Universal Carbon UPCO2: World’s First Carbon Off-Set Token Now Tradable on Uphold Platform

Universal Carbon (UPCO2), the world’s first tradable carbon token is now available on Uphold, a digital money platform serving more than 3 million customers in more than 150 countries.

UPCO2 is now available on Uphold, to trade or to offset corporate carbon footprints with each token representing one ton per year of carbon dioxide.

The Universal Protocol Alliance (UPA), a coalition of leading blockchain companies including Bittrex Global, Ledger, Certik, Infinigold and Uphold, today launches Universal Carbon (UPCO2), the world’s first tradable carbon token on a public blockchain that can be bought and held as an investment or burnt to offset an individual’s carbon footprint.

With demand for carbon credits outstripping supply by a factor of 4 to 1 in 2020, according to the World Bank, the UPCO2 Token is set to democratize an important new asset class, which could lead to the establishment of a global clearing price for carbon (as today exists for such commodities as oil and gold) and more resources going into environmental projects.

Each UPCO2 Token represents one year-ton of CO2 pollution averted by a certified REDD+ project preventing rainforest loss or degradation. Every Token is backed by a Voluntary Carbon Unit, VCU, a digital certificate issued by Verra, the international standards agency, which allows certified projects to turn their greenhouse gas (GHG) reductions into tradable carbon credits.

UP Alliance Chairman, Matthew Le Merle:

“The projects we support through carbon credit purchases prevent deforestation in the Amazon, Congo Basin and Indonesia as well as other threatened rainforests[…] For a new generation of investors looking for more than mere financial return, UPCO2 offers attractive social, economic and environmental benefits. At a key moment for climate change, UPCO2 allows people worldwide to do good for the planet and potentially do well for themselves.”

Powerful macroeconomic forces underpin the Voluntary Carbon Credit market and, according to some commentators, could drive up prices significantly as more countries introduce regulated CO2 markets, forcing companies to compensate for their pollution. Additionally, a growing number of firms and individuals are choosing to offset their carbon footprints voluntarily.

Combating Climate Change with Tokenization

Universal Protocol Alliance’s vision is that every asset class will be digitized and tokenized.

According to the World Bank, in 2020, humanity compensates for just 22% of global emissions through the purchase and retirement of carbon credits, and yet the proportion of countries operating regulated carbon markets has risen from 40 percent of global GDP in 2016 to 70 percent in 2020. The result is a wall of demand that may far outstrip the production of new carbon credits, which is choked by the slow and expensive process of Voluntary Carbon Project certification.

“This year may go down as the key inflection point for climate change,” said JP Thieriot, Co-Founder of the UP Alliance and CEO of Uphold. “The year it went from a far-off issue enshrined in distant accords like Kyoto and Paris, to an existential threat affecting the lives of tens of millions of people. In recent months, we’ve seen Australia and California on fire, ever more powerful hurricanes, the US president-elect Joe Biden announcing a Climate Administration, and companies such as Apple, Microsoft, and Nike voluntarily committing to carbon neutrality.”

Thieriot added:

“Combating climate change is likely to become the dominant economic issue of the next 20 years. The UPCO2 Token allows people everywhere to participate in this hugely important – and potentially lucrative – new market, as well as do the right thing for the planet.”

Voluntary carbon credits, which back all UPCO2 Tokens, offer major economic advantages compared with regulated credits. As dollar-denominated, globally-recognized, fungible and perennial assets, voluntary credits last forever, maintaining option value, until consumed or retired by a company or an individual seeking to compensate for carbon footprint.

“It’s astonishing that there is no single global clearing price for carbon emissions,” said Le Merle. “A non-deliverable, digitally-tradable commodity that’s essential for human activity shouldn’t be traded bilaterally on OTC markets, as carbon credits are today.One year-ton of carbon means the same everywhere. As a globally-recognized asset, defined by international standards, a Voluntary Carbon Credit should eventually fetch the same price anywhere.”

Matthew Le Merle said:

‘We believe that the UPCO2 token has an important role to play in democratizing access to carbon credits, which could eliminate price arbitrage and produce a single global price. This was a light bulb going on for me. Combine a digital asset with a rainforest carbon offset and give everyone in the world access. How could that not be a great idea?”

Mastercard Enhances Crypto Wallet and Exchange Business

Payment giant Mastercard announced Tuesday to enhance its function and experience for cryptocurrency wallets and exchanges to their clients. The card issuer cooperates with multiple crypto enterprises to make conversion of crypto and traditional fiat money easier.

In a statement, Mastercard reveals its ambition of enhancement to the existing crypto card program with multiple partners. The card issuer considers Evolve Bank & Trust and Metropolitan Commercial Bank to issue cards, Uphold and BitPay to provide real-time crypto wallet technology, i2c Inc., Apto Payments and Galileo Financial Technologies to support processing and program management.

Meanwhile, Paxos and Circle will use their platforms to convert crypto to fiat through fiat-backed stablecoins, a class of cryptocurrency that offers price stability and is backed by reserve assets.

