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Global Warming Solutions Generate Excitement
at Carbon Expo
COLOGNE, Germany,
May 11, 2005 (ENS) -
Limiting emissions of the greenhouse gas
carbon
dioxide is serious business, yet the effort
took on a festive air today with the opening
of Carbon Expo 2005 in Cologne. The second
annual fair and conference for emissions
trading and the carbon market has attracted
134 exhibitors from 50 countries, and some
1,000 participants from around theworld,
including high level government officials,
business leaders, carbon market specialists,
and civil society organizations. The huge
number of people here at Carbon Expo shows
that the carbon market is maturing," said
Joke Waller-Hunter, executive secretary of
the United Nations Framework Convention on
Climate Change. "When looking at the latest
scientific evidence on climate change a
sense of urgency must prevail. We must
prevent dangerous interference with the
climate system before it is too late," she
told the opening conference session.
Exhibitors from 50
countries offer their wares on the Carbon
Expo show floor. (Photo courtesy
Carbon Expo 2005)
The EU Emissions
Trading Scheme for the greenhouse gas carbon
dioxide (CO2) came into force in the 25 EU
member states on January 1. The Kyoto
Protocol took effect February 16.
Both regimes make
use of flexible mechanisms to reduce CO2
emissions resulting from the burning of
coal, oil and gas. These emissions blanket
the Earth, trapping the heat of the Sun
close to the planet.
The flexible
mechanism allow rich countries and companies
to buy emission reductions credits through
climate friendly projects in either
developing countries or in other
industrialized countries and count those
relatively low cost reductions towards their
own national emissions targets.
As a result,
projects in developing countries get new
sources of financing for sustainable
development in the energy, industrial and
waste management sectors, land
rehabilitation, and clean technologies.
Industrialized countries can meet part of
their Kyoto obligations, while the threat of
climate change is reduced at lower overall
cost.
These systems have
given rise to a market for trading carbon
dioxide emissions credits that is being
stimulated by the networking taking place in
Cologne.
Bärbel Höhn,
Environment Minister the German state of
North Rhine-Westphalia where Cologne is
located, told the opening session, "Carbon
Expo has become an international platform
for promoting the carbon market. Emissions
trading is the most powerful tool we have to
deal with climate change."
The World Bank
staged the event together with the
International Emissions Trading Association
(IETA) and trade show organizer Koelnmesse.
IETA chief Andrei
Marco called the second Carbon Expo "a major
success."
"Much has changed
since Carbon Expo I last year," said Marco.
"Kyoto is in force, new companies are
joining the market and here we can both do
business and do good for the planet."
UK Secretary for
Environment, Food and Rural Affairs Margaret
Beckett addresses Carbon Expo participants.
(Photo courtesy Carbon Expo 2005)
"The UK has already
demonstrated that de-carbonization does not
have to come at economic cost," UK
Environment Secretary Margaret Beckett told
the opening session this morning. "There are
costs of action but compared to the
potential costs of climate change, these
costs are moderate. The UK government firmly
believes that emission trading is key in
achieving our greenhouse emission reduction
targets."
Several speakers
called for continuity of the global carbon
market beyond 2012, when both the Kyoto
Protocol and the European Unions Emissions
Trading Scheme are set to expire.
World Bank Senior
Manager for Sustainable Development Ken
Newcombe, said, "Several billion dollars are
represented here in Carbon Expo - companies
that want to buy carbon assets in developing
countries. Twenty-five high level
representatives from developing countries
are offering these assets. Now is the time
to create the public-private partnerships
that can provide the bridge between the
Kyoto era and the future after 2012."
The carbon funds
featured at the expo include, among others,
the European Carbon Fund, the Japanese
Greenhouse Gas Reduction Fund, the Austrian
Clean Development Mechanism/ Joint
Implementation (CDM/JI) Program,
Eco-Securities-Standard Bank Carbon
Facility, Baltic TGF, Belgium CDM/JI Tender,
The World Conservation Union, IUCN Climate
Fund - Denmark Carbon Facility and JI
Tender, and a series of World Bank managed
carbon funds.
World Bank Senior
Manager for Sustainable Development Ken
Newcombe (Photo courtesy Carbon Expo
2005)
The World Bank manages
more than $US850 million through different
carbon funds, including the newly created
Spanish Carbon Fund. Arturo Aizpiri, Spain's
secretary of state for climate change, said
Spain's participation, "proves our
commitment to move forward in fighting
climate change."
The event provides
developing countries with a professional
business platform, enabling them to showcase
their products, technologies and services
and to attract new customers.
Tree planting and
renewable energy projects, fuel efficiency
programs, energy efficiency software,
measurement and instrument calibrating
services, carbon saving project designers,
validation and quality assurance companies,
environmental publishers are some of the
exhibitors showcasing their climate
solutions.
