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Introduction to the Gold Standard

Introduction to the Gold Standard. Gold Standard in a Nutshell. Who we are: a non-profit organization under Swiss law that operates a certification scheme for premium quality carbon credits Endorsed by over 65 NGOs How we got started:

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Introduction to the Gold Standard

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  1. Introduction to the Gold Standard

  2. Gold Standard in a Nutshell Who we are: • a non-profit organization under Swiss law that operates a certification scheme for premium quality carbon credits • Endorsed by over 65 NGOs How we got started: • The Gold Standard quality benchmark emerged and has evolved in parallel with the emergence and maturation of carbon offset markets. It was developed by a group of NGOs led by WWF, SSN and HELIO International and launched in 2003.

  3. Gold Standard in a Nutshell – cont’d What we stand for: • promoting sustainable development through carbon offset markets that are characterized by transparency and equality of access for all market participants What we do: • GS registers projects that reduce GHG emissions in ways that contribute to sustainable development and certifies their carbon credits for sale on both compliance and voluntary offset markets.

  4. Gold Standard in a Nutshell – cont’d How we are governed: • Foundation Board, the Technical Advisory Committee and the Secretariat How we are funded: • Core funding from both public and private sector contributors and additional revenues from sponsorship agreements and fees

  5. Overview: Our Global Presence

  6. Guiding Principles Bottom-up participatory approach to local SD Conservativeness Transparency Pragmatism

  7. The Gold Standard Market • Voluntary Market • Issue VERs • Benchmark standard • Premium VER price • Promotes innovation • Compliance Market • Label CERs • Promotes participatory approaches through stakeholder involvement and acceptance • SD

  8. GS v2.1 Rule Books “Requirements” Presents the fundamental principles and ‘hard’ rules “Toolkit” and its Annexes Describes the project cycle, provides examples and detailed instructions on the use of the GS Annexes include: Templates, GS Terms & Conditions, Cover Letter, GS Registry Operation, Fee Schedule, etc.  Available at: http://www.cdmgoldstandard.org/Gold-Standard-Version-2-1.355.0.html

  9. GS v2.1 Project Documentation UNFCCC PDD templates All GS projects must use latest UNFCCC Project Design Document templates GS Passport Provides all required GS-specific information not already covered in the PDD (fixed template) Sustainability Assessments

  10. GS Registry • Available at: goldstandard.apx.com • Every project developer and auditor must open a registry account • One account per entity • PD must select DOE for validation (or verification) in order for DOE to have access to project account • If DOE cannot access project account, check if PD has selected the DOE

  11. GS Registry

  12. Introduction to Methodologies Carbon accounting & monitoring emissions reductions • Voluntary Market • 7 VER methodologies • RE and EE • Find the most current list under “Current Rules” tab on our website • CDM • Renewable Energy • End-use energy efficiency

  13. New VER Methodologies • Proposals for new GS-VER methodologies may be submitted • Fee: USD $500 + cost of two external experts • Procedure described in Toolkit Chapter 5 • DOEs are not involved in methodology & tool approval process

  14. Pre-evaluation • - Eligibility • Additionality • Sustainability Open Registry Account • Local Stakeholder Consult. • non technical summary • draft PDD and Passport GS NGOs listed • New methodology • draft submission • approval process • Project Final Design • PDD + Passport: • Additionality • Baseline & project emissions • ‘Do no harm’, SD Matrix • Carbon & SD Monitoring Plans • EIA, etc. • MoU (for fast tracked projects) • Retroactive Registration • pre-feasibility assessment • fast track GS TAC RE Issued GS TAC RE • GS Certification/Issuance • 3 weeks review period • issuance of credits/labels • serial numbers GS TAC GS Project Cycle GS NGOs • GS Ext./Int. Verification • Monitoring Report(s) • Verification Report(s) DOEs • Stakeholder feedback round • public posting DOEs GS NGOs Registered GS Registration - 8 weeks review period • GS External Validation • Validation Report(s) DOEs Validated GS TAC GS NGOs • GS Internal Validation • Validation Statement GS TAC micro-scale projects

