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Kyotos Clean Development Mechanism: global warming and
its market fix
By Mark Rainer
13 January 2007
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Recent developments have exposed a UN greenhouse gas emissions
trading program as a lucrative source of profits. The program
has hindered investment in technologies that would contribute
to a long-term decline in the emissions that cause global warming.
The emissions trading program, called the Clean Development
Mechanism (CDM), began its operation in December 2003 and is one
part of the Kyoto protocol. Under the protocol, Annex 1
countries (including Canada, Japan and the more economically
developed countries of Europe) have pledged to reduce their greenhouse
gas emissions to an average of 5.2 percent below their 1990 levels
by 2012. So-called developing countries (non-Annex 1 countries,
including China and India) are not bound to reduce their greenhouse
gas emissions.
The stated rationale for the CDM is to encourage sustainable
development in non-Annex 1 countries, and to lessen the burden
of Kyoto-bound countries in meeting their reduction targets. Under
the CDM, this is to be accomplished through the coordination of
emission-reduction projects in non-Annex 1 countries, such as
China and India.
CDM projects generally operate on a profit basis with details
of funding and distribution of profits to be worked out among
the participantsincluding companies and banks in Annex 1
countries as well as companies or governments in non-Annex 1 countries.
Projects must be based on an approved methodology, that is, a
means of reducing greenhouse gas emissions and a means of monitoring
and confirming such reductions.
Once a project is approved by the CDM Executive Board and the
Designated National Authorities, credits are issued to the participants
in Annex 1 countries based on confirmed reductions. These credits
can in turn be used to meet Kyoto targets or can be sold on the
carbon market. This is an attractive option for companies in Europe
and elsewhere because it is often cheaper to sponsor these projects
than to reduce emissions at their own companies.
While the CDM has generated many carbon credits, and thus lessened
the burden of Kyoto-bound countries, it has failed to truly encourage
sustainable development. Predictably, the most popular CDM projects
are those that yield the greatest profits for the participants.
Projects that consider the development of sustainable alternative
sources of energy are among the least popular in terms credits
issued. The discouragement of renewables has much to do with the
way credits are issued and the economics of CDM projects.
Credits are issued according to the global warming potential
of the particular gas reduced. For example, reducing a tonne of
methane would have the same effect as reducing 23 tonnes of carbon
dioxide over a 100-year period. Certain greenhouse gasses such
as HFC-23, also known as fluroform, have a much larger global
warming potential. One tonne of HFC-23 in the atmosphere is equivalent
to 11,700 tonnes of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere over a 100-year
period.
The issuing of credits based on global warming potential has
strongly skewed the economics of the CDM toward reduction projects
with high potentials and low costs. For a modest initial investment
and small operating costs, these projects generate a large number
of credits annually. This means that there has been little investment
in alternative energy projects, which tend to be capital intensive
and therefore have lower profit potential.
From statistics gathered from the CDM web site, of the 467
projects currently registered, 15 large projects stand to earn
68 percent of the yearly issued credits. Ten of these projects
concern the destruction of HFC-23, a byproduct of HCFC-22 production.
HCFC-22 is a refrigerant, and is to phased out under the Montreal
protocol since it depletes the ozone layer. These 10 projects
stand to earn half of the yearly issued credits as part of the
CDM program. For the projects that destroy HFC-23, a process done
voluntarily by many large HCFC-22 chemical manufactures, the participants
stand to reap huge profits.
Thus the bulk of credits issued relate to the production of
a chemical whose production must be eliminated anyway.
According to a study commissioned by the UN, only $4 million
is required to upgrade an HCFC-22 production facility with annual
operating costs of $250,000. Assuming the 2006 average market
price of $10.5 a credit, there is about $563 million a year to
be derived from the 10 currently registered HFC-23 projects. The
participants, including companies as well as large banks and corporations
from the European Union and Japan, no doubt stand to gain substantially,
even after the assorted fees and portions going to governments
are taken into account.
That the CDM is seen mainly as a cheap source of credits to
trade on the carbon market is exemplified by its participants,
many whom have significant interests in the fossil fuel industry.
The non-profit group CDM Watch noted in a report published in
December 2004, Market failure: Strikingly, some
of the most prominent participants in the CDM like BP, Statoil,
Mitsubishi and the World Bank are simultaneously engaged in fossil
fuel projects that directly stymie the stated intent of their
CDM projects. The World Bank is currently the biggest single player
in the CDM and one of the most enthusiastic promoters of a carbon
market as a means of addressing climate change. Yet the US$410
million that it manages through its six carbon funds (which invest
in CDM and JI projects) is less than the US$500-600 million it
provides annually to fossil fuel extraction projects, and about
one sixth of its total 2003 financing for fossil fuel related
projects, estimated to be US$2.5 billion.
