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www.perspectives.ccbutzengeiger@perspectives.cc Where is the CDM’s future? Some critical observations and reform proposals Oxford, September 19 th 2005 Sonja Butzengeiger Perspectives Climate Change Hamburg Institute of International Economics
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www.perspectives.ccbutzengeiger@perspectives.cc Contents of Presentation Recent CDM experiences and problems CDM: lame duck or success story? Real contribution to sustainable development? Slow registration of projects High transaction costs (TAC) Registration/approval risk Post-2012 uncertainty Insufficient incentives for private Annex-B investors Proposed solutions Shortening of approval times, reduction of TAC Long-term planning security Expanded applications for CERs Enhanced SD-benefits (project type, levies) Discussion
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www.perspectives.ccbutzengeiger@perspectives.cc Review of CDM-developments Lame duck or success story? 1997 - Kyoto Protocol 2001 - Marrakech Accords 2002 -Set-up of CDM-EB, development of PDD-template 9 DNA-Host Country, 1 Investor Country 2003 -First baseline-submissions, none of the 35 accepted DNA-boom at year end: 33 + 8 new DNAs 2004 -1 st CDM-project registered Current demand for 1 st Kyoto-Period 2-3 billion tons CO 2-eq, (of which 1.5 billion by funds alone)
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www.perspectives.ccbutzengeiger@perspectives.cc Lame duck or success story? > 175 projects, estimated CER- volume 341 Mio. until 2012
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www.perspectives.ccbutzengeiger@perspectives.cc (April 2005) Trends in submitted project methodologies 45% Small Scale !
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www.perspectives.ccbutzengeiger@perspectives.cc Real contribution to SD?
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www.perspectives.ccbutzengeiger@perspectives.cc Barriers against CDM-investment Slow registration of CDM-projects Lead-time of 1-2 years (with/without AM) Cut-off date 31.12.05 for pre-registration crediting High up-front transaction costs Regular scale projects with AM PDD + validation + registration = 25,000-60,000 EUR Verification = 5,000 -10,000 EUR EB Administration fee = ? Host country approval = ? Lower for small scale projects, but generally not viable if less than 20,000 CERs/year
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www.perspectives.ccbutzengeiger@perspectives.cc CDM Barriers II Difficult additionality assessment Business as usual versus additional benefits Opposed by business, but needed from environmental and SD- perspective Consolidated additionality test of EB - complex High risk of rejection Average rejection rate is 50% Especially for complex project types as energy efficiency + transport (SD-benefits), and forestry Low incentives for business engagement in past Now EU-ETS Post 2012-uncertainty Closing window for investment opportunities
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www.perspectives.ccbutzengeiger@perspectives.cc Contents of Presentation Recent CDM experiences and problems CDM: lame duck or success story? Real contribution to sustainable development? Slow registration of projects High transaction costs (TAC) Registration/approval risk Post-2012 uncertainty Insufficient incentives for private Annex-B investors Proposed solutions Shortening of approval times, reduction of TAC Long-term planning security Expanded applications for CERs Enhanced SD-benefits (project type, levies) Discussion
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www.perspectives.ccbutzengeiger@perspectives.cc Proposed Solutions I Shortening of approval periods Strict timelines for international bodies need to secure sufficient personal capacities Shortening of pre-registration period (4 instead of 8 weeks) Accelerated development of consolidated methodologies Reduction of TACs Allowing bundling for unlimited sizes Centralized database for baseline data Sectoral CDM Streamlined but environmentally integer additionality determination Decision on administration fee and cross-subsidization of small projects
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www.perspectives.ccbutzengeiger@perspectives.cc Proposed Solutions II Contribution to SD Financially supported development of methodologies for energy efficiency and transport Higher adaptation levy for low-development benefit projects Concentration of capacity building in low income countries with high emissions Increased incentives for business participation Crediting of CERs against domestic climate policy instruments Planning certainty beyond 2012
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www.perspectives.ccbutzengeiger@perspectives.cc Proposed Solutions III Provide long-term CDM perspective No such perspectives without long-term international climate policy regime Constructive Post-2012 negotiations need both additional commitments by current Annex-B countries, but also clear commitments by recently industrialised countries and major emitters from the developing world. Difficulty to merge intensity targets with CDM-concept Unilateral declaration of post-2012 CER validity
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www.perspectives.ccbutzengeiger@perspectives.cc The floor is open.. Discussion
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