported by Kichwa Chief Alipno Fasabi Tuanama, the Park was created in 2001 without the consent or consultation of the Kichwa people or other Indigenous Peoples whose territories it overlaps, and its operation has disregarded Indigenous territorial rights which are largely denied today by the Peruvian state.

According to Vice-President Isidro Sangama, the Ethnic Council of the Kichwa Peoples of the Amazon (CEPKA) is calling on the State

"to return us the territory which they have taken without the Puerto Franco community's consent... The State thinks that this territory is in this condition and remains forested due to the care of the National Park, but they forget that in fact this territory has been cared for by Indigenous communities for years."

CEPKA member Marco Sangama reported that despite caring for and protecting the forest, the Kichwa community has not benefited from the sale of carbon credits under this project:

"The community controls and protects their territory, however they don’t see who is administering the PNCAZ. We understand that this park has benefitted from carbon credits. Despite this, the community has not benefitted, even when they are conserving their lands.”[10]

In response to this press release, CIMA (the park manager) hosted a webinar to discuss the project with a law firm, its accreditation agency Verra, and a fossil fuel conglomerate Total SA.

No Indigenous Peoples were invited to speak at the webinar, prompting the federations of the Kichwa people of the San Martín region to issue a joint statement[11] expressing:

"our deep unease and indignation at the exclusionary and discriminatory vision of the Cordillera Azul National Park in Peru, express our deep discomfort and indignation at the exclusionary and discriminatory vision that persists around conservation in Peru, and is carried out at the expense of the forests that we have occupied, protected and managed ancestrally, and the violation of our fundamental rights.

The joint statement included a "demand that the economic resources received be fairly distributed," and a call "to respect buen vivir and move towards a conservation paradigm that respects our human rights and recognises our millenary contributions to the protection of the Amazon."

The Kichwa federation noted that the deforestation and rights violations have continued apace due to the lack of support for their ancestral rights:

"Traditionally, we have not only preserved the forest, but also the buen vivir among our communities. Nowadays, however, there are timber extractors and land traffickers who are dedicated to planting coca leaves. It is no man’s land, and what is the Peruvian state doing to help us mitigate these problems? How can the Peruvian state not strengthen our own community strategies to defend the forests?

While their call to respect Indigenous Sovereignty and Land Management is scientifically backed[12] as essential to effective conservation within and beyond the project area:

"from scientific knowledge, it has been proven that, if territorial rights are respected, conservation is more effective and sustainable in social and economic terms. It has been demonstrated that securing communal land and resource rights is crucial for the sustainable management and effective protection of forests, both in the Amazon and globally."

Shell Oil

Shell Oil is a major financier of this project through the purchase of its carbon credits, which it uses to advertise its fossil fuels as "carbon neutral."[13][14]

Resguardo Indigena Unificando Selva de Mataven

  1. https://medium.com/regen-network/introducing-nature-carbon-ton-nct-6d0fbaaf490d
  2. https://www.notion.so/Cosmos-ZERO-Achieve-protocol-net-zero-carbon-emissions-while-building-a-carbon-market-in-Cosmos-ddd441e3ff3d4dbda83265433843ec10
  3. https://verra.org/project/vcs-program/
  4. https://docs.toucan.earth/toucan/pool/pool-parties/nct-pool-party-report
  5. https://www.notion.so/Cosmos-ZERO-Achieve-protocol-net-zero-carbon-emissions-while-building-a-carbon-market-in-Cosmos-ddd441e3ff3d4dbda83265433843ec10
  6. https://redd-monitor.org/2018/11/09/can-buying-ben-jerrys-ice-cream-save-the-cordillera-azul-national-park-in-peru-featuring-ecosphere-althelia-the-poseidon-foundation-redd-blockchain-and-the-government-of-malta/
  7. https://www.theguardian.com/business/2023/feb/27/climate-campaigners-sue-bnp-paribas-over-fossil-fuel-finance
  8. http://www.vcsprojectdatabase.org/services/publicViewServices/downloadDocumentById/25701
  9. https://redd-monitor.org/2018/11/09/can-buying-ben-jerrys-ice-cream-save-the-cordillera-azul-national-park-in-peru-featuring-ecosphere-althelia-the-poseidon-foundation-redd-blockchain-and-the-government-of-malta/
  10. https://www.forestpeoples.org/en/press-release/kichwa-take-Peru-state-PNAZ-courtM
  11. https://redd-monitor.org/2021/08/03/statement-from-kichwa-indigenous-people-opposing-exclusionary-conservation-and-redd-in-the-cordillera-azul-national-park-peru/
  12. https://www.yesmagazine.org/social-justice/2014/07/29/indigenous-land-management-effective-combating-climate-change
  13. https://redd-monitor.org/2021/07/02/indigenous-kichwa-community-takes-the-peruvian-state-and-cordillera-azul-national-park-to-court/
  14. https://www.shell.com/business-customers/trading-and-supply/trading/news-and-media-releases/cpc-corporation-taiwan-receives-second-carbon-neutral-lng-cargo-from-shell.html