Buying carbon credits is no longer a CSR checkbox for Indian companies.
It is a compliance reality – and the window to act strategically (rather than reactively) is closing fast.
If you are an ESG head, CFO, or sustainability manager researching how to enter the carbon market, this guide is for you.
First – why does “verified” matter so much?
A verified carbon credit (also called a Verified Carbon Unit or VCU) represents one metric tonne of CO₂ reduced or removed from the atmosphere — confirmed by an independent, accredited third-party auditor.
Without verification, a carbon credit is just a number on paper.
With it, you get a publicly traceable record on a global registry — defensible in SEBI BRSR disclosures, investor communications, and net zero claims.
The regulatory clock is ticking for Indian corporates
Here is what has changed in the last 12 months:
- SEBI’s BRSR Core framework is now mandatory for India’s top 250 listed companies — with Scope 1, 2, and 3 emissions reporting under enhanced scrutiny.
- India’s Carbon Credit Trading Scheme (CCTS) has set legally binding Greenhouse Gas Emission Intensity targets for 740+ industrial entities across 9 sectors — including cement, steel, aluminium, textiles, and petrochemicals.
- The EU’s Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM) is now in full enforcement from 2026. If your company exports cement, steel, fertilizer, or textiles to Europe — your carbon footprint is now a trade issue.
This is not a future problem. It is a 2026 problem.
The 4 main types of verified carbon credits available
Before buying, understand what you are buying:
- 🌲 Nature-Based Credits — Afforestation, REDD+, biodiversity projects. Premium pricing. Exceptional ESG narrative and SDG alignment.
- ☀️ Reneable Energy Credits — Solar, wind, hydro. Cost-effective for large-volume offset requirements. Well-suited for manufacturing and FMCG sectors.
- 🤝 Social Carbon / Community Projects — Clean cookstoves, rural electrification, safe water. Strongest impact on the “S” pillar of ESG.
- ✈️ CORSIA-Eligible Credits — Specifically approved for aviation sector compliance under ICAO’s CORSIA scheme.
The right credit type depends on your sector, volume, ESG narrative goals, and the co-benefits you want to report.
How corporates actually buy verified carbon credits
Step 1 Calculate your carbon footprint Quantify your Scope 1, Scope 2, and Scope 3 emissions in tCO₂e. This is your baseline. Without a credible footprint number, you cannot know how many credits you need — and your BRSR disclosures will not hold up to third-party assurance.
Step 2 Define your offsetting goal Are you targeting carbon neutral operations? A net zero pledge by a specific year? A carbon neutral product line? Your goal determines volume, credit type, and which standard to use.
Step 3 Choose the right standard Gold Standard or Verra VCS for voluntary market claims. CCTS Carbon Credit Certificates for India’s compliance market. CORSIA-approved credits for aviation. Each has distinct documentation and registry requirements.
Step 4 Select a credible developer or broker Work only with established carbon credit developers who offer verified project portfolios with full registry traceability. Avoid purchasing from secondary aggregators without clear provenance documentation.
Step 5 Perform due diligence Verify three things before any purchase:
- Additionality: the reduction would not have happened without the project
- Permanence: the reduction is long-term and protected
- Co-benefits: the project delivers documented SDG impact beyond carbon
Step 6 Purchase and retire your credits Purchasing is not enough. Credits must be formally retired — permanently removed from circulation — before you can make any public climate claim. Retirement creates a unique serial number on a public registry, preventing double-counting.
Step 7 Report in your ESG disclosures Include your retired credit certificates in your BRSR filing, sustainability report, and any carbon neutrality certification. Documentation must be third-party verified and registry-traceable.
5 mistakes corporate buyers make — and why they matter
❌ Buying cheap, unverified credits to hit a number This is a greenwashing liability. SEBI’s BRSR framework now requires third-party assurance. Undocumented credits will not pass regulatory scrutiny — or investor due diligence.
❌ Purchasing credits without retiring them A credit you have not retired cannot support any climate claim. Retirement is the non-negotiable final step.
❌ Skipping internal emission reduction efforts first Credible net zero frameworks (Science Based Targets, Oxford Principles) require companies to reduce emissions internally before offsetting. Offsetting-only strategies are increasingly flagged by institutional investors.
❌ Choosing credits with no co-benefit documentation For BRSR and ESG investor reporting, you need to demonstrate the social and environmental impact of your offset projects — not just the carbon tonne figure.
❌ Making public claims before credits are retired Announcing carbon neutrality before formal registry retirement is a regulatory and reputational risk. The claim must always follow the verified record — never precede it.
Quick answers to the questions most decision-makers ask
Q: Is there a minimum volume requirement? No. Credits are purchased per tonne of CO₂e. Flexible structures exist for both SMEs and large enterprises.
Q: How much do verified carbon credits cost in India? Pricing varies by standard, project type, and vintage. Nature-based credits carry a premium over renewable energy credits. Indicative market range is USD 3–25 per tonne depending on co-benefit richness.
Q: Can verified carbon credits be used in SEBI BRSR disclosures? Yes — provided credits are formally retired, registry-documented, and backed by third-party verification.
Q: How long does the process take? From footprint assessment to credit retirement and certificate issuance, the typical timeline is 3–8 weeks depending on your volume and credit type.
Q: Should we buy credits or try to generate them? Companies whose energy intensity exceeds their assigned CCTS targets can earn Carbon Credit Certificates and sell them to less efficient peers. Whether you are a buyer or a potential seller depends on your operational profile – worth assessing before you commit to a purchase strategy.
India’s corporate carbon market is no longer voluntary in spirit. Between SEBI’s BRSR mandates, CCTS compliance deadlines, and EU CBAM enforcement — the companies that build verified, documented carbon strategies in 2026 will face 2027 from a position of strength.
Those that wait will be paying a premium to catch up – under regulatory pressure, with less choice.
EKI Energy Services is one of India’s largest carbon credit developers and brokers, offering end-to-end services from carbon footprint assessment to verified credit sourcing, retirement, and ESG reporting support.
📩 Reach out to explore how EKI can support your company’s carbon strategy.
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