ICCP KEY MECHANISM ISSUES (listed in order of importance)
Supplementarity -- To what extent will a given country be allowed to rely upon credits derived
from external sources, versus achievement of reductions/sequestration via domestic actions.
The U.S. favors no elaboration of supplementarity. The negotiating text contains a variety of
options, including: no elaboration, suspension of mechanisms if domestic action is not the primary
means of achieving reductions, a 50% cap, or a 25-30% cap.
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ICCP position -- The US should continue to oppose efforts to impose any quantitative or
additional supplementarity requirements at COP 6.
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Fungibility -- Will the credits accruing under the various mechanisms be fully fungible, i.e.,
interchangeable (all will be denominated in tons of CO2-equivalent reductions) and eligible for
multiple transactions. The value of a CER would be significantly reduced, for example, if it cannot
be subsequently traded. A number of developing countries are concerned that CDM activities and
credits be kept separate from JI credits. The current negotiating text includes options for
fungibility and non-fungibility.
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ICCP position -- Credits from the 3 different mechanisms should be fully fungible, eligible for
multiple transactions, and their origins preserved in their respective registry listings.
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Additionality -- What tests will be applied to specific JI or CDM projects to ensure that they are
benefiting the environment and contributing to sustainable development in ways that would not
have otherwise occurred. Ascertaining whether a reduction represents "business as usual" is
cumbersome and subjective, especially in instances where new capacity is being added.
Negotiating text includes four different proposed tests for this: environmental additionality
(whether emissions are less than would have been), financial additionality (whether funding
displaces other resources), investment additionality (whether value of the credits is key to
economic viability of the project), and technology additionality (whether technology is best
available in given circumstance).
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ICCP position -- Only environmental additionality should be considered, as specified by the
Protocol.
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Share of Proceeds -- The Protocol provides for a portion of the proceeds from CDM projects to be
set aside for administrative expenses and to assist developing country Parties that are particularly
vulnerable to the adverse effects of climate change to meet the costs of adaptation. The current
draft text extends this notion to JI and emissions trading and contains multiple options for how
(and how much) such a share is to be calculated.
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ICCP position -- A share of the proceeds should only be set aside from CDM projects, as
specified by the Protocol. The surrender of a high proportion of the proceeds will act as a deterrent
to industry's participation in the CDM process.
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Public Involvement -- Proposals in the current text would facilitate (in some cases require)
internet-driven, open-ended public input at both the policy and project decision making levels,
even where host country regulations would not normally provide for same or would limit same to,
for example, the local community.
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ICCP position -- ICCP's principles on CDM state that the process must be "simple," "flexible,"
"cost effective," and "unconstrained" in order for industry to want to participate. Open-ended
public participation will not be conducive to achieving these principles.
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Equity -- Whether allocation of credits/development of projects under the mechanisms would be
constrained by some tests of geographic or social equity (text includes notion of contributing to
long-term goal of convergence of per capita emissions levels between developed and developing
countries).
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ICCP position -- Equity considerations are not specified in the Protocol and should not be part of
project evaluation.
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Project Limitations -- Text includes no nuclear power option and option of no sinks until science
is clarified. European Council proposes that a positive list of eligible projects be adopted at COP 6
and no inclusion of sinks in CDM.
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ICCP position -- Arbitrary limitations on the types of projects that can be undertaken under CDM
should not be included. The Protocol clearly allows for carbon sequestration projects.
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ADDITIONAL ISSUES
Entity Participation -- Private "legal entities" must be assured the opportunity to participate in
the holding and transfer of ERUs, CERs, and AAUs with the consent of the directly-involved
Parties.
Baseline Determination -- What standards will apply in determining what the "business-as-usual"
baseline is, against which to judge relative improvement in emissions or sequestration for specific
JI or CDM projects. This becomes very tricky when one looks beyond end-of-pipe retrofits or
replacement technologies. This is especially true in the case of CDM, where the aim is to ensure
that new development occurs in a more responsible manner, since the test must consider both
technological capability and prevailing conditions in the host country.
Validation, Registration, Certification, Verification -- How will specific projects be judged to
have met the criteria; how will they be registered and accounted for, and how will they be
monitored to verify that they have in fact achieved the reductions/ sequestration for which the
credits were awarded. The text currently has the potential to treat all of these as separate decision
steps, seriously compromising efficiency and timeliness.
Project Documentation/Confidentiality -- Text contains elaborate documentation requirements
in conjunction with project-level activities for which CDM or JI credit is being sought, raising
questions of demarcation point between confidential business information and public disclosure
and public involvement mandates.
Institutional Structure -- What new or existing institutions will take on what policy and decision
making roles under the mechanisms and how will they relate to each other and to the overall
decision making body of the Protocol (the Conference of the Parties to the Convention serving as
the Meeting of the Parties to the Protocol -- the so-called COP/MOP).
Liability -- Annex I countries can trade away a portion of their allocation of carbon emissions, as
long as they reduce emissions commitment level by that amount. However, there is question as to
who bears liability should it subsequently be determined that their actual emissions exceeded that
level: is it "buyer beware" or does the country of origin for the "credit" have extra liability in that
circumstance, with the acquiring country retaining full rights under the initial transaction. This
question can have spillover effects if the acquiring country turns around and apportions the extra
rights secured in the trade to, for example, industry -- does the company using those extra rights
suddenly see them evaporate.