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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Over the past 30 years, the United States has moved towards integrated municipal solid waste management strategies involving recycling, composting, waste-to-energy combustion, and landfills with gas collection and energy recovery (among others) that have been championed for reducing greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions. However, budgetary constraints often delay or prevent progressive waste management strategies like those mentioned above from being implemented and because most communities operate within set budgets and often do not have funds for new programs, waste management strategies like these, with the exception of perhaps recycling, are not considered an economically feasible option. As one potential solution to budgetary constraints, carbon offsets associated with waste diversion and other municipal solid waste management strategies can be sold in emerging carbon markets to help finance solid waste diversion programs that were previously not feasible for communities to implement. These carbon-offset markets offer waste managers a potential funding stream that can be realized now—well ahead of any mandatory federal GHG regulations.

In this emerging marketplace, waste managers face several key considerations when deciding whether or not to move forward with a GHG reduction project. For example, each project must be viewed on its own merits and a determination must be made as to what protocol or regime it may qualify under. As will be discussed later in this article, municipal solid waste managers need to understand that not all projects will meet the requirements of existing regimes or protocols. Additionally, an analysis of each project’s potential, including financial benefits, needs to be identified. Waste managers should make sure they understand all options and consider the price, timing, and resource availability before making a commitment.  

Some areas of the market are more defined and developed, while others are not yet at a point where credits can be claimed. However, even in cases where the market or protocols are not yet fully developed, there can be benefits to waste managers who show leadership and help develop standards in these emerging markets. This article explores the opportunities and challenges waste managers face, particularly with regards to landfill methane and waste-to-energy projects, in the emerging carbon market arena.

Offsets and the Carbon Market
Carbon offsets are generally defined as financial instruments resulting from an activity that reduces, sequesters, or avoids 1 metric ton of CO2-equivalent (CO2-e) GHG emissions. Offsets provide a means for private or public entities to reduce their carbon emissions indirectly.

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Currently, only a voluntary carbon offset market exists in the US, although it is anticipated that there will be mandatory caps on emission sources in the future (most likely within three to five years). President Obama, in his State of the Union address on February 24, challenged Congress to send him a bill to implement new regulation.  

Until such time, there is a burgeoning and fast-growing voluntary market. At the broadest level, the voluntary carbon offset market can be divided into two main segments: the Chicago Climate Exchange (CCX)—a voluntary, but legally binding, cap-and-trade system—and the broader, nonbinding, over-the-counter (OTC) offset market. OTC transactions may occur through a brokered deal or through direct purchases, otherwise known as bilateral transactions, in which the end buyer contracts directly with the project proponent.   Next Page >

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