IATA is teaming up with XCHG to launch a carbon exchange platform
John E. Kaye
- Published
- Home, Technology

The International Air Transport Association (IATA) is teaming up with a company to develop a carbon exchange platform where airlines, and passengers, can purchase offsets aimed at reducing the impact of air travel on the environment.
The deal with Xpansiv CBL Holding Group (XCHG), a commodity exchange company, will provide a common marketplace called Aviation Carbon Exchange for eligible emission units, the two organisations said in a joint statement on Thursday.
International airlines are counting on a global carbon offsetting plan to cap CO2 emissions from air travel at 2020 levels, mitigating the environmental impact of flying even as passenger traffic is forecast to grow.
The plan, known as Carbon Offsetting and Reduction Scheme for International Aviation (CORSIA), is the first of its kind for a single industry in response to climate change.
In response to climate change,
“We expect airlines from all over the world to participate,” XCHG President and Chief Operating Officer John Melby, who has worked with individual airlines and carbon markets, told Reuters.
Commercial aviation is responsible for 2% of global carbon emissions and has been facing an expanding backlash in Europe where a Swedish-born “flight shaming” movement has taken hold.
Participating commercial airlines aspire to replace conventional fuel with more sustainable biofuels in order to achieve a carbon-neutral growth after 2020. However, with biofuel proving to be more costly and in limited quantity, emissions may be offset by purchasing carbon credits from designated environmental projects around the world
Those credits will be offered on the exchange, which enters a pilot phase in the current quarter. It will be powered by XCHG’s CBL Markets with real-time data, and airlines will pay a fee for each transaction.
The International Civil Aviation Organisation, the UN agency that ratified CORSIA, will determine which offsets from different environmental projects will be offered on the exchange.
CORSIA is expected to provide more than $40 billion in funding for climate projects, and offset 2.6 billion tonnes of C02 emissions between 2021 and 2035.
Commercial airlines have also sought to cut down on their carbon impact by using more fuel-efficient aircraft and finding more direct flight paths through improved air traffic control.
IATA represents some 290 airlines comprising 82% of global air traffic.
By Tracy Rucinski, Sourced Reuters
For more aviation news follow The European.
TOP STORIES
-
AI lab says brain-like engine could slash chatbot bills by 98 per cent -
The board challenge: why security is no longer an IT problem -
The fist-bumping, selfie-taking humanoid guide that could usher sightseeing tours into the AI age -
EU says ‘time for change’ on child social media safety after survey links platforms to youth distress -
UK’s under-16s social media ban risks giving parents false comfort, experts warn -
Redefining optical gas detection: how Optronics Group is building the future of industrial safety -
Claude maker Anthropic valued at nearly $1tn after record AI funding round -
NASA to send rabbit-like drones to scout site for first Moon base -
Apollo, Artemis, Ali and Live Aid satellite station set for new Moon role in £37m deal -
Four forces reshaping cyber risk in 2026 -
Siemens expands rail technology arm with Italian deal -
Italy draws global tech investors as Europe races to build its own champions -
Opel turns to Chinese EV technology for new European-built SUV -
Japan and Luxembourg deepen space ties as lunar race gathers pace -
Polymorphic attacks: the shape-shifting threat -
‘Lost’ zip design could give space exploration a lift -
Orbitae - AI by SDG Group launches Gena Suite to scale enterprise AI -
Firms ‘wasting AI’ by using it to speed up bad habits -
Why leadership matters when implementing AI -
Stratospheric telecoms blimp completes “historic” record 12-day flight over Atlantic -
Mobile operators warn of higher bills and slower 5G rollout after energy support exclusion -
The 2026 European awards cement Steve Durbin and the ISF at the forefront of cybersecurity -
These are the 10 AI trends to watch in 2026 that will drive business forward -
Europe launches ‘anti-kill switch’ cloud shield as Trump fears grip Brussels -
Starmer summons social media chiefs to Downing Street over child safety
IATA is teaming up with XCHG to launch a carbon exchange platform
John E. Kaye
- Published
- Home, Technology

TOP STORIES
-
AI lab says brain-like engine could slash chatbot bills by 98 per cent -
The board challenge: why security is no longer an IT problem -
The fist-bumping, selfie-taking humanoid guide that could usher sightseeing tours into the AI age -
EU says ‘time for change’ on child social media safety after survey links platforms to youth distress -
UK’s under-16s social media ban risks giving parents false comfort, experts warn -
Redefining optical gas detection: how Optronics Group is building the future of industrial safety -
Claude maker Anthropic valued at nearly $1tn after record AI funding round -
NASA to send rabbit-like drones to scout site for first Moon base -
Apollo, Artemis, Ali and Live Aid satellite station set for new Moon role in £37m deal -
Four forces reshaping cyber risk in 2026 -
Siemens expands rail technology arm with Italian deal -
Italy draws global tech investors as Europe races to build its own champions -
Opel turns to Chinese EV technology for new European-built SUV -
Japan and Luxembourg deepen space ties as lunar race gathers pace -
Polymorphic attacks: the shape-shifting threat -
‘Lost’ zip design could give space exploration a lift -
Orbitae - AI by SDG Group launches Gena Suite to scale enterprise AI -
Firms ‘wasting AI’ by using it to speed up bad habits -
Why leadership matters when implementing AI -
Stratospheric telecoms blimp completes “historic” record 12-day flight over Atlantic -
Mobile operators warn of higher bills and slower 5G rollout after energy support exclusion -
The 2026 European awards cement Steve Durbin and the ISF at the forefront of cybersecurity -
These are the 10 AI trends to watch in 2026 that will drive business forward -
Europe launches ‘anti-kill switch’ cloud shield as Trump fears grip Brussels -
Starmer summons social media chiefs to Downing Street over child safety


























