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The California Registry and the Voluntary Carbon Market

This workshop provides an overview of the California Registry and the Voluntary Carbon Market Forest Protocols, including project protocols and the role of protocols in measuring greenhouse gas emissions. The workshop also discusses the role of the registry in facilitating companies in establishing state-recognized baselines and encourages voluntary public reporting and early actions to reduce emissions.

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The California Registry and the Voluntary Carbon Market

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  1. The California Registry and the Voluntary Carbon Market Forest Protocols Workshop Air Resources Board September 6, 2007

  2. Overview • Overview of the Registry • Project Protocols • The Voluntary Carbon Market

  3. Background on the Registry • Public/private partnership created by state legislation in 2000 • Facilitate companies in establishing state-recognized baselines • Develop GHG accounting protocols • Encourage voluntary public reporting and promote early actions to reduce GHG emissions • Board represents business, government, NGOs • Defines a “standard of excellence” for tracking GHG emissions • Close ongoing ties to the state

  4. Entity Wide Reporting • Gather data • CO2 first 3 years, then all 6 Kyoto gases (CO2, CH4, N2O, HFCs, PFCs, SF6) • Direct stationary, mobile, process and fugitive emissions • Indirect emissions: i.e. purchases of electricity and steam • California, national or international reporting • Tracking mostly through utility bills and vehicle fuel • Certify data using third-party certifiers • Report data publicly

  5. Role of Protocols • Detailed accounting standards • Provides step-by-step guidance in measuring emissions and ensures that “a ton is a ton” across different organizations • Two types: Entity and Project • Entity protocols measure organization’s footprint • Facilitate year on year tracking of GHG management

  6. Registry Entity Protocols • General Reporting Protocol • Power Utility Protocol • Cement Protocol • Forest Sector Protocol

  7. Project Reduction Protocols • Projects are discrete activities undertaken with the intention of reducing, avoiding or sequestering emissions • Demonstrate coherent reduction independent of other emissions trends • Projects are often undertaken for trading purposes • Projects demand a different type of accounting

  8. Key Project Accounting Concepts • Generally accepted international standards (CDM, WRI, ISO 14064, etc.) • Reductions must be real, additional, quantifiable, and permanent • Additionality is central to project accounting (determine reductions relative to BAU)

  9. Registry Project Protocols • Forest Project Protocol • Livestock Manure Management Protocol • Additional protocols under development include: • Landfill gas capture • Transportation • Electrification • High GWP gas mitigation • Other forestry

  10. The Voluntary Carbon Market • Non-compliance production, sale and purchase of VERs • Multiple sources of demand: • Companies seeking climate neutrality or pre-compliance • Individuals desiring to offset emissions • Investors and speculators • Rapid growth (>23 million tons of VERs traded in 2006) • Standards still coalescing • Increased scrutiny

  11. Developing Market Needs • Integrity • Consumer confidence • Standardization and consistency • Learning through experience • Structure and oversight

  12. Registry Roles in the Voluntary Market • Protocol development and refinement (with ARB as a partner) • Convene stakeholders to improve protocols through use • Develop new protocols • Verification and registration • Operate VER tracking system (register, serialize, track transfers and retire)

  13. Gary Gero gary@climateregistry.org Derek Markolf derek@climateregistry.org Sam Hitz sam@climateregistry.org Contact Information California Climate Action Registry 213-891-1444

  14. Where Are We Now? • US EPA comparative analysis/workshop • COP/MOP 1 protocol side-event, Montreal 2005 • Several projects in progress of reporting data to Registry • WESTCARB Phase II will provide further validation and refinement of existing protocols • Development of guidance for fire management and biomass projects • PG&E’s Climate Protection Tariff will generate more widespread use • Registry Forestry Committee recommending refinements

  15. Key Issues for FS Participation • Permanence and easements • Baselines • Need for additional project types

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