Carbon project market leads with REDD methodology
Wednesday, 01 September 2010 10:47    PDF Print E-mail

The landmark approval of a carbon accounting methodology to underpin REDD projects in Asia shows the project-based voluntary carbon market leading the way in the development of mechanisms to halt the destruction of climate-critical tropical forests.

Last week, project proponents announced they had won the first approval for a project methodology under the Voluntary Carbon Standard for REDD activities, or reduced emissions from deforestation and degradation. The methodology for calculating carbon emissions savings from forest preservation will be applied to a project attacking deforestation on its frontline – conserving 100,000 hectares of peatland forest in the Rimba Raya Biodiversity Reserve in Indonesia’s Kalimantan province on the island of Borneo. Borneo along with neighbouring Sumatra, is also home to the threatened orang-utan, while the region has some of highest rates of deforestation worldwide.

The destruction of rainforest and the draining of forest peat swamps in the tropics is estimated responsible for 15 per cent of the world’s total human-induced greenhouse emissions – billions of tonnes of carbon dioxide (CO2) per year. The Rimba Raya project aims to prevent up to 75 million tonnes of CO2 emissions over 30 years by preventing rainforest being cleared for plantations.

While the approval of the methodology is a milestone, the first such carbon accounting plan for implementing REDD to achieve VCS double approval, the project upon which the methodology is based must itself yet be validated by third-party certifiers. Rimba Raya is also applying for certification under the Climate, Community and Biodiversity (CCB) Standard for the recognition of the environmental and social benefits beyond carbon savings that would flow from the project - namely protecting valuable orang-utan habitat and the livelihoods of local communities.

Project developers InfiniteEarth and Gazprom Marketing and Trading, the chief proponents of the Rimba Raya project, had plenty of support for the development of the methodology from a large number of stakeholders, private and public. These include the Clinton Foundation, Shell, Winrock International and Orangutan Foundation International. Under the VCS rules, new carbon offset project methodologies must undergo a dual approval process by two separate third-party certifiers, in this case Rainforest Alliance and Bureau Veritas.

The widespread buy-in for the methodology makes it and the project its designed for torchbearers for project-based REDD and REDD+. The resulting VCS methodology approval is an indication of the project-based carbon offset sector moving out in front in the development of worldwide REDD mechanisms targeting tropical deforestation. The methodology now approved is applicable to other conservation projects that avoid planned land-use conversion in tropical peat swamp forests in South-East Asia.

The UN, World Bank, EU, national governments and others are trying to develop a global REDD+ system based on large national and regional programmes with credits issued at the government level. But getting international agreement and working through the inherent bureaucracy attached to this high-level approach is proving a challenge. Norway and Indonesia have sought to cut through the multilateral impediments, announcing a bilateral agreement in May aimed at placing a moratorium on deforestation across Indonesia in return for a $1 billion funding grant from Oslo.

One of the big challenges facing the establishment of a global REDD mechanism is ensuring a credible system of monitoring, reporting and verification of emissions reductions, MRV in shorthand, across the national programmes of many developing countries.

This is just what approved methodologies such as the VCS example address, providing robust carbon accounting, albeit on a smaller scale. Other standards are developing REDD methodologies and project designs too. The American Carbon Registry is currently taking public comments on a methodology for avoiding planned deforestation that would underpin one type of international REDD project.

The CCB Standard has already validated the design of two REDD projects in a similar vein to Rimba Raya; the Ulu Masen forest preservation and orang-utan project in Sumatra’s Aceh province and the Juma sustainable development project in Brazil’s Amozonas state. However, these two projects and a string of other REDD projects in Indonesia and around the world still require a methodology such as the VCS’s to properly account for their carbon emissions savings in order to generate credits.

While the VCS certification for Rimba Raya would produce VER carbon credits for sale into the voluntary carbon market, there is also the possibility that such VCS credits could receive official recognition, and hence be tradable, under a future UN REDD scheme.

Source: carbonpositive

Some rights for the image is reserved under Creative Commons license

Comments (0)

Subscribe to this comment's feed

Write comment

smaller | bigger
security image
Write the displayed characters

busy
 

Document

Documentation to facilitate negotiations among Parties. Note by the Chair. Addendum. Land use, land-use change and forestry.

