Climate Action Reserve ODS Project Protocols Geneva, Switzerland June 14, 2010.

21
Climate Action Reserve ODS Project Protocols Geneva, Switzerland June 14, 2010

Transcript of Climate Action Reserve ODS Project Protocols Geneva, Switzerland June 14, 2010.

Page 1: Climate Action Reserve ODS Project Protocols Geneva, Switzerland June 14, 2010.

Climate Action Reserve ODS Project Protocols

Geneva, SwitzerlandJune 14, 2010

Page 2: Climate Action Reserve ODS Project Protocols Geneva, Switzerland June 14, 2010.

2

Background on the Climate Action Reserve

• Non-profit organization, chartered by California state legislation in 2001

– Mission is to encourage voluntary actions to reduce emissions and to have such emissions reductions recognized

• Balances business, government, and environmental interests

Page 3: Climate Action Reserve ODS Project Protocols Geneva, Switzerland June 14, 2010.

3

What We Do• Develop High Quality Standards

– Convene stakeholders and lead development of standardized protocols for carbon offset projects

• Manage Independent Third Party Verification

– Training and oversight of independent verification bodies

• Operate a Transparent Registry System

– Maintain registry of approved projects

– Issue and track serialized credits generated by projects

Page 4: Climate Action Reserve ODS Project Protocols Geneva, Switzerland June 14, 2010.

Listed & Registered Projects

Page 5: Climate Action Reserve ODS Project Protocols Geneva, Switzerland June 14, 2010.

5

Reserve stats

CRTs registered ~5.2 million (~1 million ODS)

Account holders 325

Projects 350 (3 ODS)

ExchangesCRT futures are traded on: •Chicago Climate Futures Exchange (CCX)•Green Exchange (NYMEX)

Recent prices $5-8 per CRT

Page 6: Climate Action Reserve ODS Project Protocols Geneva, Switzerland June 14, 2010.

6

Performance Standards

• Why a performance standard is different

– The hard work is upfront

– Assess industry practice as a whole, rather than individual project activities

• Less subjective determination to qualify

• More certainty in amount of credits

• Lower risk for developers and investors

• Faster project processing

Page 7: Climate Action Reserve ODS Project Protocols Geneva, Switzerland June 14, 2010.

7

ODS Project Definition

• All ODS destroyed within a twelve month period by a single project developer at a single destruction facility– May come from a single or multiple sourcesIncludes only gases for which production is completely phased out

• Excludes halons

– Refrigerants• Collection and destruction of ODS refrigerant from residential, commercial

and industrial equipment, systems and appliances, or stockpiles

– Foam• Extraction and destruction of ODS blowing agent from foam; or• Destruction of intact foam sourced from building insulation

Page 8: Climate Action Reserve ODS Project Protocols Geneva, Switzerland June 14, 2010.

8

Sources and Destruction

• Acceptable sources– US sources: Must originate from US sources for

destruction in US– Imported sources: Must originate from (one or more)

Article 5 countries for destruction in US• Why only U.S. destruction?

– Role of destruction facility is very important. We only permit destruction at U.S. facilities that are regulated for ODS destruction by U.S. EPA.

• If there were a similar mechanism for overseeing ODS incinerators globally, we would be pleased to collaborate with it.

Page 9: Climate Action Reserve ODS Project Protocols Geneva, Switzerland June 14, 2010.

9

Additionality

• Legal requirement test

• Performance standard test: Must exceed a standard of common practice for ODS management

Page 10: Climate Action Reserve ODS Project Protocols Geneva, Switzerland June 14, 2010.

10

Performance standard test

• Must exceed a “common practice” standard for managing ODS– US: ODS destruction is not common practice,

so all ODS destruction activities are considered additional

– Article 5 Countries: ODS destruction is not common practice, so all ODS destruction activities are considered additional

Page 11: Climate Action Reserve ODS Project Protocols Geneva, Switzerland June 14, 2010.

11

Calculating reductions

• Emission reductions = baseline emissions – project emissions

• Baseline emissions: Sum of all emissions in the baseline scenario over 10 years

• Project emissions: Sum of all emissions in the project over 10 years

Page 12: Climate Action Reserve ODS Project Protocols Geneva, Switzerland June 14, 2010.

12

Baseline scenarios

• US– Refrigerants: Recovered and used to charge existing

equipment– Appliance foam: shredded and landfilled– Building demolition foam: landfilled

• Article 5 countries– Virgin stockpiles of refrigerants: used to recharge

existing equipment– Refrigerants from end-of-life equipment: 100% vented– Appliance foam: shredded and landfilled– Building demolition foam: landfilled

Page 13: Climate Action Reserve ODS Project Protocols Geneva, Switzerland June 14, 2010.

13

Project emissions

• Sum various sources such as– Transportation of gases for destruction– Losses from extraction of foam– Losses from incomplete destruction– Energy use at destruction facility– Emissions from non-ODS substitutes

Page 14: Climate Action Reserve ODS Project Protocols Geneva, Switzerland June 14, 2010.

14

So what does all this mean?

• Destruction of one kg CFC 12– Article 5 source

• Government stockpile: ~10 tonnes CO2e• End of life: ~10.9 tonnes CO2e

– U.S. source• End of life: ~9.58 tonnes CO2e

Page 15: Climate Action Reserve ODS Project Protocols Geneva, Switzerland June 14, 2010.

15

Project Examples

• Project Developer: EOS Climate– Partnered with firm that gathers and recycles

U.S. refrigerators– Instead of reuse, CFC-12 is destroyed– To date, issued ~250,000 CRTs

• Project Developer: Coolgas– Ships ODS to US from private Indian

stockpiles for destruction– To date, issued ~650,000 CRTs

Page 16: Climate Action Reserve ODS Project Protocols Geneva, Switzerland June 14, 2010.

16

Who are the buyers?

• Large industrial firms that expect to be regulated under state or federal climate legislation.

• Financial firms hoping to buy now and sell to regulated entities later.– Banks, hedge funds, private equity funds

• Pure voluntary buyers

Page 17: Climate Action Reserve ODS Project Protocols Geneva, Switzerland June 14, 2010.

17

How does financing work?

• We do not get involved in financial transaction

• Currently, most transactions are through a broker– There are a handful of active CRT brokers– Can be exchange-traded– Common for project developers to pre-sell

some CRTs and get some upfront financing—depends on risk profile

• Helps pay for verification and project costs

Page 18: Climate Action Reserve ODS Project Protocols Geneva, Switzerland June 14, 2010.

18

The bottom line today

• We currently accept Article 5 sourced ODS projects for U.S. destruction from:– Government stockpiles;– Equipment end-of-life.

Page 19: Climate Action Reserve ODS Project Protocols Geneva, Switzerland June 14, 2010.

19

Going forward

• For destruction elsewhere, we are very interested to work with the Ozone Secretariat and others to develop an oversight mechanism for destruction in Article 5 countries.

Page 20: Climate Action Reserve ODS Project Protocols Geneva, Switzerland June 14, 2010.

20

Would a facility be useful?

• In the short-term, voluntary and pre-compliance buyers are generating moderate demand.

• Looking out several years, federal program will have large demand

• Over next 1-3 years, a facility could ramp projects up to scale– Administration would be very simple for

projects registered with the Reserve

Page 21: Climate Action Reserve ODS Project Protocols Geneva, Switzerland June 14, 2010.

21

Contact Information

Joel Levin

[email protected]

www.climateactionreserve.org

523 W. 6th Street, Ste. 428Los Angeles, CA 90014

(213) 891-1444