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June 26th, 2008 at 12:53pm
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t r u t h o u t | In London's Financial World, Carbon Trading Is the New Big Thing
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THURSDAY 26 JUNE 2008 News In London's Financial World, Carbon Trading Is the New Big Thing » In London's Financial World, Carbon Trading Is the New Big Thing By James Kanter The New York Times Friday 06 July 2007 London - Seeking to match a desire to make money with his environmental instincts, Louis Redshaw, a former electricity trader, met with five investment banks in 2004 to propose the trading of carbon dioxide. Only one, Barclays Capital, was interested. Three years later, the situation has turned, and carbon specialists like Mr. Redshaw, 34, are among the rising stars in the London financial district. Managing emissions has become one of the fastest-growing specialties in financial services, and companies are scrambling to find workers. Their goal is a slice of a market now worth about $30 billion and that could grow to $1 trillion within a decade. "Carbon will be the world's biggest commodity market, and it could become the world's biggest market over all," said Mr. Redshaw, the head of environmental markets at Barclays Capital. If greed is suddenly good for the environment, then the seedbed for this financial experiment may be London. More carbon was traded here than in any other city, according to a study by International Financial Services London, a company promoting British-based financial business. Carbon could become "one of the fasting-growing markets ever, with volumes comparable to credit derivatives inside of a decade," said Chris Leeds, 38, who is the head of emissions trading at Merrill Lynch here and who plans to expand his team to five"
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