← NewsAll
United Kingdom news is currently paused for latest updates. We'll resume retrieval when enough requests come in.
Microsoft agrees record deal for soil carbon credits as data centres surge
Summary
Microsoft has agreed to buy 2.85 million soil carbon credits from Indigo Carbon under a reported 12-year deal, part of its goal to be carbon negative by 2030. The price range was reported as $60 to $80 per ton, which would value the agreement at roughly $171 million to $228 million.
Content
Microsoft has agreed with Indigo Carbon to buy 2.85 million soil carbon credits linked to regenerative agriculture in the United States. The purchase is reported as a 12-year tie-up and is part of Microsoft's stated plan to be carbon negative by 2030. A person familiar with the deal told Reuters the credits fall within a historic range of $60 to $80 a ton, which would value the agreement at about $171 million to $228 million. The deal comes as emissions linked to artificial intelligence and an expansion of data centres have risen.
Key facts:
- The agreement is for 2.85 million soil carbon credits supplied by Indigo Carbon.
- Reported term of the purchase is 12 years.
- A source cited a price range of $60 to $80 per ton, implying a deal value of roughly $171 million to $228 million.
- Regenerative farming practices tied to these credits include reduced tilling, use of cover crops and managed grazing to increase soil carbon and retain water.
- Indigo says farmers receive 75% of the average weighted cost of a credit from any given issuance or crop year.
- Market data referenced that Microsoft previously bought 2.6 million credits from Agoro Carbon, and that Microsoft is a major buyer of carbon removal credits.
Summary:
The reported purchase is described as a record volume for soil carbon credits and reflects increased corporate demand for carbon removals as data centre-related emissions climb. Undetermined at this time.