The World Bank is
supporting the participation of project
developers and government representatives
from 25 developing and threshold countries.
Countries from Africa, Asia, North and South
America and central and eastern Europe are
presenting their climate friendly emission
reduction projects at the Expo.
Mayor of Cologne
and Chairman of the Supervisory Board of
Koelnmesse Fritz Schramma told the opening
session, "The Kyoto Protocol, which came
into effect on 16th February 2005, has made
developing countries attractive once and for
all as locations for projects aimed at
reducing emissions and as partners in the
effort to protect our climate."
Schramma said the
event offers companies "an outstanding
opportunity to find out how and where they
can acquire emissions certificates by
exporting mission-reducing technologies,
thus generating additional income for their
investment."
"Another focus will
be on reducing the risks and uncertainties
associated with private investments in
projects for reducing greenhouse gas
emissions in developing and threshold
countries," he said.
Land Use
Certification Standards Debut at Carbon Expo
Standards
certifying land-use projects that reduce
global warming while helping communities and
conserving biodiversity were launched at the
2005 Carbon Expo today by the Climate,
Community and Biodiversity Alliance (CCBA).
The CCBA is a
unique partnership among research
institutions, corporations and environmental
groups. The Participating Groups founded the
CCBA and contributed to the development of
the CCB standards. The independent Advising
Institutions facilitated the revision of the
draft standards based on public comments and
field testing.
Participating
Groups include: BP, Center for Environmental
Leadership in Business at Conservation
International, GFA Terra Systems, The
Hamburg Institute for International
Economics, Intel, The Nature Conservancy,
Pelangi, SC Johnson, and Weyerhaeuser.
The Advising
Institutions are: the Tropical Agricultural
Research and Higher Education Center of
Costa Rica, The World Agroforestry Center,
and the Center for International Forestry
Research.
"We've seen
tremendous uptake of the standards across a
wide-variety of real world projects." said
John Niles, manager of the CCBA and one of
the authors of the standards. "We've been
surprised at how excited people are about
the CCB Standards."
"Several of the
World Bank's BioCarbon Fund projects meet
the standards. Some of the largest
environmental groups in the world are
already using the CCB Standards to design
and implement carbon projects," Niles said.
The State Forestry
Administration of China has announced that
it will use the CCB Standards to develop new
projects that concurrently fight global
warming, conserve biodiversity and help
local communities.
The new projects
will measure changes in carbon stocks, use
primarily native species, and involve local
communities in project design and benefit
sharing.
The new
multiple-benefit projects will be designed
for the Kyoto Protocol's Clean Development
Mechanism (CDM). The CDM allows developed
countries that have ratified the Kyoto
Protocol to invest in climate change
mitigation projects in developing countries
and use the resulting carbon credits against
their Kyoto obligations.
State Forestry
Administration's Deputy Director with the
Carbon Sequestration Management Office,
Chunfeng Wang announced, "As an agency in
charge of carbon sequestration management,
we would like to facilitate the combination
of the CCB Standards with current Chinese
Afforestation and Reforestation criteria in
Clean Development Mechanism projects and
promote testing and extension to other
reforestation projects in China."
The SFA will work
with the Climate, Community & Biodiversity
Alliance, The Nature Conservancy,
Conservation International, research
institutes from the Chinese Academy of
Sciences, and other partners to implement
these new projects. The Yunnan and Sichuan
provincial forestry departments will be the
main implementing agencies.
"We have created
the potential for large-scale conservation
and policy change," commented Zhang Shuang
of The Nature Conservancy.
"By the end of the
year, US$50 million worth of land use
projects worldwide will be using the CCB
Standards," said Niles. "This represents a
tremendous paradigm shift in land management
for many parts of the world."
Carbon Expo Will
Be Carbon Neutral
Tanzanian tree
planters will offset the CO2 emissions from
Carbon Expo 2005.
(Photo courtesy
TIST)
The organizers of
Carbon Expo 2005 are planning to make the
event carbon neutral by purchasing
greenhouse gas emission reductions from the
Tanzania Small Group Tree Plantings Project
to offset emissions arising from travel and
energy use associated with the event.
Thousands of
farmers from impoverished areas in Tanzania
are planting trees and switching to
conservation tillage. As a result they
restore soil fertility, create a supply of
fuelwood, save capital for the future, and
sequester carbon dioxide above and below
ground.
Two thousand mature
trees account for about 1,000 metric tons of
carbon dioxide equivalent (tCO2e). This will
amount to large quantities of carbon
emission reductions that will be available
for sale to the voluntary carbon market.
Carbon sale
proceeds are channeled to the local
villagers by Clean Air Action Corporation
through a network of rural banks throughout
Tanzania.
Visit Carbon Expo
2005 online at:
http://www.carbonexpo.com/
View the new CCB
Standards at:
http://www.climate-standards.org/standards/index.html
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