Bridging carbon markets and agriculture: a comparative study of stakeholder engagement in South Korea and United States

Abstract Agricultural stakeholder engagement remains one of the most persistent challenges in carbon market development, particularly for small- and medium-sized producers. This study investigates how institutional design influences the conditions under which these stakeholders can access, participa...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Younghoo Cho, Ziwen Yu, Yiannis Ampatzidis
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Springer 2025-08-01
Series:Discover Agriculture
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1007/s44279-025-00305-5
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1849331778597158912
author Younghoo Cho
Ziwen Yu
Yiannis Ampatzidis
author_facet Younghoo Cho
Ziwen Yu
Yiannis Ampatzidis
author_sort Younghoo Cho
collection DOAJ
description Abstract Agricultural stakeholder engagement remains one of the most persistent challenges in carbon market development, particularly for small- and medium-sized producers. This study investigates how institutional design influences the conditions under which these stakeholders can access, participate in, and benefit from agricultural carbon markets. Using a structured comparative framework, the study analyzes two contrasting models: South Korea’s centralized, state-led approach anchored by the Carbon Bank (CB) and Controlled Environment Systems (CES), and the United States’ decentralized, market-oriented framework exemplified by the USDA’s Partnerships for Climate-Smart Commodities (PCSC) and California’s Cap-and-Trade system. Four analytical dimensions guide the comparison: national policy inclusion, verification processes, stakeholder intermediation, and institutional scalability. The findings reveal that South Korea’s integrated architecture lowers participation barriers through standardized MRV (Measurement, Reporting, and Verification) systems and bundled public support, whereas the U.S. model promotes innovation and market interoperability but externalizes verification and outreach responsibilities, limiting inclusion. Rather than endorsing a singular model, the study proposes differentiated strategies: in the Global North, focus on expanding inclusive participation through unified digital infrastructure and diversified practice eligibility; in the Global South, prioritize verifiable, internationally compatible entry pathways to accelerate institutional learning and market access. By aligning carbon market structures with the needs and capacities of diverse agricultural actors, a hybrid infrastructure can enhance both the credibility and accessibility of future agricultural carbon markets.
format Article
id doaj-art-ea94ce9cd7a14e74be742f1faf039a3c
institution Kabale University
issn 2731-9598
language English
publishDate 2025-08-01
publisher Springer
record_format Article
series Discover Agriculture
spelling doaj-art-ea94ce9cd7a14e74be742f1faf039a3c2025-08-20T03:46:24ZengSpringerDiscover Agriculture2731-95982025-08-013112310.1007/s44279-025-00305-5Bridging carbon markets and agriculture: a comparative study of stakeholder engagement in South Korea and United StatesYounghoo Cho0Ziwen Yu1Yiannis Ampatzidis2Agricultural and Biological Engineering Department, University of FloridaAgricultural and Biological Engineering Department, University of FloridaAgricultural and Biological Engineering Department, Southwest Florida Research and Education Center, University of FloridaAbstract Agricultural stakeholder engagement remains one of the most persistent challenges in carbon market development, particularly for small- and medium-sized producers. This study investigates how institutional design influences the conditions under which these stakeholders can access, participate in, and benefit from agricultural carbon markets. Using a structured comparative framework, the study analyzes two contrasting models: South Korea’s centralized, state-led approach anchored by the Carbon Bank (CB) and Controlled Environment Systems (CES), and the United States’ decentralized, market-oriented framework exemplified by the USDA’s Partnerships for Climate-Smart Commodities (PCSC) and California’s Cap-and-Trade system. Four analytical dimensions guide the comparison: national policy inclusion, verification processes, stakeholder intermediation, and institutional scalability. The findings reveal that South Korea’s integrated architecture lowers participation barriers through standardized MRV (Measurement, Reporting, and Verification) systems and bundled public support, whereas the U.S. model promotes innovation and market interoperability but externalizes verification and outreach responsibilities, limiting inclusion. Rather than endorsing a singular model, the study proposes differentiated strategies: in the Global North, focus on expanding inclusive participation through unified digital infrastructure and diversified practice eligibility; in the Global South, prioritize verifiable, internationally compatible entry pathways to accelerate institutional learning and market access. By aligning carbon market structures with the needs and capacities of diverse agricultural actors, a hybrid infrastructure can enhance both the credibility and accessibility of future agricultural carbon markets.https://doi.org/10.1007/s44279-025-00305-5Carbon marketVoluntary carbon market (VCM)SustainabilityControlled environment systems (CES)Agricultural stakeholdersTraceability
spellingShingle Younghoo Cho
Ziwen Yu
Yiannis Ampatzidis
Bridging carbon markets and agriculture: a comparative study of stakeholder engagement in South Korea and United States
Discover Agriculture
Carbon market
Voluntary carbon market (VCM)
Sustainability
Controlled environment systems (CES)
Agricultural stakeholders
Traceability
title Bridging carbon markets and agriculture: a comparative study of stakeholder engagement in South Korea and United States
title_full Bridging carbon markets and agriculture: a comparative study of stakeholder engagement in South Korea and United States
title_fullStr Bridging carbon markets and agriculture: a comparative study of stakeholder engagement in South Korea and United States
title_full_unstemmed Bridging carbon markets and agriculture: a comparative study of stakeholder engagement in South Korea and United States
title_short Bridging carbon markets and agriculture: a comparative study of stakeholder engagement in South Korea and United States
title_sort bridging carbon markets and agriculture a comparative study of stakeholder engagement in south korea and united states
topic Carbon market
Voluntary carbon market (VCM)
Sustainability
Controlled environment systems (CES)
Agricultural stakeholders
Traceability
url https://doi.org/10.1007/s44279-025-00305-5
work_keys_str_mv AT younghoocho bridgingcarbonmarketsandagricultureacomparativestudyofstakeholderengagementinsouthkoreaandunitedstates
AT ziwenyu bridgingcarbonmarketsandagricultureacomparativestudyofstakeholderengagementinsouthkoreaandunitedstates
AT yiannisampatzidis bridgingcarbonmarketsandagricultureacomparativestudyofstakeholderengagementinsouthkoreaandunitedstates