Nairobi: Second all-Africa Carbon Forum to be held
Second all-Africa Carbon Forum to be held in Nairobi, Kenya
on 3–5 March
2010
Conference, Trade Fair and Capacity
Development to build on CDM gains on
continent — IETA,
UNEP, UNDP, WB, UNITAR, UNCTAD AfDB and UNFCCC
(Bonn, 16
February 2010) – The programme is set and the list
of
participants is growing fast for the second all-Africa
Carbon Forum, set to
take place at the United Nations
Gigiri complex in Nairobi, Kenya, 3–5
March.
The
forum, an initiative of the Nairobi Framework partner UN
agencies and
the International Emissions Trading
Association (IETA), will build on the
growing interest in
the Kyoto Protocol’s clean development mechanism
(CDM)
in Africa.
Under the CDM, projects that reduce
greenhouse gas emissions and contribute
to sustainable
development can earn saleable certified emission
reduction
credits. Thus, the CDM is stimulating
investment in clean, sustainable
development, while
helping to address climate change.
Countries are eager to
scale up and extend the benefits of the CDM to
more
countries. The all-Africa Carbon Forum, which will
bring together project
developers, buyers, service
providers, national CDM representatives and
various other
private and public sector stakeholders, is an important
part
of that effort.
The more than 500 expected
participants will include some 60
national
representatives – so-called CDM designated
national authorities and
national focal points – from
more than 30 African countries. The conference
programme
is focused on topics of special interest to CDM in Africa
with
the expressed intention of catalyzing CDM activity
on the continent –
emerging opportunities in the area
of agriculture, forestry and land use;
carbon finance in
waste management; reducing emissions from
deforestation
and forest degradation (REDD) in Africa;
opportunities for renewable
energy; Africa-friendly
methodologies and programmes of multiple CDM
project
activities; and raising capacity of CDM stakeholders, to
name a few
topics.
In November 2006, then
Secretary-General Kofi Annan launched the
Nairobi
Framework, aimed at spreading the benefits of the
CDM. Since then, interest
in the mechanism in Africa has
grown, and with it the number of projects
and hosting
countries. Still, Africa accounts for less than 2 per cent
of
the 2,040 plus CDM projects registered to date in 62
countries.
The United Nations Development Programme
(UNDP), United Nations Environment
Programme (UNEP), the
World Bank (WB), United Nations Institute for
Training
and Research (UNITAR), United Nations Conference on Trade
and
Development (UNCTAD), the African Development Bank
and the UNFCCC
secretariat have joined to implement the
Nairobi
Framework.