Kenyan clean cookstoves developer Koko Networks is shutting down operations and filing for insolvency after delays in obtaining a letter of authorisation from the government, a source said.
The developer could not continue subsidising the bioethanol in its automated fuel dispensers because its revenue dried up while waiting for its Gold Standard-hosted 11440 project to be approved under the Carbon Offsetting and Reduction Scheme for International Aviation (Corsia), the source said.
A letter of authorisation said the country intends to apply a corresponding adjustment to carbon credits sold, meaning the resulting emissions reduction will not count towards its climate target under the UN Paris Agreement.
This was the last requirement before Corsia approval.
Koko obtained a political risk guarantee from the World Bank-backed Multilateral Investment Guarantee Agency to replace credits if the corresponding adjustment were not applied in its biennial transparency report to the UN.
In this case, Koko's business model relied on institutional carbon revenues from credits approved under the first phase of Corsia.
"The project was not feasible on voluntary prices," the source said.
The government's uncertainty about its capacity to grant corresponding adjustments while retaining enough emissions reductions to meet its Paris agreement targets caused the delays, the source said.
Another clean cookstoves developer in the country, Circle Gas, obtained a letter of approval from the government last week, which paves the way for a letter of authorisation.
Whether Koko will now pursue revenue under the high-integrity Core Carbon Principles (CCP) tag is unknown. The project had issued nearly 15mn credits, of which about 170,000 were retired.
Market talk for its credits recently fell below their trading levels in July. Many of the 125,000 credits of 2022 vintage last traded in early-July at $11.50/t of CO2 equivalent (CO2e). Offers for unknown quantities of Koko credits were $5/t CO2e in late December. Prices for CCP-tagged clean cookstoves credits are in the $9-11/t CO2e range, while standard clean cookstoves credits in Africa are trading at around $1-2/t CO2e.

