Technology

‘Carbon is going to be very close to a currency,’ tokenizing nature is next: COP27

After moving carbon into a system where it will be “very close to a currency,” the world’s financial elite are looking to tokenize just about everything in nature.

Speaking at a side session at COP27 on Wednesday, former Bank of England (BoE) senior advisor and G20 co-chairman Michael Sheren said that carbon was “moving very quickly into a system where it’s going to be close to a currency,” and that next on the agenda was the tokenization of nature and biodiversity, where places like Indonesia, Brazil, and Africa would be “absolutely critical.”

“Carbon, we already figured out, and carbon is moving very quickly into a system where it’s going to be very close to a currency” — Michael Sheren, Ex-Central Banker, COP27

“We’ve spent a lot of time in the G20, a lot of time in the BoE trying to understand where value is created — not just in our systems, but also where the threats to it are,” said Sheran.

“Carbon, we already figured out, and carbon is moving very quickly into a system where it’s going to be very close to a currency, basically being able to take a ton of absorbed or sequestered carbon and being able to create a forward-pricing curve, with financial service architecture, documentation,” he added.

And with carbon being close to a currency, “There are going to be derivatives.”

Next on the agenda is the tokenization of water, trees, and just about everything else in nature.

“We start thinking about putting prices on water, on trees, on biodiversity […] How do we start tokenizing? How do we start building systems that actually create not only the value, but transfer that value around the world?” — Michael Sheren, Ex-Central Banker, COP27

“The BoE spent a lot of time trying to put value on nature” — Michael Sheren, Ex-Central Banker, COP27

According to Sheren, “The southern part of the world has value far greater than large elements of the northern part.

“And we start thinking about putting prices on water, on trees, on biodiversity, we find where does that sit?”

The ex-central banker added that Indonesia, Brazil, and Africa were “absolutely critical” because “we need their natural capital as a system-based world more than we need that 66 billion [gold coins] we’ve got sitting in the basement of the Bank of England.”

How do we start tokenizing?

“How do we start building systems that actually create not only the value, but transfer that value around the world?” Sheren pondered.

“The southern part of the world has value far greater than large elements of the northern part” — Michael Sheren, Ex-Central Banker, COP27

His remarks came during the UN Climate Change Global Innovation Hub’s COP27 side session on “Digital environment assets programmable money and the future of climate finance” that explored “how tokenizing environmental assets through blockchain technology can address frictions in mobilizing and distributing climate finance globally.”

After leaving the Bank of England in July, 2022, Sheren stepped into his current role as president and CSO at MetaVerse Green Exchange (MVGX).

MVGX “has two patent-pending technologies, Non-Fungible Digital Twin to represent objects in the metaverse, and Carbon Neutrality Token to facilitate cross-border trading of carbon voluntary emission reduction credits without triggering national ownership issues.”

Tim Hinchliffe

The Sociable editor Tim Hinchliffe covers tech and society, with perspectives on public and private policies proposed by governments, unelected globalists, think tanks, big tech companies, defense departments, and intelligence agencies. Previously, Tim was a reporter for the Ghanaian Chronicle in West Africa and an editor at Colombia Reports in South America. These days, he is only responsible for articles he writes and publishes in his own name. tim@sociable.co

View Comments

  • Carbon containing gases have to be limited in the atmosphere and everybody negating this FACT is a goddamn ignorant FUCKING MORON. If it only works by using certificates fine.

  • So is he saying that they need to invade Indonesia, Brazil, and Africa more and stealing their resources?
    USA, EU, Russia, China and co. gotta bring some fresh democracy to those countries, litter the countries with war, psyops, installing puppet-governments etc.! :D

    He definitely is someone understanding value. You can't eat gold.

Recent Posts

The UK’s push to be a relevant global hub for space technology

Despite lagging behind global space powers like the United States, Russia and China, the United…

3 days ago

US spy community is creating a portal to buy, access your personal data

The Intelligence Community is setting up a one-stop shop, icdata.gov, to buy access to your…

5 days ago

The gaming startup market in Mexico: Opportunities and challenges

The vibrant world of tech startups has found a space carved out for growth and…

5 days ago

As data center demand drives uptick in demand for electricity, AEP and Think Power Solutions focus on AI-enabled utility infrastructure 

Despite the recent volatility seen in the markets, American Electric Power (AEP), one of the…

5 days ago

Building a competitive edge with cloud-native MFTs

The ever-present threat of cybercrime is expected to come with an eye-watering price tag of…

5 days ago

Stefanini Group Accelerates Cloud Expansion with 60% Stake in Escala 24×7, AWS Premier Partner in LATAM

Latin America's cloud adoption is surging. According to recent reports by Gartner and IDC, by…

1 week ago