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The Climate, Community & Biodiversity Standards When, why and how to use CCB Standards Joanna Durbin Director, Climate, Community & Biodiversity Alliance.

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Presentation on theme: "The Climate, Community & Biodiversity Standards When, why and how to use CCB Standards Joanna Durbin Director, Climate, Community & Biodiversity Alliance."— Presentation transcript:

1 The Climate, Community & Biodiversity Standards When, why and how to use CCB Standards Joanna Durbin Director, Climate, Community & Biodiversity Alliance

2 Land-based Options for Mitigating Climate Change Reducing carbon emissions by: -Preventing or reducing deforestation or other carbon-rich natural habitat conversion -Improving soil management & reduced nitrogen fertilizer use Increasing carbon uptake through: -Reforestation, afforestation and forest restoration -Improved forest management -Integration of trees into agricultural systems (agro-forestry)

3 Negative  Clearance of natural ecosystems  Threats to endangered species  Reduced water regulation/quality  Loss of natural pollination  Exclusion from land and resources  Non-respect of customary tenure/rights  New influences (immigration, revenues, power) can degrade traditions and cause social conflicts Land-based carbon activities have great potential impact on people and biodiversity

4 Positive  Watershed & soil protection  Agricultural productivity enhancement  Employment or new livelihoods  Revenue sharing  Biodiversity conservation  Continued use of forest products  Maintenance of traditional livelihoods and culture Land-based carbon activities have great potential impact on people and biodiversity

5 The Climate, Community & Biodiversity Alliance Alliance Members Advisors Mission: To catalyze the creation of a robust, global carbon market for land-based activities that simultaneously benefit the global climate, local communities and biodiversity

6  Baselines & Additionality  careful site selection  Measurement & Monitoring  apply best practices  Offsite impacts (leakage)  build in sustainable livelihoods  Permanence  long-term management, community incentives, buffers  Negative tradeoffs  design for multiple-benefits Project design and implementation is key

7 Two-Year International Stakeholder Process Public and expert comments Field testing - Tanzania - Peru - Bolivia - Ecuador - Indonesia - Scotland Independent peer review –ICRAF –CATIE –CIFOR First Edition released May 2005 Translated into Chinese, French and Spanish Further revisions are planned

8 - CCB Standards are applied up front - Identify and validate high quality project design -Encourage sensitive and integrated design to generate positive social and biodiversity impact -Stimulate investment in project development and ex-ante carbon -AND attract investors interested in multiple benefits -Stimulate investor preference/potential price premium -Attract co-funding for community and biodiversity benefits eg from Govts, overseas development assistance, NGOs, CCB Standards are project design standards

9  Baselines & Additionality How can high quality project design and multiple-benefits reassure an investor?  Additionality – many multiple-benefit projects are not entirely commercially driven thus would not make economic sense without carbon funding  Leakage – building sustainable livelihoods around project site reduces risks of shifting destructive practices elsewhere, off-site impacts must be defined and monitored  Permanence – ecological stability & community incentives increase prospects for durability, and buffers can be employed as insurance against loss CCBS build confidence in forest carbon

10  Baselines & Additionality  community and biodiversity impacts are clarified - Baselines, methodologies, expected impacts and monitoring plans Why would investors be interested in additional benefits?  Avoid negative social/environmental impacts  Community incentives and sustainable landscapes can help reduce risks to carbon of permanence and leakage  Marketing ‘story’  Multiple objectives for corporate social responsibility to appeal to consumers/staff/regulators,  Can improve credentials to enable greater access or license to operate CCBS demonstrate community and biodiversity benefits

11 The Climate, Community & Biodiversity Standards Independent 3 rd party validation

12 G1. Original Conditions at Project SiteRequired G2. Baseline ProjectionsRequired G3. Project Design & GoalsRequired G4. Management CapacityRequired G5. Land TenureRequired G6. Legal StatusRequired G7. Adaptive Management for Sustainability 1 point G8. Knowledge Dissemination 1 point General Criteria General criteria

13 C1. Net Positive Climate ImpactsRequired C2. Offsite Climate Impacts (“Leakage”)Required C3. Climate Impact MonitoringRequired C4. Adapting to Climate Change & Variability 1 point C5. Carbon Benefits Withheld from Reg. Markets 1 point Climate Criteria Climate criteria

14 Climate Criteria C1. Net Positive Climate ImpactsRequired Concept The project must generate net positive impacts on atmospheric concentrations of greenhouse gases (GHGs) within the project boundaries and over the project lifetime. Indicators 1)Use the methodologies of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change’s Good Practice Guidance (IPCC GPG) to estimate the net change in carbon stocks due to the project activities. The net change is equal to carbon stock changes with the project minus carbon stock changes without the project (the latter having been estimated in G2). Alternatively, any methodology approved by the CDM Executive Board may be used. This estimate must be based on clearly defined and defendable assumptions about how project activities will alter carbon stocks and non-CO2 GHG emissions over the duration of the project or the project accounting period. 2)Factor in the non-CO2 gases CH4 and N2O to the net change calculations (above) if they are likely to account for more than 15% (in terms of CO2 equivalents) of the project’s overall GHG impact. 3)Demonstrate that the net climate impact of the project (including changes in carbon stocks, and non-CO2 gases where appropriate) will give a positive result in terms of overall GHG benefits delivered.

