SINRA White Paper
English
English
  • Summary
    • Catch Your Own Butterfly
    • Project Scheme
    • Regenerative NFTs
  • 1. Introduction
    • 1-1. Introduction
    • 1-2. The three distinctive features of SINRA
  • 2. Carbon credits derived from natural resources
    • 2-1. NBS(Nature Based Solution)
    • 2-2. Carbon credits
    • 2-3. Carbon credits and offsets
    • 2-4. Social Impacts
  • 3. Regenerative NFT
    • 3-1. Project scheme
    • 3-2. A Regenerative NFT with multifaceted value
  • 4. Carbon credits and their relationship to Regenerative NFTs
    • 4-1. State of Regenerative NFTs
    • 4-2. Rights that Regenerative NFT represent
    • 4-3. Flow of consolidation of carbon credits with Regenerative NFT
    • 4-4. Prevent double counting of carbon credits
    • 4-5. Why SINRA promotes the creation of carbon credits
  • 5. Specifications of SINRA's Regenerative NFT
    • 5-1. Purchase Unit
    • 5-2. Status and Art Drawing
    • 5-3. Year in which carbon credits are generated.
    • 5-4. NFT validity and expiration date
    • 5-5 Uncertainty in environmental value creation
    • 5-6. Traceability
    • 5-7. Offset
    • 5-8. Utility
    • 5-9. Secondary distribution
    • 5-10. Sustainability of Regenerative NFTs
  • 6. Architecture
    • 6-1. Architecture
    • 6-2. Information held by the SINRA system
    • 6-3. Information held by the CONTRACT
    • 6-4. metadata specification
    • 6-5. control panel
    • 6-6. Security measures for SINRA systems
  • 7. marketplace
    • 7-1. primary sale
    • 7-2. Price
    • 7-3. commission
    • 7-4. secondary sale
    • 7-5. carbon offset
  • 8. Advantages of owning Regenerative NFTs (individual and corporate)
    • 8-1. Personal Advantages
    • 8-2. Corporate Advantages
  • 9. governance
    • 9-1. Decisions on SINRA product development
    • 9-2. Community of Regenerative NFT Holders
  • 10. NFT Issuing Company
    • 10-1. Company Information
  • Appendix
    • reference document
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  1. 5. Specifications of SINRA's Regenerative NFT

5-6. Traceability

Many carbon credit projects derived from natural resources are frequently traded as voluntary credits on the global market. There exists some skepticism regarding the credibility of certain voluntary credits. Specifically, there have been instances where companies that purchased carbon credits verified the associated forests, only to find that these forests had already been logged.

At SINRA, we ensure traceability between the environmental value and the natural resources that produced it, allowing users to confidently purchase these values. For instance, in the case of forest-derived carbon credits, we provide information such as the specific area where the carbon credits were generated, as well as details like the types of trees and their ages in that area, ensuring users can verify this data.

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Last updated 1 year ago