For
years now, the global initiative to improve the condition of the environment has
brought about many ideas and efforts from countries all over the world. Strong
principles such as sustainable development have instigated people from all walks
of life to partake in these efforts and recognize more than ever the urgency of
our environmental situation.
Still,
with the continuous technological advancement and material development in
today’s society, it has become a hard task for environmentalists to attract
participation to improve the quality of the environment. Theirs is a task that
is between the well-being and comfort that today’s world can provide and the
worsening ecological conditions of the current times.
Until
recently, policy-makers and environmentalists have found ways to make two ends
meet. Now, there is no need to sacrifice the environment for the advancement of
the quality of life and vice-versa. The global climate protection movement has
not only recognized the problem, the urgency, gaps of past suggested solutions
but the possibilities of new solutions albeit giving up the continual global
economic growth.
A
Brief History
It
was in 1988 when the United Nations Environmental
Programme (UNEP) and the World
Metrological Organization (WMO) established the Intergovernmental Panel on
Climate Change (IPCC) as a response to the findings of global warming scientists
and experts tasked to evaluate the amount of scientific knowledge available on
climate change. Through the IPCC, policymakers were provided with authoritative
scientific information to evaluate the current conditions then and its
socioeconomic impacts. It took only two years for these scientists to conclude
that the increasing accumulation of man-made greenhouse gases (GHG) will add to
the warming of the earth’s surface. On the same year, the United Nations
General Assembly launched negotiations to formulate an international treaty on
global climate change protection and in 1991 the United Nations Framework on
Climate Change (UNFCC) was established.
By
1994, the UNFCC was opened for signature with the ultimate objective of
stabilizing atmospheric concentrations of greenhouse gases at safe levels. These
levels are to be achieved during a time frame that will allow ecosystems to
adapt naturally to climate change without disturbing food supply and allowing
economic development to proceed in a manner that was sustainable. The principle
of “common but differentiated responsibilities” was made concrete as
countries were divided into two: Annex I being the industrialized countries and
the non-Annex countries which are mostly developing. Annex I countries were
mandated to decrease the GHG emissions by the year 2000 to their 1990 levels.
The
Kyoto Protocol of 1997 created legally binding obligations for industrialized
countries to lower their GHG emissions. Countries were given the option to
choose which among the six Protocol enumerated GHGs to reduce: carbon dioxide,
methane, nitrous oxide, hydrofluorocarbons (HFCs), perfluorocarbons (PFCs) and
sulfur hexafluoride. Due to the unelaborated provisions of the Kyoto Protocol, a
meeting in Brazil brought about the Marrakech Accords, a more specific guide for
its implementation.
Kyoto
Bends
 |
|
The
Clean Development Mechanism aims to assist developing countries to promote
environmental-friendly investments |
One
of the considerations of the Kyoto Protocol is the high costs for Annex I
countries to reach the level of GHG reduction that is required of them. As a
solution, the Protocol provided three cooperative mechanisms to help Annex I
countries achieve this at lower costs in other countries than they could do
domestically. These are: International Emission Trading where countries are
allowed to transfer parts of their “allowed emissions”, Joint Implementation
(JI) where countries are allowed to claim credit for emissions reductions based
on investments in industrialized countries and the Clean Development Mechanism (CDM)
where emission-reduction projects that assist in creating sustainable
development in developing countries to generate “certified emission
reductions” (CERs) for use by the investor.
The
Clean Development Mechanism aims to assist developing countries to promote
environmental-friendly investments from industrialized country governments and
businesses. CDM projects can be implemented by non-profit, public and private
partnerships. It is a market-based mechanism that targets the private sector
primarily as these may be the recipient of increasing investment flows that they
may get through the CDM projects. Primary considerations for a CDM project
include long-term benefits in terms of climate change mitigation, sustainable
development factors with approval from all parties involved.
Jumpstarting
CDM
For
a country to participate in CDM, there are three basic requirements they have to
comply with: voluntary participation in the CDM, the designation and
establishment of the National CDM Authority, and the country’s ratification of
the Kyoto Protocol. Industrialized countries are further required to establish
the assigned amount of GHG emission to be reduced, a national system for the
estimation of GHGs and an accounting system for the sale and purchase of
emission reductions.
The
CDM cycle starts with the submission of a Project Design and Document (PDD) for
national approval through the National Authority. An independent operational
entity reviews it until its validation and registration. At this point, the
project financing comes in and the project starts. Monitoring is done and is
followed through monitoring reports. On the verification and certification
stage, an independent operational entity reviews the project’s performance and
writes the verification report, certification report and finally, the request
for CERs. This is submitted to the international CDM Executive Board who will
issue the CER.
On
the national level, every country is allowed to make its own rules and
regulations on CDM and develop its own sustainable development criteria. The
National Authority is the focal point of all CDM activities as it serves as the
CDM monitoring agency of a country. It is also the agency that endorses a
proposed CDM project to the international CDM Executive Board for approval and
for certification. Having a National Authority is one of the primary
considerations of investor countries in choosing which countries to work with.
CDM:
Everybody’s Ball Game
The
CDM Information and Guidebook published by the UNEP last December 2003 enlisted
the pertinent characters in the CDM picture and parallel to these, the benefits
they will get from it namely: for developing countries to “promote sustainable
development through investment”; developed countries will “meet their Kyoto
Protocol commitments at low costs”; NGOs to “promote the environment and
development”; for development banks to “promote sustainable development and
create new markets” and so on.
The
CDM is viewed by many as an opportunity to further national sustainable
development but in the long run, the environmental benefits that will be reaped
are far greater than the financial rewards a participant country may get. It is
one of the many ways that countries may work together. One by one, countries are
forming partnerships to start on CDM projects. Step by step, countries are
making themselves CDM-worthy, designating their national authorities and
complying with the requirements. And little by little, the environmental
benefits will hand in hand allow a global economy that considers the
sustainability of life, irregardless of what role it had to play in protecting
our global climate. The CDM coffee is starting to brew.
Sources:
-
CDM
Information and Guidebook, UNEP, 2003
-
Clean
Development Mechanism, Manila Observatory