It is hard to believe that everything around you is becoming more and more of a financial tool when you are standing at the edge of a mangrove forest in the Indus Delta at low tide, your boots slightly sinking into carbon-black sediment. Nothing about the brackish smell, the gnarled root systems, or the shorebirds picking through shallow water seems like an asset class. However, that is precisely what it is turning into.
For years, blue carbon—the carbon stored in coastal ecosystems such as tidal saltmarshes, mangroves, and seagrass meadows—has quietly developed a scientific case. The financial community is now paying close attention due to the increasing urgency of climate commitments and a voluntary carbon market that is ravenous for reliable credits. The ocean is being given a balance sheet after being regarded for so long as a shared resource without a ledger.
It turns out that the numbers are impressive. According to research published in Frontiers in Marine Science, the average price of mangrove restoration credits on the global voluntary carbon market was $26.03 per metric ton of CO2 equivalent in 2023; by late 2024, some trades were reportedly clearing $32 per ton. The premium is difficult to ignore when compared to the forestry and land-use average of $9.91 or the broader voluntary carbon market average of $6.63 per ton during the same period. Investors appear to think that something truly unique is taking place here.

The science itself contributes to that premium. Wetlands along the coast behave differently from forests. They sequester carbon at rates that frequently surpass terrestrial ecosystems per hectare when left undisturbed. Crucially, they continue to sequester, with organic matter building up in saline soils over centuries instead of reaching equilibrium. In a market that desperately needs long-term credibility, it serves as a long-term carbon sink. According to one of the top blue carbon scientists in the world, Professor Carlos Duarte, these tactics could together account for about 15% of the targeted removal of greenhouse gases worldwide. That contribution is not insignificant.
Even enthusiastic investors have been slow to fully consider the layers of complexity involved in moving from scientific potential to tradeable credit. The Blue Carbon Cost Tool, created by the Nature Conservancy in partnership with researchers from nine different countries, attempts to map precisely this gap by modeling carbon credit estimates against project costs and highlighting the unsettling fact that higher upfront capital or price tolerance is frequently required just to break even. Many of these projects are expensive to construct and maintain, and credit quality is greatly impacted by the monitoring. Jennifer Howard of Conservation International has cautioned that there is substantial market risk associated with anything that skimps on verification. $32 per ton is not the value of a blue carbon credit supported by dubious measurement. It might have very little value.
Additionally, pure finance frequently ignores the community aspect. The Mikoko Pamoja project in Madagascar, which is frequently used as a model, provides funding for small-scale fishing, water access, and local education in addition to actual mangrove restoration. This has been made clear by Lalao Aigrette of Blue Ventures: blue carbon projects that don’t prioritize local ownership run the risk of social failure. They also run the risk of carbon failure because communities with no stake in a project’s success have little incentive to safeguard it. Trading desks haven’t always learned that lesson.
A market attempting to strike a balance between ecological integrity and financial efficiency is emerging, albeit slowly and with predictable friction. Pakistan has been recognized as a nation with true blue carbon potential due to its mangrove-rich coastline. The largest nature-based solution of its kind, Sindh’s Delta Blue Carbon Project, has already restored 80,000 hectares and established public-private partnership structures that could be used as a model elsewhere. These kinds of initiatives have the potential to define responsible blue carbon finance on a large scale.
Whether the voluntary market can self-discipline before the inevitable surge of subpar credits erodes confidence is still up for debate. Science is advancing quickly. The financial sector is expanding more quickly. It doesn’t really matter if the ocean is traded or protected in the process.
