Stimulating Ambitious Nationally Appropriate Mitigation Actions

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Stimulating Ambitious Nationally Appropriate Mitigation Actions A Project to Catalyze High-Impact NAMAs and Create a Vibrant Practitioner Network June 2011

Transcript of Stimulating Ambitious Nationally Appropriate Mitigation Actions

Stimulating Ambitious Nationally Appropriate

Mitigation Actions A Project to Catalyze High-Impact

NAMAs and Create a Vibrant Practitioner Network

June 2011

The Project

CCAP forms networks of mitigation action practitioners in Latin America and Asia,

concentrating on mid-income developing countries

Mitigation Action Implementation Network (MAIN)

One of the Goals: Support for the International Partnership on Mitigation and MRV

with insights from the ground

The Participants

• Latin America: started in March 2011

Argentina, Caribbean, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica ,

Panama, Peru

• Asia: Likely participants include China, India, Indonesia,

Korea, Malaysia, Pakistan, the Philippines, Singapore,

Thailand, and Vietnam, as well as Pacific Island nations

such as Maldives, Marshall Islands, Tuvalu and

Micronesia.

NAMAS

LCDSLCDS

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-NAMA

-NAMA

-NAMA

Other-NAMA

-NAMA

-NAMA

Energy

-NAMA

-NAMA

-NAMA

Industry

-NAMA

-NAMA

-NAMAMulti-Sector NAMA

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-NAMA

-NAMA

-NAMA

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-NAMA

-NAMA

-NAMA

Other-NAMA

-NAMA

-NAMA

Other-NAMA

-NAMA

-NAMA

Energy

-NAMA

-NAMA

-NAMA

Energy

-NAMA

-NAMA

-NAMA

Industry

-NAMA

-NAMA

-NAMA

Industry

-NAMA

-NAMA

-NAMAMulti-Sector NAMA

LCDS are umbrella strategies/plans for mitigation actions

*Key Design Features of NAMAs

- More specific than overall reduction target or pledge

for an entire country (some confusion on this point)

- More than project-by-project approach of CDM- More than project-by-project approach of CDM

- No final definition yet

- Selected and designed by the respective host

government

- Goal: Put climate on the national policy agenda

The Private Sector and the Implementation of NAMAs

• Involve it from the very beginning of design of NAMAs

• Developing countries can clearly learn from mitigation actions

implemented already elsewhere that were successful in

mobilising the private sector (for example, renewables)

• Outside finance (NAMA support) can help to get green • Outside finance (NAMA support) can help to get green

business models running and showcase their advantages (loan

programs for efficiency - started with money from Annex-1 -

become attractive for local banks in short-time)

• International support can lower risk for investors and attract

attention of local players

*What are Good Practices to Develop and Implement NAMAs?

- The abbreviation NAMAs is confusing to of those not

involved in UNFCCC negotiations on a daily basis

- We should demistify this term and make clear that it is

simply about implementing good nationally simply about implementing good nationally

appropriate mitigation actions

- As in developed countries, it seems best if LCDS and

NAMA development is coordinated in an inter-

ministerial committee which has the backing of the

president or the head of government.

*What are Good Practices to Develop and Implement NAMAs?

Copy and paste the best ideas from

your succesful neighbours and peersyour succesful neighbours and peers

Potential NAMAs being Developed

• Mexico cement “NAMA” (potential)

– Increase use of blended cement to reduce need for energy-intensive clinker (creating

demand for blended cement through regulations, etc.)

– Increase use of alternative fuels (MSW, tires, etc.)

– Targets in these areas � reduce sector emissions by 9% (2020) and 15% (2030) below –BAU

• Argentina freight rail “NAMA” (potential)

– Large-scale, $1.5 bn railway renovation project (GHG, co-benefits)

– Modal switch for freight transport (2% � 20% of agriculture by rail)

– Although already largely funded, incremental components could be funded through

NAMA framework and result in further GHG reductions

– Working on MRV methodology and how to make attractive to donors

Potential NAMAs

Being Developed (cont’d)• Other Potential “NAMAs”

– In Peru: Promoting energy-efficient lighting in the residential and commercial sectors by

removing barriers to the use of efficient lighting technologies (NAMA financing could go

toward public education or EE pilot project)

– In Chile: Renewable energy; energy efficiency in transportation, buildings/housing,

mining operations

– In Colombia: Smart growth, transport-oriented development opportunities; energy – In Colombia: Smart growth, transport-oriented development opportunities; energy

efficiency in housing; renewable energy

WANTED

For another project we are looking for sucess stories

• mitigation projects in developing countries

• Supported with finance from Europe

• already visibles results• already visibles results

- Low carbon technologies applied

- Programs or laws already adopted

- Ambitious national strategies

WANTED

Timm Kraegenow

Center for Clean Air PolicyCenter for Clean Air Policy

[email protected]

+32 474 494 581