Quick Take
- India opens Carbon Credit Trading in October 2026, with first trades expected between November 2026 and January 2027.
- Startups can join now via the voluntary Offset Mechanism, registering clean projects to earn tradable CCCs.
- Projects must start on or after January 1, 2025, so early registration on the ICM portal matters most now.
In This Article
Carbon Credit Trading in India will open in October 2026, when the Bureau of Energy Efficiency (BEE) issues the first Carbon Credit Certificates (CCCs), with live trading expected between November 2026 and January 2027. Each CCC equals one tonne of carbon dioxide equivalent saved.
The launch runs under the Carbon Credit Trading Scheme (CCTS), India’s national carbon market built on the Energy Conservation (Amendment) Act, 2022. For founders, the bigger opportunity sits in the voluntary Offset Mechanism, which lets non-obligated companies register clean projects and earn credits they can sell. The window to prepare is now, not later.
StartupFeed Insight
Early registration is the real edge here, and most founders will miss it. Because projects must start on or after January 1, 2025, a startup that registers a clean-energy or waste-gas project in 2026 can bank credits before the market floods. Watch this closely if you run a climate-tech, agritech, or waste-management venture, because the compliance buyers (aluminium, cement, steel later) will need supply. StartupFeed expects the first offset CCCs from startups to trade by mid-2027, and early movers will price higher before oversupply, a known risk, softens rates across the Indian Carbon Market. By Avinash.
Carbon Credit Trading Timeline for 2026
Carbon Credit Trading in India follows a fixed annual cycle set by the BEE. The first compliance year (FY2026) ended on March 31, 2026, followed by four months for verification and three months for assessment and issuance.
Speaking on the sidelines of Mumbai Climate Week, BEE Director Saurabh Diddi confirmed the schedule to Business Standard. Credits will be issued in October 2026, with trading expected from November 2026 to January 2027, and the cycle repeating every year after that.
Carbon Credit Trading Scheme: Key Facts at a Glance
The Carbon Credit Trading Scheme is India’s mandatory emissions trading system, replacing the older Perform, Achieve and Trade (PAT) energy-saving scheme. The table below breaks down the core structure.
| Feature | Detail | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| First CCC issuance | October 2026 | Trading expected November 2026 to January 2027 |
| Administrator | Bureau of Energy Efficiency (BEE) | Registry run by Grid Controller of India (GCI) |
| Trading platform | Power exchanges (IEX, PXIL) | Regulated by CERC; no OTC trading initially |
| Sectors covered | Nine energy-intensive sectors | Roughly 490 units notified as of early 2026 |
| One CCC equals | 1 tonne CO2 equivalent | Baseline year: FY2023-24 |
| Startup route | Voluntary Offset Mechanism | Open to non-obligated entities now |
The most striking detail: the compliance mechanism will initially cover over 700 million tonnes of CO2 equivalent, placing India among the world’s largest emissions trading systems, according to the International Carbon Action Partnership (ICAP).
About the Indian Carbon Market
The Indian Carbon Market (ICM) is the national trading framework created under the Energy Conservation (Amendment) Act, 2022, and first notified in 2023. It runs two streams: a mandatory compliance mechanism for heavy industry and a voluntary Offset Mechanism for everyone else. The BEE administers it, GCI operates the registry, and the Central Electricity Regulatory Commission (CERC) oversees trading on power exchanges. The nine covered sectors account for roughly 16% of India’s total emissions.
How Can Startups Join the Offset Mechanism?
Startups join Carbon Credit Trading through the voluntary Offset Mechanism, a project-based route open to non-obligated entities. Clean-energy, reforestation, waste-management, and green-hydrogen ventures can register projects and earn CCCs.
Non-obligated companies, NGOs, startups, or individuals working on clean energy, reforestation, or waste management can voluntarily join the CCTS under the Offset Mechanism, according to guidance from the Bureau of Energy Efficiency.
To qualify, a project must start on or after January 1, 2025, follow a BEE-approved methodology, and stay additional, meaning it is not double-counted under any other carbon market. You can register through the official BEE Indian Carbon Market portal, which lists eligibility rules and templates.
Steps Indian Startups Should Take Now
Preparing for Carbon Credit Trading means acting before the October 2026 issuance, not after. Founders in eligible sectors should treat the next few months as a setup window. Here is a clear checklist.
- Check eligibility. Confirm your project type (renewables, energy efficiency, waste-gas capture, afforestation, green hydrogen) fits a BEE-approved methodology.
- Fix your start date. Only projects starting on or after January 1, 2025 qualify. Document the exact commencement date.
- Register on the ICM portal. Submit project information and a Project Design Document (PDD) as per BEE norms.
- Line up verification. Your project needs validation by an Accredited Carbon Verification Agency (ACVA) before credits are issued.
- Build monitoring systems. Set up data collection and reporting early, since verification depends on clean, standardized records.
The review process is not instant. BEE runs a completeness check followed by technical and expert reviews, so starting early protects your place in the first issuance rounds.
What Are the Market Risks to Watch?
Carbon Credit Trading carries real price risk in its early years, a pattern seen across global carbon markets. Founders should plan for soft prices at launch, not a windfall.
The World Economic Forum notes that India’s initial emission targets translate to a modest 3% average reduction across sectors, which can create oversupply. Combined with unlimited banking of credits, large surpluses could build up and dampen prices. India has added a price collar, an indicative floor and ceiling, to limit extreme swings. The Institute for Energy Economics and Financial Analysis (IEEFA) warns that markets lacking strong stability tools have faced years of weak price signals, as seen in the early EU system. For startups, this makes early, low-cost credits more valuable than credits sold into a crowded market later.
What’s Next
The next milestone is the October 2026 CCC issuance, followed by live trading through January 2027. The government also plans to expand the scheme to coal-fired power generation in a later stage, widening future demand. For founders, the question is simple: will you register your clean project before the first credits are issued, or wait until the market is already crowded?
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