Carbon Neutrality Goals Require Enterprises to Transform Completely

As the glaciers of the Arctic collapse and disappear at an unprecedented rate, as cities along the Mediterranean coast become paralyzed in a 50°C heatwave, and as the smoke from North American wildfires obscures the entire continent... the harsh realities of human existence need no further elaboration.

In the eye of this climate crisis storm, a global consensus is reshaping the economic order: data from the United Nations Environment Programme shows that over 130 countries and regions have committed to achieving carbon neutrality between 2050 and 2060. China has also set clear targets of peaking carbon emissions before 2030 and achieving carbon neutrality before 2060.

Enterprises, as the core cells of economic activity, find themselves at a crossroads of profound transformation. Data from the Ministry of Ecology and Environment of China sends a clear signal: the paid allocation of carbon emission quotas has covered eight high-emission industries, including petrochemicals and steel, involving a total annual emission of over 6 billion tons. The European Union's Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM) will be fully implemented in 2026, and the green barriers faced by Chinese export enterprises have already emerged.

Carbon neutrality is not just an environmental pledge; it is also a transformative test for enterprises—related to survival and leading towards future blue oceans.

The killer application of blockchain Web3 will be in new energy and carbon trading, green electricity, green certificates, and carbon credit tokens, rather than Bitcoin (BTC).

The era of integration between Bitcoin and the green economy of carbon credits is about to arrive.