Raj Dhamodharan, executive vice president of digital asset and blockchain products & partnerships at Mastercard, welcomed the partnership and said:

“Not all crypto companies have the foundational infrastructure to convert cryptocurrency to traditional fiat currency and we’re making it easier…Mastercard expects to deliver on our the promise of consumer choice to provide options to people around the world on how and when to pay,”

This is “a critical step in expanding the ecosystem and safely, securely and compliantly setting the stage for the future of crypto payments,” the statement added. 

Mastercard understands the growing demand for digital payment from its customers. More than 93% of clients considered adopting innovative payment methods, such as biometrics, digital currencies, and QR codes. Therefore, the payment platform has announced in February to support direct crypto payments by allowing cardholders to transact crypto on its network this year directly. 

Meanwhile, Visa, one of the major competitors to Mastercard, their visa cardholders has spent more than $1 billion worth of crypto in the first six months this year by consumers globally. Recently, Visa expanded its business in Australia by approving an Australian startup CryptoSpend to issue debit cards for its customers to consume through cryptocurrencies.

Mastercard Launches New Crypto Program for Start-ups

Payment giant Mastercard announced Tuesday to kick off a new program for start-up companies to support cryptocurrency and blockchain industries.

This new Start Path global engagement program aims to support fast-growing digital assets, blockchain and cryptocurrency companies.

According to the statement from the company, at least seven digital assets and blockchain start-up companies have joined the emerging program, including Singapore-based Mintable, a platform with novel features such as gasless minting and credit card purchasing. Mintable is also designed to empower the public to get involved with non-fungible tokens (NFTs) without prior knowledge of crypto or coding.

Jess Turner, MasterCard’s executive vice president of new digital infrastructure and fintech, commented:

“Mastercard has been engaging with the digital currency ecosystem since 2015. As a leading technology player, we believe we can play a key role in digital assets, helping to shape the industry and provide consumer protection and security.”

The payment platform seeks to expand and accelerate innovation around digital asset technology and make it safer and more accessible for the public and institutions to buy, spend and hold cryptocurrencies and digital assets.

“Part of our role is to forge the future of cryptocurrency, and we’re doing that by bridging mainstream financial principles with digital assets innovations,” Turner added.

MasterCard said more than 250 start-ups had joined the Start Path program since 2014. The company provides access, tools, and solutions to these start-ups to connect with banks and merchants’ ecosystems to deliver new solutions.  

Last week, MasterCards announced to enhance its function and experience using cryptocurrency wallets and exchanges with their clients, pairing with multiple crypto enterprises to convert crypto and traditional fiat money.

Mastercard understands the growing demand for digital payment from its customers. More than 93% of clients considered adopting innovative payment methods, such as biometrics, digital currencies, and QR codes. Therefore, the payment platform has announced in February to support direct crypto payments by allowing cardholders to transact crypto on its network this year directly. 

Meanwhile, Visa, one of the major competitors to Mastercard, their visa cardholders has spent more than $1 billion worth of crypto in the first six months this year by consumers globally. Recently, Visa expanded its business in Australia by approving an Australian startup CryptoSpend to issue debit cards for its customers to consume through cryptocurrencies.

Cred Claims Uphold Exchange Owes Millions

The cryptocurrency exchange known as Uphold has disputed that it is responsible for paying around $784 million to the liquidation trust established by the defunct cryptocurrency investment platform Cred.

On January 11, 2019, after a hearing in the court, Uphold submitted a move to dismiss all charges of the lawsuit that Cred had lodged against the company back in June.

Cred was a cryptocurrency loan firm that initiated bankruptcy proceedings under Chapter 11 in November of 2020.

In June, Cred’s liquidation trust initiated legal action against Uphold and two of its affiliates by submitting an adversary lawsuit.

It was said that Uphold had collaborated with Cred co-founders to promote CredEarn and that the company owed the cryptocurrency lender $783.9 million.

The complaint states that Cred said that Uphold collaborated with Cred’s co-founders to promote CredEarn, and that Cred asserted that crypto investments routed from Uphold at the time of the market top would have been valued in excess of $700 million.

Retail investors were drawn in by the product’s promise of large payouts; nevertheless, Cred’s investments went bad, which resulted in consumer losses and ultimately led to the company filing for bankruptcy in November of 2020.

The circumstances behind Cred’s bankruptcy are very similar to those surrounding Celsius Network and Voyager Digital.

However, in its move to dismiss the lawsuit, Uphold characterized Cred trust’s claims against it illogical, conclusory, and conspiratorial, and it urged the Delaware bankruptcy court to reject them. Cred trust had accused Uphold of being involved in a conspiracy.

Uphold refuted the claims that it was aware of the hazards at Cred and said that Cred was owned and managed wholly separately from Uphold. Additionally, it said that it was uninformed of the financial difficulties that CredEarn was experiencing at the time that it advertised the product to Uphold clients.

At the hearing, the counsel for the Cred trust, Joseph B. Evans of McDermott Will & Emery, said that allegations against the insiders relating their participation with Uphold had been addressed independently. These claims were to the insiders’ work with the company.

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