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SUMMARY
OF THE CLIMATE CHANGE AGREEMENT IN BONN
6th August, 2001
The agreement
by the Sixth Session (part two) of the Conference of the Parties
to the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change, known as
COP-6, covers four principal areas:
- operating rules for emissions
trading and other market-based mechanisms established under
the Protocol;
- how the sequestration of carbon
by forests and other "sinks" will be credited toward Kyoto
emission targets;
- funding to help developing
countries combat and cope with climate change; and,
- mechanisms to encourage and
enforce compliance with the Kyoto targets.
The Protocol
will take effect only when ratified by at least 55 countries
accounting for at least 55 percent of the industrialised country
emissions in 1990 listed in Annex I. To date Rumania is the
only Annex One country to have ratified.
Jargon:
Annex I - The
list of countries committing to controlling their emissions.
They are all Northern industrialised countries
CDM - Clean Development
Mechanism. Bilateral projects with developing countries to
obtain carbon credits.
COP - The international
climate negotiating meetings are called Conferences of Parties.
The Hague was COP6. Marrakech will be COP7. The Bonn meeting
was specially formulated intermediary meeting called COP6bis
(or COP6b).
KEY ELEMENTS
1. Flexible
Mechanisms
The Protocol
establishes three market-based mechanisms to allow countries
to buy their way out of emissions reductions;
- emissions trading (the buying
and selling of emissions credits among Annex I countries,
which are those with binding emission targets);
- joint implementation (allowing
one country with a target to receive emissions credit for
a specific project undertaken in another country with a
target); and,
- the Clean Development Mechanism,
or CDM (allowing industrialised countries to receive emissions
credit for financing projects that reduce emissions in developing
countries).
Key decisions
reached at Bonn include:
- No quantitative limits on
the use of the mechanisms. Instead, the agreement provides
simply that domestic action shall constitute "a significant
element" of the effort made by Annex I Parties to reach
their targets.
- A 2% levy on CDM projects
to support developing country efforts to cope with the impacts
of climate change. (The agreement does not place a levy
on emissions trading or joint implementation.)
- Nuclear projects under joint
implementation and CDM not specifically excluded, but "Annex
I parties are to refrain from using" credits generated from
such projects.
- Sinks projects will be allowed
under the CDM, but will be limited to afforestation and
reforestation projects during the first target period (2008-2012).
Sinks credits under CDM will be capped at 1% of a country's
base-year emissions.
- Simplified modalities and
procedures for small-scale CDM projects (including renewable
energy and energy efficiency projects).
- A prompt start for CDM through
nominations for the CDM Executive Board prior to COP-7,
with a view to election of the Executive Board at COP-7.
- To address the risk of overselling
emission credits, each Annex I party must hold back from
the market 90% of its allowable emissions, or five times
its most recently reviewed emissions inventory, whichever
is lower. The former test allows countries whose emissions
are higher than their target and who will be net buyers
to sell up to 10% of their allowable emissions. The latter
test allows countries whose emissions are projected to be
below their target to sell their excess credits, but not
to sell credits they are expected to need to cover their
projected emissions.
- Key issues such as fungibility
(allowing credits under all three mechanisms to be treated
equally) and unilateral CDM (allowing developing countries
to generate credits for projects undertaken on their own)
are not addressed in the agreement, and will presumably
be taken up in the "technical" negotiations that will resume
this week.
- The negotiation of the technical
rules of the emissions trading system will continue at COP-7
in Marrakech in November 2001.
2. Sinks
The Protocol
establishes the principle that countries potentially may receive
credit toward their emissions targets for carbon absorbed
by forests, soils and other so-called "sinks." However, the
Protocol left unresolved precisely what sinks activities would
be recognized and how the credits would be calculated.
Key decisions
reached at Bonn include:
- Broad activities eligible
for sinks credits, including forest management, cropland
management and revegetation.
- No overall cap on sink credits.
Instead, the compromise agreement establishes specific limits
on the various categories of sink activities.
- For forest management, Appendix
Z sets forth country-specific caps for each Annex I country.
Japan's forest management cap is 13 million tons (about
4% of its base-year emissions) and Canada's is 12 million
tons (about 10% of its base-year emissions). The Appendix
Z caps include sinks credits generated through joint implementation.
- Credits for cropland management,
grazing land management and revegetation are not capped,
but countries may receive credit only for increased sequestration
over 1990 levels.
3. Finance
Under both the
Convention and the Protocol, industrialised countries agreed
to provide financial resources to developing countries to
help them meet their obligations under the treaties and adapt
to the adverse effects of climate change. Key elements of
this week's agreement include:
Establishment
of three new funds, two under the Convention and one under
the Protocol. Contributions to the Convention funds are voluntary.
The new funds are as follows:
- A special climate change fund,
to provide assistance for the full gamut of climate change
purposes.
- A least industrialised country
fund to support National Adaptation Programmes of Action.
- A Kyoto Protocol adaptation
fund to be funded by the CDM levy as well as voluntary contributions.
- An acknowledgment of the "need"
for "new and additional" funding under the Convention, but
no specific funding level identified and no new legal requirement
on countries to provide funds.
- A political pledge by the
European Union and several other industrialised countries
to contribute $410 million per year. (This figure includes
contributions toward replenishment of the Global Environment
Facility). Canada joined this political pledge, but not
Japan or Australia.
- Establishment of a new expert
group on technology transfer.
4. Compliance
The Protocol
calls for establishment of procedures and mechanisms to address
non-compliance with its provisions. This was one of the most
contentious issues in Bonn. While final action on a compliance
regime was deferred, major elements were defined:
- The legal character of the
compliance regime deferred. At the earliest, a compliance
agreement establishing a binding regime would be adopted
at the first meeting of Kyoto Protocol parties following
the treaty's entry into force.
- Consequences for failing to
meet an emissions target include the following: Restoration
of tons at a rate of 1.3 to 1 (a country must make up its
shortfall, plus 30 percent, in the next target period).
- Suspension of eligibility
to sell credits
- A compliance action plan (CAP).
Developing countries to hold majority of seats on both the
enforcement and facilitative branches of the Compliance
Committee. In the absence of consensus, decisions must be
approved by a majority of both of industrialised country
and developing country representatives.
This summary was freely adapted
from an original report by the Pew Foundation which can be
found at http://www.pewclimate.org/
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