Enverus and Xpansiv have announced an expanded partnership that integrates spot and forward pricing data for environmental commodities directly into the MarketView® platform. The collaboration brings together transaction data from the Xpansiv CBL spot exchange and forward indicative pricing from Evolution Markets, creating a consolidated hub for price discovery across traditional energy and emerging environmental sectors.
For years, traders and risk management teams have struggled with fragmented data, often forced to reconcile exchange prices, over-the-counter (OTC) broker assessments, and core commodity data across separate, siloed systems. This integration aims to eliminate that friction by harmonising disparate data sets into a single, continuous workflow.
MarketView, which already supports over 8,000 users across 500 global sites, provides real-time access to data from more than 500 providers, including major global exchanges and price reporting agencies such as Platts, Argus, and OPIS. The addition of Xpansiv’s data extends this infrastructure into the carbon and renewable energy certificate (REC) markets.
“Environmental markets didn’t lack data, they lacked cohesion,” said Matt Wilcoxson, EVP of Strategic Development at Enverus. “Traders were forced to piece together exchange prices, broker views, and their core positions across multiple systems. MarketView now brings those signals together into a single, trusted view of the market.”
The expanded partnership provides market participants with two primary new streams of intelligence:
- Verified exchange data: Real-time transactions and firm orders from CBL, the world’s largest spot marketplace for RECs and carbon credits. CBL currently covers approximately 30% of global REC issuance.
- OTC market depth: Spot and forward pricing from Evolution Markets, covering a range of US emissions, natural gas, coal, power, and nuclear markets, with historical data dating back as far as 2000.
Russell Karas, Senior Vice President of Strategic Market Solutions at Xpansiv, noted that the integration provides “the clarity [teams] need to make faster, more confident decisions grounded in comprehensive market insights.”
The unified platform is expected to significantly improve the accuracy of mark-to-market valuations by grounding them in both executable exchange transactions and broker-informed forward curves. Furthermore, it enables more sophisticated cross-market risk analysis, allowing firms to view their environmental and traditional energy exposures side-by-side.
As environmental commodities become increasingly central to corporate sustainability and energy trading strategies, the move toward consolidated, liquidity-aware platforms marks a significant step in the maturation of these markets.