The situation in China illustrates the failure of the CDM.
The World Energy Outlook for 2004 estimates yearly carbon dioxide
emissions will rise to 4,386 million tonnes in the year 2010,
a 91.6 percent increase over 1990 levels and about 16 percent
of the worlds total expected emissions for 2010. Of the
major sources, 77 percent of these emissions will come from the
burning of coal, 20 percent from the burning of oil and 3 percent
from the burning of natural gas. In 2010 fossil fuels will constitute
the source of 89 percent of Chinas power production and
heat plants.
Of the 35 CDM projects based in China, 23 concern the development
of power from non-carbon-based renewable sources (wind, hydroelectric).
However, the combined yearly emissions reductions, the equivalent
of about 2 million tonnes of carbon dioxide, constitute a tiny
fraction of Chinas expected emissionsjust .05 percent
of Chinas expected carbon dioxide emissions in 2010. The
CDM does nothing to effect a major shift in China or elsewhere
away from fossil fuel consumption.
Several other factors have combined with the CDM to lessen
the effectiveness of the Kyoto protocol. The Kyoto protocol arose
out of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change
(UNFCC). Negotiated in 1997 and coming into formal effect in 2005,
the Kyoto protocol is the first international treaty to address
global warming. The United States played a large role in the Kyoto
negotiations, insisting on the market-based flexible mechanisms,
such as the cap and trade system and the CDM.
Among parties to the UNFCC, participation is voluntary. Two
of the largest polluters per capita, the United States and Australia,
have not ratified the protocol. For countries that do participate,
there are no real enforcement mechanisms.
Countries that exceed their cap must make up the difference
plus an additional 30 percent and are barred from selling credits
on the carbon market. However, a government may decide it is less
burdensome to simply withdraw from Kyoto. Canadas former
environmental minister, Rona Ambrose, announced in April of last
year that it would be impossible for Canada to meet its Kyoto
targets, citing close to a 30 percent increase in greenhouse gas
emissions over 1990 levels. In May the Conservative government
cut the Canadian governments funding for Kyoto compliance,
signaling a likely withdraw from Kyoto.
Kyotos distribution of emission allowances to countries
based on 1990 levels has raised some concerns, especially in the
case of Russia, whose emissions have significantly dropped as
a result of the economic decline following the collapse of the
Soviet Union. As a consequences, it is expected that Russia will
have a large surplus of credits to trade on the carbon market,
lessening the effect of Kyoto.
Moreover, Kyotos fixed allowances divided among industrialized
states fail to reflect the increasingly dynamic, globalized and
interconnected nature of production and the emergence of India
and China as major economic forces. While China and India are
exempt, they are the host to transnational corporations, many
of which originate in Kyoto-bound countries. Another scenario,
not suggested by promoters of cap and trade carbon
markets, is that transnational corporations could shift some of
their more polluting operations to developing countries where
there is no regulation of greenhouse gas emissions.
The net result is that Kyoto fails even as a modest proposal
to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and hence address the serious
and pressing problem of global warming. According to the World
Energy Outlook for 2004, yearly carbon dioxide emissions will
continue to rise to 27,817 million tonnes in the year 2010, a
38.9 increase over 1990 levels, even were all existing policies
to reduce emissions implemented.
The failure to act could be catastrophic. The effects of human-induced
global warming are becoming increasingly visible, with 2006 being
the warmest year on record for the United States. Global temperatures
have increased by 0.6 degrees Celsius over the last three decades,
and 2007 is expected to be the warmest on record. NASAs
Goddard Space Flight Center reported late last year a significant
decline in maximum sea ice cover in 2005 and 2006 of 6 percent
per year, whereas previously it remained stable. Also, it was
recently reported that the Canadian Ayles Ice Shelf has broken
free, one of six major ice shelves in Canadas Arctic.
The ineffectiveness of the Kyoto protocol stems from the fact
that it attempts to reconcile environmental measures with the
nation-state system and the demands of private profit and corporate
competition. What is increasingly demonstratedthrough the
negotiations of the Kyoto protocol, the operations of the CDM
and the carbon marketis the domination of capitalist interests
over the publics interest in the protection of the environment
and the need for a truly integrated and international plan to
confront the problem of global warming.
See Also:
Studies link global
warming with increased hurricane intensity
[13 September 2005]
Bush aide who doctored
global warming documents joins ExxonMobil
[18 June 2005]
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