Selangor Journal
A general view of the Dewan Rakyat during a session at the Parliament, Kuala Lumpur, on December 19, 2022. — Picture by REUTERS

Govt to ensure carbon credits sale abroad will not affect NDCs

KUALA LUMPUR, July 2 — The Federal government will ensure that the sale of carbon credits abroad does not undermine Malaysia’s achievement of its nationally determined contribution (NDC) targets, the Dewan Rakyat was told today.

Natural Resources and Environmental Sustainability Minister Nik Nazmi Nik Ahmad said this measure aims to ensure Malaysia’s NDC goal of reducing carbon emissions intensity across the economy by 45 per cent by 2030 is met.

“At the same time, to encourage and support carbon generation initiatives from the forestry sector, the ministry has established the Malaysia Forest Fund (MFF) as the entity responsible for implementing efforts and innovative financial strategies for the forestry sector, and we have seen that carbon credits have started to be traded on the platform Bursa Carbon Exchange (BCX) and the Kuamut Project in Sabah.

Natural Resources and Sustainability Minister Nik Nazmi Nik Ahmad. — Picture by BERNAMA

“We have appointed MFF as the implementing agency under the Forest Carbon Project Development Fund of RM5 million in 2024 to support the activities carried out by the state governments,” he said.

Nazmi was responding to Paya Besar MP Datuk Mohd Shahar Abdullah’s query on the action taken by the ministry regarding the Federal-state coordination in generating carbon credits from Malaysian forests

On May 20, the inaugural auction of Malaysian Renewable Energy Certificates (RECs) and carbon credits on the BCX provided opportunities for the corporate sector to showcase their climate actions by efficiently allocating capital to support forest conservation and restoration efforts and low-carbon technologies.

Nazmi added that carbon credits and RECs have the potential to stimulate the development of low-carbon projects, supporting Malaysia’s goal of achieving a 45 per cent reduction in emissions intensity by 2030, based on gross domestic product levels in 2005, as outlined in Malaysia’s NDCs.

In reply to Shahar’s supplementary question about the government’s efforts to strengthen the carbon market mechanism, especially in the forestry sector, he said the government, via the Finance Ministry, is holding discussions with the World Bank to explore the feasibility of implementing a carbon tax in Malaysia.

“The discussion is ongoing, and this is one of the things that need to be taken into account in the process of drafting the National Climate Change Bill.

“I believe that if there is such a framework, the price (carbon market) is better than what we have in the market now, which is currently relatively low,” Nazmi said.

— Bernama

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