- Calyx Global’s GHG and SDG carbon credit quality ratings will now be accessible directly inside the Bloomberg Terminal, expanding institutional access to independent credit assessments
- The collaboration responds to growing regulatory and investor scrutiny around carbon credit integrity, comparability and disclosure
- Integration of ratings with pricing, project and market intelligence data supports stronger risk management and capital allocation decisions across voluntary carbon markets
Global finance and carbon markets are moving closer together as Bloomberg and Calyx Global launch a strategic collaboration to deliver independent carbon credit ratings directly through the Bloomberg Terminal, embedding quality analysis into daily institutional workflows.
The move expands access to research driven assessments of carbon credit integrity at a time when voluntary carbon markets face heightened scrutiny from regulators, investors and corporate buyers seeking defensible climate claims.
Bringing Independent Carbon Quality Analysis Into Core Financial Infrastructure
Under the collaboration, Bloomberg Terminal users will be able to view Calyx Global’s greenhouse gas (GHG) and Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) ratings alongside project data, pricing trends and broader market intelligence. The integration aims to improve transparency and allow investors to compare credits across registries, project types and geographies using standardized quality benchmarks.
Duncan van Bergen, Co-Founder of Calyx Global, said: “Calyx Global was founded on the belief that trust in the carbon market needs independent, science-backed voices on quality. Our collaboration with Bloomberg brings unbiased ratings to the heart of global finance, helping investors and companies make confident decisions about carbon credits backed by deep, independent analysis.”

Bloomberg’s existing carbon market solutions already enable users to track project pipelines, analyze price signals and follow market outlook data. By layering independent credit quality scores onto this dataset, the partnership introduces a new decision layer for investors balancing cost, impact credibility and reputational risk.
Governance Pressure And Market Standardization Are Driving Demand
The collaboration arrives as governments and standard setters push for higher integrity carbon markets. New disclosure rules, voluntary claims guidance and emerging compliance frameworks are forcing buyers to demonstrate not just credit volume purchases but underlying environmental quality and permanence.
The voluntary carbon market has grown more complex as new registries, methodologies and project categories emerge. This complexity has increased due diligence burdens on asset managers, corporate sustainability teams and carbon trading desks.
Emilie Gallagher, Global Head of Commodities, FX and Macro Product at Bloomberg, said: “The carbon market landscape is becoming increasingly complex with new registries, evolving methodologies, and rising expectations for transparency around carbon credits. By collaborating with Calyx Global to bring their carbon credit ratings to the Bloomberg Terminal, we are equipping investors and corporate decision makers with deeper insight into credit quality and market performance, along with the reliable Bloomberg Terminal analytics they already trust.”
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Finance Implications: From Optional Data To Core Risk Infrastructure
For institutional investors, the integration signals a shift toward treating carbon credit quality analysis as standard financial risk data rather than niche ESG research. Credit ratings embedded directly in trading and analytics platforms lower friction for portfolio integration and compliance documentation.
Carbon traders and project developers may also face increased pricing differentiation as high rated credits potentially command premium pricing, while lower quality credits face greater scrutiny and discounting.
For corporates, particularly those with science based net zero commitments, the availability of standardized quality signals could reshape procurement strategies, audit readiness and public disclosure confidence.
What Executives And Investors Should Watch
Executives should expect continued convergence between climate data providers and financial infrastructure platforms. Carbon markets are moving toward a model similar to traditional fixed income and commodities markets, where third party ratings and analytics shape capital flows and liquidity.
Investors should monitor how widely integrated carbon quality ratings become across financial systems, and whether regulators begin referencing third party ratings in disclosure or compliance frameworks.
As carbon markets mature, transparency tools embedded inside core financial platforms could determine which credits attract long term institutional capital and which fail to meet emerging integrity thresholds.
The integration of independent carbon credit quality ratings into one of the world’s most widely used financial data platforms reflects a broader structural shift. Climate risk, carbon pricing and environmental integrity are no longer peripheral ESG considerations. They are becoming embedded into the core architecture of global finance, shaping how capital is priced, allocated and governed across the energy transition.
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