ecosync WELCOME TO real-world impact Real-World Assets driving expertise unlock growth with Our carbon finance
The equivalent of the annual emissions of a small country. The equivalent of the annual emissions of a small country. The equivalent of the annual emissions of a small country. The equivalent of the annual emissions of a small country. The equivalent of the annual emissions of a small country. The equivalent of the annual emissions of a small country. The equivalent of the annual emissions of a small country. The equivalent of the annual emissions of a small country. The equivalent of the annual emissions of a small country. The equivalent of the annual emissions of a small country. The equivalent of the annual emissions of a small country. The equivalent of the annual emissions of a small country. The equivalent of the annual emissions of a small country. The equivalent of the annual emissions of a small country. The equivalent of the annual emissions of a small country.

The infrastructure layer for on-chain carbon

Ecosyns provides us all with a global organizational layer to address climate change.
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$1,000,000.00

Total value locked (TVL) achieving global

What's in there

Insights
Insights
  • Rapid Growth

    The voluntary carbon market (VCM) is projected to grow from $2B today to over $50B by 2030, driven by corporate net-zero commitments and regulatory pressure.

  • High Fragmentation

    Carbon markets are complex, opaque, and fragmented, with over 170 standards, registries, and brokers — creating friction for access, trust, and scalability.

  • Web3 Opportunity

    Blockchain enables transparent, liquid, and programmable carbon assets, paving the way for carbon-backed tokens, climate finance, and real-world impact at scale.

Challenges in Global Coordination
Challenges in Global Coordination
  • Lack of Standardization

    Varying methodologies, verification standards, and carbon registries across regions hinder trust, interoperability, and global trading.

  • Regulatory Fragmentation

    Inconsistent national policies and unclear international rules (e.g., Article 6 of the Paris Agreement) slow down cross-border carbon credit recognition and compliance.

  • Double Counting & Integrity Risks

    Without unified tracking, there’s a high risk of double issuance, double claiming, and low-quality credits undermining market credibility.

Lack of Trust in Carbon Markets
Lack of Trust in Carbon Markets
  • Low Transparency

    Most carbon credits are traded over-the-counter (OTC) with limited visibility into project quality, pricing, and credit provenance.

  • Questionable Integrity

    Many projects are criticized for over-crediting, greenwashing, or lacking additionality, raising doubts about real climate impact.

  • Verification Gaps

    Delays, human error, and inconsistent methodologies in third-party auditing reduce confidence in the legitimacy of issued credits.