2. INTRODUCTION
Greenhouse Gases: Carbon dioxide (CO2)
The main source of CO2 emissions is the
burning of fossil fuels:
heating
power generation
transportation
Deforestation
CO2 has the largest impact on the greenhouse effect.
There are Six Green House Gases:
(Carbon Dioxide, Methane, Nitrous Oxide, Hydro-Fluoro-
Carbons, Per-Fluoro-Carbons and Sulphur-Hexa-Floride) .
The gases increase the atmosphere's ability to trap infrared
energy and thus affect the climate
3. What is Carbon credit ?
Carbon credits are a key component of national
and international emissions trading that have been
implemented schemes to mitigate global warming
The concept of carbon credits came into existence
as a result of increasing awareness of the need for
controlling emissions.
They provide a way to reduce greenhouse effect
emissions on an industrial scale by capping total
annual emissions and letting the market assign a
monetary value to any shortfall through trading .
4. The greenhouse mitigation project generate
credits and these credits can be exchanged
between businesses or bought and sold in
international markets at the prevailing market
price .
The protocol followed with respect to carbon
trading was KYOTO PROTOCOL.
5. Kyoto protocol
Protocol to the international Framework Convention
on Climate Change with the objective of reducing
Greenhouse gases that cause climate change.
It was agreed on 11 December 1997 at the 3rd
Conference of the Parties to the treaty when they
met in Kyoto in Japan.
Came into force on February 16, 2005
6. OBJECTIVE
Kyoto is intended to cut global emissions of
greenhouse gases.
The objective is to achieve "stabilization of
greenhouse gas concentrations in the atmosphere at
a level that would prevent dangerous anthropogenic
interference with the climate system."
7. Emission Allowances:
The Protocol agreed 'caps' or quotas on the
maximum amount of Greenhouse gases for
developed and developing countries, listed in its
Annex I .
Operators- local business and other organizations.
Each operator has an allowance of credits, where
each unit gives the owner the right to emit one metric
tonne of carbon dioxide or other equivalent
greenhouse gas
8. Unused allowances are sold as carbon credits.
while businesses that are about to exceed their
quotas can buy the extra allowances as
credits, privately or on the open market
National 'registries‘ managed – to validate and
monitor for compliance by the UNFCCC.
9. Kyoto's 'Flexible mechanisms'
A credit can be an emissions allowance which was
originally allocated or auctioned by the national
administrators of a cap-and-trade program
mitigating activities can occur in any developing
country which has ratified the Kyoto Protocol, and
has a national agreement in place to validate its
carbon project through one of the UNFCCC's
approved mechanisms.
10. Once approved, these units are termed Certified
Emission Reductions, or CERs. The Protocol allows
these projects to be constructed and credited in
advance of the Kyoto trading period.
The Kyoto Protocol provides for three mechanisms
- Joint Implementation
- Clean Development Mechanism
- Emissions Trading
11. Emissions Market
These allowances either can be sold privately or in
the international market at the prevailing market
price.
UNFCCC – It validates each international transfer.
Carbon prices are normally quoted in Euros per
tonne of carbon dioxide .
The Chicago Climate Exchange, European
Climate Exchange, Nord Pool, and PowerNext.
Currently are four exchanges.
12. How buying Carbon credit can
reduce emissions?
It creates a market-by giving a monetary
value to the cost of polluting air.
Emissions become an internal cost of doing
business
Example
13. Setting a market price for carbon
Unchecked energy use and emission levels
are predicted to keep rising
Rule of supply and demand will push up the
market price
• Encourage more groups to undertake
environmentally friendly activites
14. India’s Role
India signed and ratified the Protocol in
August, 2002.
India has generated 30 million carbon
credits, the second highest transaction
volumes in the world.
15. Criticism
The Kyoto trading period only applies for five
years between 2008 and 2012.
As several countries responsible for a large
proportion of global emissions (notably
USA, Australia, China and India) have avoided
mandatory caps.
Concerns raised over the validation of CDM
credits.