15 CM1. Net Positive Community ImpactsRequired CM2. Offsite Community ImpactsRequired CM3. Community Impact MonitoringRequired CM4. Capacity Building 1 point CM5. Best Practices in Community Involvement 1 point Community Criteria Community criteria

16 Community Criteria CM3. Community Impact MonitoringRequired Concept The project proponents must have an initial monitoring plan to quantify and document changes in social and economic wellbeing resulting from the project activities (within and outside the project boundaries). The monitoring plan should indicate which measurements will likely be taken and which sampling strategy will be used to determine how the project affects social and economic wellbeing. Since developing a full community-monitoring plan can be costly, it is accepted that some of the plan details may not be fully defined at the design stage, when projects are being evaluated by the CCB Standards. This will especially be true for small-scale projects. Indicators 1)Have an initial plan for how they will select community variables to be monitored, and the frequency of monitoring. Potential variables include income, health, roads, schools, food security, education and inequality. Community variables at risk of being negatively impacted by project activities should be monitored.

17 B1. Net Positive Biodiversity ImpactsRequired B2. Offsite Biodiversity ImpactsRequired B3. Biodiversity Impact MonitoringRequired B4. Native Species Use 1 point B5. Water & Soil Resource Enhancement 1 point Biodiversity Criteria Biodiversity criteria

18 The CCB Standards - validation procedure 1.Internal desk review 2.Contract 3 rd party validator (CDM or FSC accredited) and provide docs 3.PDD and supporting docs posted to CCBA website for 21 day public comment period 4.Validator site visit 5.Audit report – may require changes to PDD or further documentation 6.Improved PDD/documents submitted as required 7.Validator issues statement of compliance and level (approved, silver or gold)

19 The CCB Standards – progress on adoption Project Development: –Two projects validated: Tengchong and Panama –Five posted for public comment; Tanzania, India, UK, Indonesia, Nicaragua –Around 80 projects planning to use CCBS –Represents estimated vast majority AFOLU under devpt –CCBS covers all AFOLU: A/R, AD, and forest management –Useful for voluntary and regulatory markets Demand: –Major portfolio investors: World Bank BioCF, EcoSecurities –Carbon retailers (e.g., Carbon Neutral Company, The CarbonFund, 3 degrees, 3C) –Major corporations + carbon tenders: Dell, Mariott, Ricoh, –54% prefer CCB projects, 40% willing to pay premium –$1-2/tonne premium –$5-15/tonne CO2 equivalent –Currently greater demand than supply for CCB carbon

20 Enables ex-post carbon sales Carbon verification standard Timeline for application of CCB Standards CCBS Project Design PhaseProject Implementation CCBS Validation enables ex-ante carbon sales and up front investment to implement project CCBS Verifies that project has been implemented according to design, verifies monitoring reports of carbon, community and biodiversity benefits, validates adaptation of project design 5 years ~5-10 years for restoration, ~1-5 years for RED before sufficient carbon benefits on ground to verify

21 DescriptionProject types – includes land- based? Carbon verification Environmental and social benefits Geographical reach CCBSMultiple-benefit project design standard All land-based projects NoYesGlobal VCSCarbon verification standard for voluntary market All types carbon offset YesNoGlobal Gold Standard Multiple-benefit project design standard Energy onlyIn development YesGlobal CDMKyoto-compliant scheme Includes A/RYes - VERsNoDeveloping countries CCXInternal system for CCX offset projects Includes A/R and AD Yes?Global Plan VivoProject development support for multiple- benefit Community- based agro- forestry Yes Global (3 projects to date) Greenhouse Friendly Certification for offsets and carbon neutral All land-based projects YesNoAustralia CCARA registry protocolForestryYesNoCalifornia VER+Certification for offsets, carbon neutral All land-based projects YesNoGlobal Social Carbon Methodology and certification for multiple- benefit land-based project All land-based projects In development Yes (more social)South America and Portugal to date

22 Promote excellence and innovation in project design Identify projects that simultaneously address climate change, support local communities and conserve biodiversity Provide investors with risk management tool Enhance the credibility of carbon forestry sector Facilitate bundling and stacking of PES The Climate, Community & Biodiversity Standards

23 More information available from… www.climate-standards.org Joanna Durbin Director, CCBA Email: jdurbin@climate-standards.orgjdurbin@climate-standards.org Cell: + 1 703 623 4441


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