Categories: Press-Releases

COTAP Becomes the First Carbon Offset Provider to Enable Funding Offsets with Cryptocurrency

[ad_2]

WALNUT CREEK, Calif., June 4, 2021 /PRNewswire/ — The global non-profit Carbon Offsets to Alleviate Poverty (COTAP.org) announced it has become the first carbon offset provider to accept all major cryptocurrencies. It joins over 200 other nonprofits which have partnered with The Giving Block to enable cryptocurrency donations, and to ensure that they are tax-compliant, secure, and automatically converted into cash. COTAP can now use cryptocurrency donations to support its high-quality, verified carbon offset programs in six low-income countries, creating a unique way to mitigate carbon emissions while generating life-changing income for some of the world’s poorest communities. 

“This is a significant first on several levels,” said COTAP founder and CEO Tim Whitley. “The voluntary carbon offset market is exploding, with demand at an all-time high, and so is the market and demand for cryptocurrency. But there are still barriers to entry for companies and people who want to offset their carbon emissions, so we’re working to bring them down however we can, including by being the first to take cryptocurrency donations to support offset projects. At the same time, cryptocurrency, and Bitcoin in particular, has a huge carbon footprint. That’s a serious problem. By making it possible for the first time to use cryptocurrency to help support to high-quality offsets that lower emissions and fight poverty, we hope to help mitigate it.” 

“Crypto is going to continue to grow explosively, so if we want to reduce its climate impact, we’re going to need a way to decarbonize it,” Whitley said. “Switching it to sustainable energy sources would be great, but will take time. Meanwhile, if you want to address the carbon footprint of the cryptocurrency you’re holding, or you want to use it to offset the carbon emissions of other activities, you now have that option. By donating just a fraction of one crypto coin, a donor can potentially counteract that coin’s emissions many times over.”

Cryptocurrencies are surprisingly carbon-intensive. Because it depends on high-powered, energy-guzzling computers, Bitcoin for example uses the same amount of energy as small countries like the Netherlands, generating an estimated 22-23 million metric tons of carbon dioxide emissions a year. That’s the reason for the market-moving controversy

 about whether Elon Musk would or wouldn’t accept Bitcoin as payment for Tesla electric cars, at least until Bitcoin “mining” transitions to sustainable energy sources. At the same time, Bitcoin and other cryptocurrency usage and acceptance are expanding across many industries. 

Companies of any size, and individuals anywhere in the world, can work with COTAP to offset as little as 1 metric tonne of carbon emissions. In the U.S., individuals don’t pay capital gains tax on cryptocurrency used to make COTAP offsetting donations, and depending on their income level and whether or not they itemize, they may also get an income tax deduction.

COTAP’s carbon offset projects counteract carbon emissions through nature-based solutions including tree planting, agroforestry and forest protection. They are all located in areas where income levels are less than $2 per day, and are certified under Plan Vivo, the world’s longest-standing voluntary standard for forest carbon. Plan Vivo stipulates not only that rural communities must actually own their carbon offset projects, but also that they must receive at least 60% of the carbon revenues.

Donations to COTAP are used to fund these high-quality, verified carbon offset projects. 90% of net proceeds from carbon offsetting donations it receives goes to COTAP’s six Plan Vivo-certified projects in Nicaragua, Uganda, India, Fiji, Indonesia, and Mexico. Those projects in turn share 60% or more of the revenues with participating low-income communities. For example, a $5000 offsetting donation made out to “All Projects” would pay each of COTAP’s six projects $750 for 55.56 metric tonnes’ worth of their carbon credits, and generate a total of at least $2,700 in income for poor communities. 

Contact:  Stephen Kent, skent@kentcom.com 914-589-5988

 

View original content:http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/cotap-becomes-the-first-carbon-offset-provider-to-enable-funding-offsets-with-cryptocurrency-301306295.html

SOURCE COTAP.org



Source link
[ad_2]
The content is by PR Newswire. Headlines of Today Media is not responsible for the content provided or any links related to this content. Headlines of Today Media is not responsible for the correctness, topicality or the quality of the content.

[ad_2]

PR Newswire and Aayushi Batra

Recent Posts

Share repurchase programme

[ad_1] Nørresundby, 26 April 2024Announcement no. 23/2024 The Board of Directors of RTX has, cf. company announcement no. 20/2023 dated…

3 days ago

Gyroscope Market Size, Share And Growth Analysis For 2024-2033

[ad_1] Gyroscope Global Market Report 2024 – Market Size, Trends, And Global Forecast 2024-2033 The Business Research Company's Gyroscope Global…

3 days ago

Casting Off the Caste System and its Stigma: Empowering the Forgotten Indigenous People of India with Human Rights

[ad_1] ODISHA, India, and LOS ANGELES, Calif., April 25, 2024 (SEND2PRESS NEWSWIRE) — In the 1880s, to call attention to…

3 days ago

Alipay+ Enables Digital Payment of 14 Overseas E-wallets from 9 Countries and Regions in Hong Kong to Support City’s Global Travel Drive

In support of Hong Kong's new mega tourism and commerce drive, Alipay+ now enables users of 14 leading overseas mobile…

3 days ago

Celebrate "Bleach: Brave Souls" Reaching Over 90 Million Downloads Worldwide with "The Future Society Zenith Summons: Cyber" Featuring New Versions of Ulquiorra, Orihime, and Nnoitora

[ad_2] TOKYO, April 26, 2024 /PRNewswire/ -- KLab Inc. announced that its hit 3D action game Bleach: Brave Souls has…

3 days ago

TransAlta Declares Dividends

[ad_1] CALGARY, Alberta, April 24, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- The Board of Directors of TransAlta Corporation (TSX: TA) (NYSE: TAC)…

4 days ago