via CAAI
Wednesday, 05 January 2011 15:00 Jeremy Mullins
Carbon trade
CAYMAN Islands-registered Green Glory Ltd is in the process of obtaining management rights to establish a carbon credit scheme using Cambodia’s forests, according to a company statement.
The firm is seeking rights to 450,000 hectares of the Kingdom’s woodlands for supply-side carbon credits. It is also planning to list on the London Alternative Investment Market exchange via the acquisition of AIM-listed Tricor Plc.
The agreement between Green Glory and Tricor is subject to conditions – including the granting of the forest management rights by the Kingdom, according to a statement released late last week.
Many developed nations have signed to the Kyoto Protocol, creating demand for carbon credits, according to the firm.
Tricor requested a trading halt on December 31 as the deal was being finalised.
Carbon permits rose in Europe last year after two consecutive years of decline.
Allowances for a December 2011 delivery in the world’s biggest cap-and-trade program gained 8.3 percent in 2010 after falling 23 percent in 2009 and 29 percent in 2008. They traded at €14.24 (US$19.024) per tonne on December 31 on London’s ICE Futures Europe exchange.
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