Beyond is bringing four sessions to Trellis Impact in San Francisco this June — covering voluntary carbon markets, Environmental Attribute Certificates, superpollutants, and carbon removal.

VCM Buyers Bootcamp

Monday, June 22  |  9:30 AM – 5:00 PM
A one-day workshop that gives corporate sustainability and procurement teams the knowledge, frameworks, and hands-on practice to move from ad hoc carbon credit purchases to a confident, strategic procurement approach.
Register here


Decarbonize Your Supply Chain With Environmental Attribute Certificates

Tuesday, June 23  |  3:30 – 5:00 PM
Interest in EACs is growing rapidly, with companies using the certificates to quantify and account for supply-chain investments in everything from carbon capture at natural gas power plants to low-carbon steel and cement. The proliferating projects build on the established use of EACs in aviation, where the mechanism has helped aggregate more than half a billion dollars in demand for sustainable aviation fuel since 2021. Learn from and interact with experts who are building the frameworks that underpin EACs and the pioneering companies using the certificates to tackle Scope 3.


Happy Hour with Symbiosis Coalition

Tuesday, June 23
Register your interest


The Fastest Ton: Making Superpollutants Core to Your Decarbonization Roadmap

Wednesday, June 24  |  10:30 AM – 12:00 PM
Methane, refrigerants, nitrous oxide, and black carbon are responsible for roughly half of today’s warming, yet most corporate climate programs treat them as secondary to CO2. That’s beginning to change: superpollutants are increasingly viewed as an “emergency brake” for near-term warming, and a consortium of major corporations recently committed $100M to accelerate action globally. This 90-minute session opens with an overview of what superpollutants are and why they matter, then moves into practical Scope 1, 2, and 3 strategies companies can act on now — including lifecycle refrigerant management, supplier engagement, and the role of emerging carbon credits — and concludes with a discussion on scaling solutions across industries and sectors.


Who Holds the Risk in Carbon Removal? Rethinking Durability and Liability

Wednesday, June 24  |  3:30 – 4:30 PM
Managing risk associated with durability is one of the biggest unresolved challenges in carbon removals. This session introduces contracted durability as a new approach to manage reversal risk, clarify long-term liability, and align incentives across projects, buyers, and institutions. Co-hosted by the American Forest Foundation and Beyond, the discussion will explore where current approaches fall short and what more durable, market-wide solutions could look like. Attendees will walk away with a clear understanding of what durability risk means in practice, the emerging approaches to manage it, and how stronger risk frameworks can help build trust, unlock investment, and support a broader portfolio of carbon removal pathways.


London Climate Action Week

Join Beyond at London Climate Action Week for a forward-looking conversation on how carbon markets can credibly manage reversal risk—moving beyond the permanence debate to practical tools and innovations that deliver durable climate outcomes at scale.

Managing Reversal Risk: Solutions for Durable Nature-Based Carbon Markets

Thursday, June 25  |  4:00 – 5:00 PM
This session will convene policymakers, standard setters, market actors, and civil society to explore how carbon markets can credibly manage reversal risk while enabling urgent climate action across the full portfolio of climate solutions. Moving beyond a binary debate on permanence, the discussion will focus on practical tools and emerging innovations — buffer pools, insurance, stress testing, and legal and financial mechanisms — that can be designed, combined, and continuously improved to deliver durable climate outcomes at scale. Speakers will spotlight how better risk management can strengthen market integrity, build confidence, and ensure both nature-based and tech-based solutions remain central pillars of climate mitigation in the critical decades ahead.