  15. Introduction to the GS Project Cycle • Project Pre-Evaluation • Open a Registry Account • Conduct Local Stakeholder Consultation (LSC) • Finalize project documentation (PDD, Passport) • Validation • Conduct stakeholder feedback round • Registration • Verification • Issuance

  16. Step 1: Evaluate your project Eligibility • Renewable energy or energy efficiency? • Is the project already operating? • Size? • Project gases eligible for credits: CO2, CH4 and N2O • Project location – does the country have a cap?

  17. Step 1: Evaluate your project Additionality • UNFCCC-approved tools • Investment analysis • Barrier analysis • Common practice analysis • Sustainability • What impact will the project have on the • local host community?

  18. Step 2: Open a Registry Account • Go to goldstandard.apx.com • Create username and password • Sign the Terms & Conditions & Terms of Use • Upload your documents

  19. Step 3: Conduct the LSC Discuss the impacts of the project with the host community • Overview • GS requires 2 rounds of consultation • At least one live meeting is required • Before the Meeting • Invite your Regional Manager, GS NGO supporters, local NGOs, local residents • and officials • At the Meeting • Sufficient diversity should be ensured (skills, gender, ethnic, etc.) • Non-technical summary and blind exercise

  20. Step 3: Conduct the LSC • After the LSC: • Local Stakeholder Consultation Report must be uploaded into the GS Registry (“time of first submission to GS”). • Upon approval by GS, project will be listed (can call itself “Gold Standard Project Applicant”). • Project becomes public in the registry (only basic project information at this stage).

  21. Step 4: Finalize your project documents And get ready to submit them for validation… • PDD • GS Passport -- Deviations from CDM methodology • Sustainability Assessments • LSC Report • SD Matrix • SD Monitoring Plan • Do Not Harm Assessment

  22. Step 5: Conduct the SFR • 2nd round of stakeholder consultation • Follow-up from the LSC and address how account was taken of stakeholders’ comments • Project documentation must be available for at least 2 months on GS Registry before completion of validation (and via other means if not all stakeholders have access to internet) • This can be completed in conjunction with validation

  23. Step 6: Validation • Purpose: To review the project and project documentation at the outset to ensure eligibility, additionality, sustainability and correct application of the methodology and our Rules. • The first third-party audit • You must hire a UNFCCC-accredited DOE who must visit the site. • Micro-scale projects can apply for internal validation

  24. Step 7: Registration • After successful completion of validation, you must send the Gold Standard a formal request for registration. This takes the form of a Cover Letter (fixed template), which is a legal document. • Upload all of your documents to the Registry • GS will review for completeness and initiate an 8-week review period during which the GS Secretariat, GS Technical Advisory Committee, and GS supporter NGOs will review the documents and ask questions or make comments • GS will consolidate all feedback and send to you • The review period ends when all comments have been addressed and all questions have been answered

  25. Step 8: Verification • Purpose: To ensure that the project is operating in accordance with the PDD and that sustainability has been properly accounted for • The second third-party audit • A pre-requisite to issuance • You must hire a different UNFCCC-accredited DOE • Required at least once in the first two years; thereafter, once every three years

  26. Step 9: Certification/Issuance • Upon successful completion of verification, all documents are uploaded and GS will check for completeness • A 3-week review period follows, during which the GS Secretariat, GS Technical Advisory Committee, and GS supporter NGOs may have comments or questions • GS sends you the feedback at end of 3-week period • Review period will end whenever all comments and questions have been addressed and answered

  27. The Retroactive Project Cycle Pre-Feasibility Assessment is required for: • Retroactive projects (all projects that have already started construction or implementation at time of first submission to GS) • Large hydro (> 20 MW), Palm oil-related projects • Rejected CDM projects • See Toolkit Chapter 2.5 and Annex C for projects requiring Prefeasibility Assessments

  28. Questions?

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