21. Transparency Paradox

Everyone agrees that transparency is a cornerstone of any carbon credit project. In fact, “transparency and integrity” has emerged as the battle cry of anybody active in the carbon markets. 

But here’s an interesting twist: Projects registered under the large carbon standards are already documented with remarkable transparency–especially when compared to traditional development finance projects or donation-driven philanthropic efforts. Detailed financial and technical documents are publicly accessible through the carbon registry. 

So why are these projects so often criticized for lacking transparency?

Paradoxically, the more transparent a project, the more vulnerable it becomes to criticism–both constructive and destructive. Providing extensive data invites more detailed scrutiny, increasing the chances of critics finding—or spotlighting—imperfections or controversies.

Adding to the paradox, the deeper one probes into a project’s workings, the more new questions arise—ironically leading to additional claims that transparency is still insufficient.

How to address the Transparency Paradox? How to ensure that the genuine intention to be fully transparent does not backfire and invite critical voices to deliberately seek for an imperfection while projects that are intransparent fly below the radar screen? 

And did we mention that transparency is of utmost importance for the success of carbon markets?