Increasing allegations
of corruption and profiteering are raising serious questions about the
UN-run carbon trading mechanism aimed at cutting pollution and
rewarding clean technologies, writes Patrick McCully, executive
director of US thinktank International Rivers.
The world's biggest carbon offset market, the Kyoto Protocol's clean
development mechanism (CDM), is run by the UN, administered by the
World Bank, and is intended to reduce emissions by rewarding developing
countries that invest in clean technologies. In fact, evidence is
accumulating that it is increasing greenhouse gas emissions behind the
guise of promoting sustainable development. The misguided mechanism is
handing out billions of dollars to chemical, coal and oil corporations
and the developers of destructive dams - in many cases for projects
they would have built anyway.
According to David Victor, a leading carbon trading analyst at Stanford
University in the US, as many as two-thirds of the supposed "emission
reduction" credits being produced by the CDM from projects in
developing countries are not backed by real reductions in pollution.
Those pollution cuts that have been generated by the CDM, he argues,
have often been achieved at a stunningly high cost: billions of pounds
could have been saved by cutting the emissions through international
funds, rather than through the CDM's supposedly efficient market
mechanism.
And when a CDM credit does represent an "emission reduction", there is
no global benefit because offsetting is a "zero sum" game. If a Chinese
mine cuts its methane emissions under the CDM, there will be no global
climate benefit because the polluter that buys the offset avoids the
obligation to reduce its own emissions.
A CDM credit is known as a certified emission reduction (CER), and is
supposed to represent one tonne of carbon dioxide not emitted to the
atmosphere. Industrialised countries' governments buy the CERs and use
them to prove to the UN that they have met their obligations under
Kyoto to "reduce" their emissions. Companies can also buy CERs to
comply with national-level legislation or with the EU's emissions
trading scheme. Analysts estimate that two-thirds of the emission
reduction obligations of the key developed countries that ratified
Kyoto may be met through buying offsets rather than by decarbonising
their economies.
Almost all the demand for CERs has so far come from Europe and Japan.
In the next few years, Australia and Canada could become significant
CER buyers. In the longer term, the US could become the largest single
market for CDM offsets under legislation being debated. The climate
plan by Republican presidential hopeful John McCain would allow
supposed emission reductions in the US to be met through domestic and
CDM offsets.
Around 2bn CERs are expected to be generated by the end of this phase
of Kyoto in 2012. At their current price, project developers will sell
around £18bn-worth of CDM credits over the next five years. The
CDM approved its 1,000th project on April 15. More than twice as many
are making their way through the approvals process.
Marginal improvement
Any type of technology other than nuclear power can apply for credits.
Even new coal plants, if these can be shown to be even a marginal
improvement upon existing plants, can receive offset income. A massive
4,000MW coal plant on the coast of Gujarat, India, is expected soon to
apply for CERs. The plant will spew into the atmosphere 26m tonnes of
CO2 per year for at least 25 years. It will be India's third - and the
world's 16th - largest source of CO2 emissions.
Many observers had hoped that the CDM would promote renewables and
energy efficiency. Yet if all projects now in the pipeline generated
the CERs they are claiming up to 2012, non-hydro renewables would
attract only 16% of CDM funds, and demand-side energy efficiency
projects just 1%. Only 16 solar power projects - less than 0.5% of the
project pipeline - have applied for CDM approval.
For a project to be eligible to sell offsets, it is supposed to prove
that it is "additional". "Additionality" is key to the design of the
CDM. If projects would happen anyway, regardless of CDM benefits, then
their offsets would not represent any reduction in emissions.
But judging additionality has turned out to be unknowable and
unworkable. It can never be definitively proved that if a developer or
factory owner did not get offset income they would not build their
project or switch to a cleaner fuel supply- and would not do so over
the decade for which projects can sell offsets.
The documents written by carbon consultants to justify why their
clients' projects should be approved for CDM offsets contain enough
lies to make a sub-prime mortgage pusher blush. One commonly used
"scam" is to make a proposed project look like an economic loser on its
own, but a profitable earner once offset income is factored in.
Examples include the Indian wind developers who failed to tell the CDM
about the lucrative tax credits their projects were earning.
Off-the-record, industry insiders will admit that deceitful claims in
CDM applications are standard practice. The carbon trading industry
lobby group, the International Emissions Trading Association (IETA),
has stated that proving the intent of developers applying for the CDM
"is an almost impossible task". Industry representatives have
complained that "good storytellers" can get a project approved, "while
bad storytellers may fail even if the project is really additional".
One glaring signal that many of the projects being approved by the
CDM's executive board are non-additional is that almost three-quarters
of projects were already complete at the time of approval. It would
seem clear that a project that is already built cannot need extra
income in order to be built.
Michael Wara, a law professor and carbon trade analyst from Stanford
University, and Victor show in a recent paper that "essentially all"
new hydro, wind and natural gas fired projects being built in China are
now applying for CDM offsets. If the developers are being truthful that
their projects are additional, this implies that without the CDM
virtually no hydro, wind or gas projects would be under construction in
China. Given the boom in construction of power projects in China, the
fact that it is government policy to promote these project types, and
the fact that thousands of hydro projects have been built in China
without any help from the CDM, this is simply not credible.
Additionality also creates perverse incentives for developing country
governments not to bring in, or enforce, climate-friendly legislation.
Why should a government voluntarily act to cap methane from its
landfills or encourage energy efficiency if in doing so it makes these
activities "business-as-usual", and so not additional and not eligible
for CDM income?
Waste gases
The project type slated to generate the most CERs is the destruction of
a gas called trifluoromethane, or HFC-23, one of the most potent
greenhouse gases, and a waste product from the manufacture of a
refrigerant gas. Every molecule of HFC-23 causes 11,700 times more
global warming than that of CO2. Because of this massive "global
warming potential", chemical companies can earn almost twice as much
from selling CERs as from selling refrigerant gases. This has spurred
concern that refrigerant producers may be increasing their output
solely so that they can produce, and then destroy, more waste gases.
A rapidly growing industry of carbon brokers and consultants is
lobbying for the CDM to be expanded and its rules to be weakened
further. If we want to sustain public support for effective global
action on climate change, we cannot risk one of its central planks
being a programme that is so fundamentally flawed. In the short term,
the CDM must be radically reformed. In the long term it must be
replaced.
· Patrick McCully is executive director of International Rivers,
a US thinktank, internationalrivers.org
http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2008/may/21/environment.carbontrading
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