Tokenised Carbon in the Dunes: Abu Dhabi’s New Blockchain Bazaar for Net-Zero Projects




Khushi V Rangdhol
Jul 03, 2025 11:52

Abu Dhabi is launching a blockchain-based carbon credit marketplace, aiming for a net-zero economy by 2050. The regulated exchange will tokenize carbon offsets, enhancing transparency and efficiency. With institutional backing and federal mandates for emissions reporting, the initiative could capture a significant share of the growing carbon market. However, challenges such as regulatory clarity and potential greenwashing remain. If successful, this could lead to a pioneering net-zero commodities exchange in the region.





A New Kind of Commodities Hub

Two years after it quietly pledged to be the Gulf’s first net-zero economy by 2050, Abu Dhabi is building an entirely new marketplace—one where carbon credits trade like barrels of Murban crude and the ledger is a blockchain. In 2024 the Abu Dhabi Global Market (ADGM) signed off on a rule-book that treats carbon offsets as regulated “emissions instruments” and licensed AirCarbon Exchange (ACX) to run the world’s first fully regulated carbon exchange and clearing-house within the free-zone financial centre.

Under that framework every carbon credit is tokenised: ACX issues a digital token on a permissioned distributed-ledger; the exchange matches buyers and sellers; and its clearing arm settles the trade automatically via smart contracts. Custody, retirement and audit all sit on-chain, trimming the week-long paperwork that dogged the legacy voluntary market to a matter of seconds.

 

Why Tokenisation—and Why Now?

 

Abu Dhabi’s wager is as much geopolitical as it is environmental. Boston Consulting Group estimates that the global voluntary carbon market could swell to US $50 billion by 2030, with the GCC alone capturing US $10-40 billion.

 

ADGM’s move to classify carbon credits as financial instruments gives institutional investors legal certainty—something Singapore and London have only begun to explore—while the token layer answers perennial complaints about double-counting and opacity.

 

A Federal Push: Making Carbon Credits Part of UAE Law

 

Market plumbing means little without demand. Last December the UAE Cabinet issued Resolution No 67, compelling large emitters—defined as companies releasing more than 500,000 t CO?-e per year—to measure, verify and report their emissions and, crucially, to offset what they cannot abate through a forthcoming National Carbon Credit Registry. The deadline for first-year reporting: 28 June 2025. Officials concede there will be “teething problems,” but the rule creates a guaranteed buyer base for ADGM’s new tokens.

 

Beyond Offsets: Tokenising the Supply Chain Itself

 

Decarbonisation is not limited to paper credits. Abu Dhabi National Oil Company (ADNOC) and Siemens Energy are piloting a blockchain system that stamps a live carbon-intensity certificate onto every cargo of Murban crude, ammonia or jet fuel that leaves the desert. Sensor data captured from well-head to customer feeds an immutable ledger; buyers can see—in real time—how “green” their shipment is. When paired with ADGM’s exchange, such certificates could be bundled into tokenised offsets or traded as premium “low-carbon” commodities.

 

Early Liquidity—and Early Sceptics

 

The first trades are trickling in. In December 2024 First Abu Dhabi Bank executed the inaugural spot deal for a Sylvera “A” Nature Tonne contract on ACX’s board, a signal that domestic banks will provide the liquidity backbone regulators want.

 

Yet lawyers point out that the UAE’s registry design is still opaque and that cross-border recognition with the EU or California’s compliance markets is years away. Critics warn of “regulatory arbitrage by rebranding sub-par projects as tokens,” echoing scandals that sank earlier offset schemes.

 

Regional Contagion

 

Abu Dhabi’s token experiment is rippling across the Middle East. Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund is weighing a rival platform in Riyadh, while Qatar’s sovereign wealth arm has joined a UAE-led Carbon Alliance pledging to buy US $450 million of high-quality African credits. Even Dubai’s Financial Market launched a pilot board during COP28, hoping to corral the emirate’s aviation and shipping giants into local trading pools.

 

The Road Ahead

 

Regulators outline a staged rollout:

  1. 2025-26: scale the registry and fold in scope-3 (supply-chain) emissions reporting for listed companies.
  2. 2026-27: connect ADGM’s ledger to Singapore and Brazil via ACX’s multi-node network, testing instant cross-jurisdiction settlement.
  3. Pre-2030: integrate real-time industrial data—think ADNOC’s sensor certificates—so offsets and actual emissions reconcile automatically at quarter-end.

If the timetable holds, a company could one day drill a well, certify the barrel’s carbon score, hedge that footprint in tokens and retire the credits—all without leaving Abu Dhabi’s desert-born blockchain.

 

A Delicate Balancing Act

 

For now, the experiment walks a policy tightrope: it must prove that tokenisation enhances integrity, not just liquidity; that a voluntary market can avoid the green-washing pitfalls that marred earlier offset booms; and that blockchain can serve the climate cause without adding another speculative layer. But if it works, the UAE may have found a way to turn sand into standards—and to make the world’s first “net-zero commodities exchange” more than a marketing slogan.

 

 

Image source: Shutterstock




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