Documentation to facilitate negotiations among Parties. Note by the Chair. Addendum. Land use, land-use change and forestry.AbstractThis addendum is a draft decision text on options and proposals on how to ... + READ MORE

Financial governance and Indonesia’s Reforestation Fund during the Soeharto and post-Soeharto periods, 1989–2009: a political economic analysis of lessons for REDD+

This study analyses Indonesia’s experience with its Reforestation Fund, and examines implications for REDD+. The Reforestation Fund (Dana Reboisasi, DR) is a national forest fund financed by a volume-based timber levy to support ... + READ MORE

Draft decision -/CMP.5: Proposal by the President. Copenhagen Accord.

Draft decision -/CMP.5: Proposal by the President. Copenhagen Accord.NotesAgenda item 15High-level segmentDocument codeFCCC/KP/CMP/2009/L.9Publication date18 December 2009Source: ... + READ MORE

Draft decision -/CP.15: Proposal by the President. Copenhagen Accord.

Draft decision -/CP.15: Proposal by the President. Copenhagen Accord.NotesAgenda item 9High-level segmentDocument codeFCCC/CP/2009/L.7Publication date18 December 2009Source: ... + READ MORE

Draft decision -/CMP.5: Outcome of the work of the Ad Hoc Working Group on Further Commitments for Annex I Parties under the Kyoto Protocol. Proposal by the President.

Draft decision -/CMP.5: Outcome of the work of the Ad Hoc Working Group on Further Commitments for Annex I Parties under the Kyoto Protocol. Proposal by the President.NotesAgenda item 15High-level ... + READ MORE

More in: Analysis, Data & information, UNFCCC negotiation, Statement & announcement

Forest & REDD

New global carbon map for 2.5 billion ha of forests

News image

2.5-billion-ha carbon map shows forests store 250B tons of carbon Forest carbon stock Tropical forests across Latin America, Africa, and Southeast Asia stored 247 gigatons of carbon — more than 30 years' worth of current emissions ... + READ MORE

Is Indonesia’s Program to Stop Deforestation in Meltdown?

News image

Back in December, I wrote an article for Mother Jones about Indonesia's efforts to reduce its levels of deforestation and, by extension, its greenhouse gas emissions, which are the third highest in the world, trailing ... + READ MORE

More Than 20 Years of Forest Carbon Yield Plenty of Lessons for Investors

It's more than two decades since a handful of environmental non-profits and green industrialists first began experimenting with mechanisms that slow global warming by funding the preservation of rainforests.  In the ensuing decades, we've ... + READ MORE

Palm oil giant vows to spare most valuable Indonesian rainforest

News image

Golden Agri-Resources – the world's second highest palm oil producer – bows to pressure from the west The world's second biggest palm oil company has agreed to halt deforestation in valuable areas of Indonesian forest, bowing to pressure ... + READ MORE

Prince Charles: 'direct relationship' between ecosystems and the economy

News image

At an EU meeting in Brussels, dubbed the Low Carbon Prosperity Summit, the UK's Prince Charles made the case that without healthy ecosystems, the global economy will suffer. "We have to see that there ... + READ MORE

More in: Forest & REDD

Climate Change

Poor will pay the price to cut carbon emissions

News image

While Australians grapple with the idea of putting a price on carbon, in many developing countries the choice looks more like a trade-off between national development out of poverty a... + READ MORE

World off course on climate; renewables vital

News image

(Reuters) - The world is off course in fighting climate change and governments need to boost green energies to build new momentum, the head of the U.N. panel of climate ... + READ MORE

Non-Aligned Movement vital to battle against climate change, Ban says

News image

Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon today called on the Non-Aligned Movement (NAM) of more than 100 countries to assist in “urgent global action” to combat the threat posed by climate change. ... + READ MORE

Nauru will use UN spotlight to confront developed world over climate change

News image

The smallest nation in the UN is about to take the AOSIS chair at a time when low-lying coastal countries are gravely threatened Last month I returned to Nauru, ... + READ MORE

Japan wants new CO2 offset scheme to complement U.N.

News image

(Reuters) - Japan's idea for a new carbon offset scheme would complement an existing U.N. mechanism and make it easier for developing countries to access ... + READ MORE

More in: Climate Change