Home > Japanese Supermarket Selling Carbon-Offset Products >
2007.12.12 Wed
Japanese Supermarket Selling Carbon-Offset Products
Carbon-offset is the act of mitigating, or offsetting, the sometimes unavoidable carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions produced in everyday life or regular economic activities by investing in carbon emissions reduction projects that may have an equivalent value. In support of this, Seiyu Ltd., a major Japanese supermarket chain, announced in September 2007 that it is selling products to offset national greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions. By purchasing the products (presently two kinds of shopping bags are for sale) consumers can contribute individually to Japan's target for reducing GHG emissions.

Here is how the scheme works. Through an offset service provided by the non-profit organization Carbon Offset Japan, part of the profits from the product sales is transferred to the national government for free as carbon credits approved by the United Nations. This allows consumers to help Japan achieve its national reduction target for greenhouse gas emissions of six percent below 1990 levels agreed under the Kyoto Protocol.

One of the products, a polyethylene shopping bag priced at 20 yen each (about US$0.18) went on sale in June 2007, and can be exchanged free of charge when it wears out. The other is the company's own eco-brand of canvas shopping bag, which was to go on sale in late October. Seiyu is trying to broadly appeal to its customers to promote better understanding of the carbon-offset scheme as a global warming countermeasure that individuals can participate in.

http://www.seiyu.co.jp/english/index.shtml

Posted: 2007/12/12 11:44:51 AM
Japanese version
| Posted by jfs |
NEXT ACTION
Search more news from JFS   
Read next article: Biwako Bank Entices Customers to Reduce their CO2 Emissions with Higher Interest Rate
Read previous article: Carbon Offset New Year's Postcard on Sale in Japan
Support JFS
About JFS
RELATED NEWS

Japanese Institute Evaluates Carbon Balances of Tropical Forests in Southeast Asia, Deforestation Effects using New Model
Honda to Reduce CO2 Emissions from Global Products by 30%
Toyota CRDL Succeeds in World's First Artificial Photosynthesis Using only Water and CO2
Temperatures at Higher Latitudes of Northern Hemisphere to Rise More than Predicted
Japanese Shipping Company Releases Online CO2 Calculator for Cargo Transport


Don't worry! Everything here is environment-friendly...
Two Municipal Governments Decide on Metropolitan Cap-and-Trade Cooperation Details
Preferential Tax Treatment of Donations Expanded for Certified NPOs
Non-recycle-oriented society
Kyoto City to Experiment with Eco-Money Points for Eco-Activities

Creative Commons