KPMG in India released this report on 17th March 2026 at India Climate Week 2026 in collaboration with Carbon Markets Association of India (CMAI). It demonstrates how circularity aligns with policy design, market architecture and digital infrastructure to create a trusted and scalable mitigation pathway for India, while providing a blueprint to convert circular actions into measurable climate value and investable carbon assets.

      India’s development trajectory is advancing at a moment when climate ambition, resource security, economic competitiveness and carbon market evolution are converging. As the global economy shifts from linear extraction to systems built on efficiency and regeneration, India’s pathway to net zero depends not only on clean energy but on how intelligently it designs, uses, and circulates materials. This calls for a rapidly evolving carbon market architecture global and domestic that protects material quality and safety as they are reused, repaired, or recycled. Internationally, expectations around baselines, traceable material flows, transparent Monitoring, Reporting, and Verification (MRV) and Article 6 alignment are tightening, while nationally, the Energy Conservation Act 2022 and the Carbon Credit Trading Scheme (CCTS) are shaping a compliance and voluntary ecosystem. Circularity is now a core pillar of India’s growth strategy, reducing material use and extending product life with a safety first approach.

      Additionally, the domestic carbon systems in India are growing in line with global carbon market rules, with a strong focus on integrity. High quality carbon credits now require clear data, strict baselines, transparent monitoring, and concrete proof that they create real extra impact. At the same time, the Paris Agreement’s Article 6 allows countries to approve international carbon credit transfers using UN supervised systems. This means well designed circular economy projects with reliable tracking, strong accounting, and proven additionality which can now reach premium global buyers, not just local markets.

      This paper elucidates how circular initiatives across waste, materials, industrial processes, construction, organics, and nature based systems translate into measurable emission reductions and outlines the technical mechanisms that enable credible carbon monetisation. 

      Key takeaways of the report:

      • Policy convergence and market architecture - India’s emerging circular carbon ecosystem, Digital MRV and registry interoperability as the invisible infrastructure architecture and Proposed circular interventions with high mitigation impact
      • Process flow to transform circular action into measurable and trusted outcomes and Monetisation architecture for circular carbon in India
      • Structuring logic and commercialisation pathways that enable circular interventions to evolve from pilot initiatives into scalable climate assets
      • Core structuring components, the aggregation models suited to India’s material systems, the commercialisation channels that convert outcomes into cash flow and the governance arrangements that sustain market confidence
      • A development roadmap regarding Establishing regulatory and methodological foundations, Building a national pipeline and integrating cities and industrial clusters, and Catalysing finance and market participation

      The paper also examines the economic and policy drivers shaping India’s emerging circular carbon ecosystem, identifies high impact interventions across material systems, details the accounting and monetisation architectures required for credible outcomes and presents the structuring principles that transform circular projects into climate ready infrastructure. It concludes with a development roadmap and stakeholder specific recommendations to build a high integrity, data driven and finance ready circular carbon market capable of advancing India’s net zero ambitions while strengthening national resource security, industrial competitiveness, and urban resilience.


      Circular advantage: Turning carbon savings into economic opportunity

      Learn how circular initiatives across waste, materials, industrial processes, and nature based systems translate into measurable emission reductions

      Key Contacts

      Nilachal Mishra

      Partner and Head, Government & Public Services (G&PS), National Leader - Government and Infrastructure

      KPMG in India

      Sandeep Paidi

      Partner, Government & Public Services (G&PS); Lead - Health, Human & Social Services (HHSS) and Office Managing Partner – KPMG in Hyderabad

      KPMG in India

      How can KPMG in India help

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