August 26, 2009


Exploring the Opportunities and Challenges Waste Managers Face in the Emerging Carbon Market Arena

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By Greg Kozak

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Some of these programs, such as the CCX and GE-AES, use their own protocols, whereas other programs adopt or allow one or more established GHG protocols. Selection of a standard/protocol is dependent upon specific project eligibility and market preference. The standard/protocol used to quantify and verify the project may greatly affect underlying credit value.

Price ranges of credits verified to the various standards sold on the OTC market in 2007 are presented in Figure 2.

In determining whether offsets associated with waste diversion and other MSW management strategies can be sold in emerging carbon markets, waste managers should evaluate which market and protocol best fit the project and determine if the potential project is eligible against that protocol/standard.

Some of the key criteria that all project developers must consider when selecting a standard or protocol include:

Project start date: Project start date refers to the date on which GHG emission reductions or avoided GHG emissions began as a result of the project. With regards to landfill methane projects, for example, project start date refers to the date methane collection and destruction began. A project’s start date is important because depending on when the project began, it may or may not qualify or be eligible under a specific protocol or standard.

Credit start date: Credit start date refers to the date that a project can start earning GHG credits. Projects implemented under the VCS, for example, could earn GHG credits beginning on March 28, 2006, whereas projects implemented under the CCX could earn GHG credits starting from January 1, 2003.

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Protocol-specific eligibility requirements: All protocols have eligibility requirements that determine whether a project will be considered eligible or deemed ineligible. For instance, some protocols explicitly prohibit landfills that have waste management systems that are defined as bioreactors. Other examples include situations where a municipality has expanded its LFG collection and combustion system after the protocol’s defined start date (when the gas collection and control system, prior to landfill expansion, was in place before the protocol’s defined start date) or where a municipality has expanded the processing capacity of its WTE facility after the protocol’s defined start date (when, similar to the landfill example, the entire WTE facility was operational before the protocol’s defined start date). Certain protocols may allow these expansions and additions to earn carbon credits (assuming appropriate metering and monitoring) while other protocols may not.  

Additionality: Generally considered to be the most significant factor that determines the integrity of the carbon offset, additionality refers to whether the offset project would have gone forward on its own merits without the support of the offset market. Establishing why a project was implemented is difficult; thus, practitioners and regulators generally rely on a series of tests to determine if a project is additional or not. These tests can assess the regulatory, financial, technical, institutional, and/or other barriers a project or project type faces to its implementation. Next Page >

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