Kyoto Protocol’s Clean Development Mechanism 5000th Project
(Bonn,
15 November 2012) – The Kyoto Protocol’s clean
development mechanism (CDM), the international market-based
tool that incentivizes greenhouse gas emission reduction
projects in developing countries, has registered its 5,000th
project. The Los Cocos Wind Farm Project, located in the
south-western province of Pedernales in the Dominican
Republic, expects to annually generate 74,200 MWh of
electricity and displace 54,183 tonnes of CO2 emissions from
electricity previously generated at fossil fuel fired power
plants. "This is just the latest in a long line of
impressive achievements made by the CDM," said UNFCCC
Executive Secretary Christiana Figueres. "In less than 10
years, the CDM has attracted more than USD 215 billion in
investment in mitigation and has proven that carbon markets
and market-based mechanisms have the ability to bring in
substantial private sector support for mitigation and
sustainable development." There are registered CDM
projects in 81 countries worldwide, ranging from projects
that reduce emissions by replacing inefficient wood stoves,
to solar power projects that displace fossil fuels, to large
industrial projects that destroy extremely potent greenhouse
gases (GHGs). In September, the one billionth certified
emission reduction (CER) credit under the CDM was issued to
a biomass plant in India. The CDM is estimated to have
provided between USD 9.5 and 13.5 billion dollars of direct
benefit to developing countries through the sale of
CERs.
While prices for CERs have dropped over the past
year, Figueres points out that this is a matter of
under-demand and stresses the need for countries to increase
their level of ambition to reduce GHG emissions. "I say
that the problem is one of ‘under-demand’ and not
‘over-supply’ because even if every last unit available
in markets today were used or cancelled to meet mitigation
targets, we would still be far from reaching the Parties’
goal to limit global warming to 2 degrees or better," she
said. Projects registered under the CDM must produce real
and transparent reductions in greenhouse gas emissions while
contributing to sustainable development. Last December, when
they met at the UN Climate Change Conference in South
Africa, governments agreed a second commitment period for
the Kyoto Protocol and confirmed a continuing key role for
market-based approaches like the CDM. At the upcoming
conference in Qatar, parties are expected to define the
length of the second commitment period, either five or eight
years, to begin 1 January, 2013. "The CDM has passed
another important milestone, again confirming the support
the mechanism has gained in countries around the world,"
said Duan Maosheng, Chair of the CDM Executive
Board. "What we need now from Kyoto Protocol countries
when they meet in Qatar later this month is their clear
recognition of how far the CDM has come in terms of quality
assurance and efficiency, and of the mechanism’s
continuing role in the international response to climate
change." For more information on the Los Cocos Wind Farm
Project, CDM project 7093, visit: https://cdm.unfccc.int/Projects/DB/RWTUV1346059974.32/view About
the CDM With 5,000 registered projects in 81developing
countries, the CDM has proven to be a powerful mechanism to
deliver finance for emission-reduction projects and
contribute to sustainable development. About the UNFCCC
With 195 Parties, the United Nations Framework Convention on
Climate Change (UNFCCC) has near universal membership and is
the parent treaty of the 1997 Kyoto Protocol. The Kyoto
Protocol has been ratified by 193 of the UNFCCC Parties.
Under the Protocol, 37 States, consisting of highly
industrialized countries and countries undergoing the
process of transition to a market economy, have legally
binding emission limitation and reduction commitments. The
ultimate objective of both treaties is to stabilize
greenhouse gas concentrations in the atmosphere at a level
that will prevent dangerous human interference with the
climate system. ENDS
Kyoto Protocol’s Clean Development Mechanism
Registers 5000th Project Read The Release On Our
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The clean development mechanism (CDM)
allows emission-reduction projects in developing countries
to earn certified emission reductions (CERs), each
equivalent to one tonne of CO2. CERs can be traded and
sold, and used by industrialized countries to meet a part of
their emission reduction targets under the Kyoto
Protocol.