How to Develop a Corporate Carbon Credit Strategy

A step-by-step framework for building a credible, science-aligned carbon credit strategy, from first principles to long-term portfolio management.

How to develop a corporate carbon credit strategy
In brief
What it is

A practical 12-step framework for building, purchasing, and governing a corporate carbon credit strategy, aligned to the Oxford Principles and Beyond Value Chain Mitigation (BVCM) guidance.

Who it's for

Sustainability leads, finance and procurement teams, and executives responsible for net-zero targets, ESG reporting, or carbon credit budgets.

Why it matters

A structured strategy reduces greenwashing risk, keeps credits in their proper place alongside genuine emissions reduction, and gives your business a defensible position when claims are challenged.

Introduction

If your business is buying carbon credits, whether to work toward a net-zero target or to fund broader climate action, you need more than a purchase order. You need a strategy.

The voluntary carbon market moves fast. Project quality varies widely, claims rules keep evolving, and stakeholders are asking harder questions than they were even a year ago. Buy without a plan and you can end up with decisions that looked credible at the time but create real risk later.

This guide sets out a 12-step framework for building a carbon credit strategy your business can stand behind: how to define your reasons for buying, where credits fit alongside emissions reduction, how to select high-quality projects, and how to communicate your progress without overstating it.

Why structure matters

Carbon credits get a bad reputation when they're bought reactively: whatever's cheapest, whenever the budget allows, with no clear link back to a reduction plan. That approach might tick a box in the short term, but it rarely survives scrutiny.

A structured carbon credit strategy does four things a spot-purchase habit can't:

  • Reduces the risk of greenwashing, by tying every claim to evidence

  • Keeps credits in their proper place, alongside (not instead of) emissions reduction

  • Gives every team involved, from sustainability to legal to finance, a shared reference point

  • Supports long-term planning around cost, supply, and portfolio quality

For business leaders, the case goes beyond sustainability reporting. A clear strategy strengthens your position in tenders and customer conversations, aligns with investor expectations, and turns an unpredictable spend line into a planned one.

The carbon credit strategy framework

This framework moves a business from early-stage thinking to a fully operational strategy. Each step builds on the last, and credits only enter the picture once you've measured your emissions and committed to reducing them. Carbon credits are not the starting point. They're what you do alongside reduction, for the emissions you can't yet eliminate.

A complete strategy should cover:

  • Why you're buying carbon credits

  • How credits fit alongside your emissions reduction plan

  • What claims you intend to make

  • How you'll select, purchase, and manage projects

  • Governance, and how you'll review and adjust as the market evolves

This framework moves a business from early-stage thinking to a fully operational strategy. Each step builds on the last, and credits only enter the picture once you've measured your emissions and committed to reducing them. Carbon credits are not the starting point. They're what you do alongside reduction, for the emissions you can't yet eliminate.

A complete strategy should cover:

Why you're buying carbon credits

How credits fit alongside your emissions reduction plan

What claims you intend to make

How you'll select, purchase, and manage projects

Governance, and how you'll review and adjust as the market evolves

Step 1: Define the business case for your carbon credit strategy

Before any decisions about credits, get clear on the reason your business is in the carbon market at all: risk management, stakeholder expectations, commercial opportunity, or genuine climate contribution. Connect that rationale to the business risks you're already exposed to, physical, regulatory, supply chain, brand, and financial, so the strategy has buy-in beyond the sustainability team.

Go deeper: Define the Business Case for your Carbon Credit Strategy

Step 2: Determine where carbon credits fit in your net-zero strategy

Carbon credits sit at a specific point in the mitigation hierarchy, after you've measured your emissions and set reduction targets, not instead of that work. Understanding where credits fit stops them from being used as a shortcut and keeps your reduction plan front and centre.

Go deeper: Determine Where Carbon Credits Fit in Your Net-Zero Strategy (Mitigation Hierarchy Explained)

Step 3: How to identify high-quality credits

Quality varies widely in the voluntary carbon market, so this is where reputational risk is won or lost. Look for additionality, permanence, robust quantification, independent verification, no double-counting, transparency, and wider co-benefits.

Go deeper: How to identify high-quality credits

Step 4: How to evaluate and select carbon credit suppliers

Assessing a credit is only half the job. You also need to assess who you're buying from: their track record, their due diligence process, and how they support you if a project underperforms or is downgraded.

Go deeper: How to evaluate and select carbon credit suppliers

Step 5: Design your Beyond Value Chain Mitigation (BVCM) strategy

A well-designed portfolio balances climate impact, nature, and social co-benefits against risk and where the market is heading. BVCM reframes credit-buying as a contribution to global climate goals, not simply a compensatory transaction, and gives you a framework for how much to fund and where.

Go deeper: Design your Beyond Value Chain Mitigation (BVCM) Strategy

Step 6: How to set a science-based carbon price

Put a credible price on carbon and you turn an abstract commitment into an operational budget. A science-based approach ties your internal carbon price to your emissions trajectory and the real cost of high-quality removals, rather than to whatever's cheapest on the day.

Go deeper: How to set a Science-Based Carbon Price

Step 7: How to align your carbon credit portfolio to the Oxford Principles

The Oxford Principles for Net Zero Aligned Carbon Offsetting, from the University of Oxford's Smith School, set out how a portfolio should evolve over time: starting with a mix of avoidance and removal, and shifting toward higher-quality, more durable removals as the market matures.

Go deeper: How to align your carbon credit portfolio to the Oxford Principles

Step 8: Fund climate solutions beyond carbon credits (BVCM Goal 2)

Credits aren't the only way to contribute beyond your value chain. BVCM's second goal covers funding broader climate solutions, from nature restoration to systemic change, that don't always come with a certificate but still support global climate action.

Go deeper: Fund Climate Solutions Beyond Carbon Credits (BVCM Goal 2)

Step 9: Buying carbon credits: the 3 main purchasing options for businesses

Spot purchases, forward contracts, and offtake agreements each carry a different balance of price, risk, and access to supply. Most businesses benefit from a mix: spot purchases for short-term needs, forward or offtake agreements to secure future supply and manage cost as the market tightens.

Go deeper: Buying carbon credits: the 3 main purchasing options for businesses

Step 10: Communicate carbon credit claims without greenwashing

Even a strong strategy is undermined by loose language. Explain the role credits play, distinguish reductions from external contributions, name the projects you support, and be precise about the claims you're making. If a claim feels uncertain, don't make it.

Go deeper: Communicate Carbon Credit Claims Without Greenwashing

Step 11: Review and evolve your carbon credit strategy over time

A carbon credit strategy isn't set-and-forget. Build a structured review across emissions progress, portfolio performance, market developments, and the accuracy of your claims. Annual reviews for direction, quarterly or biannual check-ins to catch issues early.

Go deeper: Review and Evolve Your Carbon Credit Strategy Over Time

Putting it into practice: implementation and governance

Roll the strategy out over 12 to 24 months: foundations first (0 to 3 months), a pilot portfolio next (3 to 9 months), then scale and full integration into financial planning (9 to 24 months). Underpin all of it with clear governance: named ownership, defined decision-making authority, and consistent alignment across sustainability, finance, legal, procurement, and marketing.

Is your business ready
to take climate action?

If this article has inspired your business to start its climate journey, talk to our team today.

Is your business ready
to take climate action?

If this article has inspired your business to start its climate journey, talk to our team today.

Is your business ready
to take climate action?

If this article has inspired your business to start its climate journey, talk to our team today.