India’s Carbon Market at a Glance
| Feature | Details (2026 Update) |
|---|---|
| Market Name | Carbon Credit Trading Scheme (CCTS) |
| Primary Unit | Carbon Credit Certificate (CCC) = 1 metric ton CO₂e reduced |
| Key Regulator | Bureau of Energy Efficiency (BEE) |
| Registrar | Grid-India (National Carbon Registry) |
| Top Sectors Covered | Cement, Steel, Textiles, Petroleum & Agriculture |
| Trading Start Date | Official exchange trading begins October 2026 |
Sector Weightage in India’s Carbon Market (Estimated Participation 2026)
| Sector Category | Market Share (Estimated) | Role in Carbon Market |
|---|---|---|
| Heavy Industry (Steel, Cement, Refineries) | 55% | Primary Buyers and Sellers of Carbon Credits |
| Energy & Grid Sector | 25% | Efficiency Leaders through emission reduction projects |
| Agriculture & Forestry | 15% | Offset Providers via carbon farming and afforestation |
| Emerging Technologies (CCUS & Green Hydrogen) | 5% | High-Value Credit Generators through advanced decarbonization |
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
Q1: What exactly is a Carbon Credit Certificate (CCC) in India?
A CCC is a certificate issued by the Ministry of Power. Each certificate represents one metric tonof carbon dioxide equivalent (CO2e) that has been reduced or avoided. It is a digital asset that can be bought and sold on designated Indian power exchanges.
Q2: Who is mandatory required to participate?
Currently, 490 “Obligated Entities” across nine industries (including Steel, Cement, and Textiles) must participate. If these companies emit more than their assigned limit, they must buy credits to stay compliant.
Q3: Can an individual farmer earn from carbon credits?
Yes. While an individual small farm might be too small to register alone, farmers can join aggregators or Farmer Producer Organizations (FPOs). By practicing “Carbon Farming” (like planting trees or reducing water in rice paddies), the FPO collects the total carbon savings and sells them as credits, distributing the profit back to the farmers.
Q4: How is “Greenwashing” prevented in the Indian market?
The 2026 framework uses a “Triple-Check” system:
Validation: Project design is checked before it starts.
Verification: Independent agencies must prove the emissions were actually reduced.
Registry: Every credit is given a unique ID in the National Carbon Registry to prevent it from being sold twice.
Q5: Will Indian carbon credits be valid globally?
Under Article 6 of the Paris Agreement, India is working to link its domestic market with international ones. However, as of 2026, the government prioritizes “Sovereign Carbon,” meaning credits must first meet national targets before they can be sold to foreign companies.

