BC Announces New Funding for Public Sector Carbon Neutral Commitments

 
On April 5, 2011, Environment Minister Terry Lake announced a new $5 million capital program that will be available to school districts for energy-efficiency projects to lower their carbon emissions. The provincial government indicated that this funding reaffirms its commitment to being the first carbon-neutral government in North America.

Starting in 2012/13, the new K-12 energy-efficiency capital program will be available to boards of education through the Ministry of Education. The amount of available funding has been set to be equal to or greater than the total paid by school boards each year for purchases of carbon offsets from the Pacific Carbon Trust (PCT).

In addition to the new funding, the following program enhancements for all public sector organizations were announced:

  • SMARTTool administration costs will no longer be charged to public sector organizations, resulting in $850,000 of cost savings that will be absorbed by the PCT.
  • To ensure the PCT’s offset portfolio meets the needs of stakeholders, the PCT will create an advisory panel. The panel will play an ongoing role in reviewing the structure and diversity of the carbon offset portfolio and provide suggestions regarding future offset opportunities. The panel will include representatives from the private and public sectors that purchase offsets from PCT, as well as select carbon-industry experts.
  • To streamline the current system, a link will be established that will feed energy data directly into the SMARTTool to reduce administrative costs associated with measuring emissions.

Under BC’s Carbon Neutral Regulation of the Greenhouse Gas Reduction Targets Act, certain public sector organizations were required to be carbon neutral by 2010. In June 2011, it was announced that BC had become the first major jurisdiction in North America to achieve carbon neutral operations as of 2010. This means that BC’s public sector including schools, post-secondary institutions, government offices, Crown corporations and hospitals have all achieved net-zero greenhouse gas emissions.

 


 

C40 and World Bank Sign Agreement to Form Climate Change Action Partnership

On  June 1, 2011, the C40 Cities Climate Leadership Group (C40) and the World Bank signed an agreement that will help cities accelerate activities to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and adapt to climate change. The C40 is an organization of large and engaged cities from around the world committed to implementing meaningful and sustainable climate-related actions locally that will help address climate change globally. C40 cities account for 8 percent of the global population, 12 percent of global greenhouse gas emissions and 21 percent of global GDP.  In 2006, the C40 partnered with the Clinton Climate Initiative to tackle climate change in cities.

The agreement was signed by C40 Chair New York City Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg and World Bank Group President Robert B. Zoellick during the C40 Cities Mayors Summit in Sao Paulo, Brazil.  Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg said: “This unique partnership with the World Bank will help solve many of the problems that cities face in obtaining financing for climate-related projects, both from the World Bank and other lenders. It will also make it easier for C40 cities to access the resources of the World Bank.”   World Bank Group President Robert B. Zoellick said: “This agreement will help us work with C40 cities to integrate growth planning with climate change adaptation and mitigation, with special attention to the vulnerabilities of the urban poor.”

The key objective of this new partnership is to enable megacities to expand mitigation and adaptation actions while at the same time, strengthen and protect economies, reduce poverty and protect vulnerable populations. In particular, it will address structural issues that make it difficult for cities to finance climate actions that have been identified by both C40 and the World Bank Group.

Under the agreement, the C40 and the World Bank will establish:

•         A consistent approach to climate action plans and strategies in large cities to enable stronger partnerships between cities on shared climate goals, and to permit potential investors to identify opportunities across cities. The lack of a standard approach or process – such as exists for national government action plans – has made it difficult for investors and grantors to assess city action plans and thus has made them reluctant to fund projects.

 

•    A common approach to measuring and reporting on city greenhouse gas emissions to allow verifiable and consistent monitoring of emissions reductions, identify actions that result in the greatest emission reductions, and facilitate access to carbon finance.  This is necessary because carbon finance requires quantitative assessments of impacts, but currently no single standard for reporting citywide carbon emissions exists; the Carbon Disclosure Project’s Measurement for Management report identified several different protocols in use by C40 cities, with no single protocol used by a majority.

 

In addition, the World Bank will establish a single, dedicated entry point for C40 cities to access World Bank climate change-related capacity building and technical assistance programs, and climate finance initiatives by December 1, 2011.  Furthermore, the C40 will identify and work with national governments who are interested in funding climate change projects and identify private sector partners to provide project financing in C40 cities.  In turn, the World Bank will identify opportunities from among sources of concessional finance, carbon finance, and innovative market and risk management instruments as well as the private sector through the International Finance Corporation. These may be accessed by project developers supporting climate action in cities.

For more information on this partnership and other C40 initiatives, please refer to the C40 web site

Accounting for your Footprint / GHG Inventory

A fundamental key to effectively managing your business risk and cost in an increasingly carbon-constrained world is an understanding of your organization’s carbon footprint, which covers emissions generated by your products and supply chain. In order to calculate your carbon footprint, an analysis of your organization’s GHG inventory is essential. A “carbon footprint” represents a measure of the total amount of GHG emissions that are directly and indirectly caused by an activity, organisation or is accumulated over the lifecycle of a product. The carbon footprint captures activities of individuals, communities, companies, processes, or industry sectors and takes into account all direct and indirect emissions. A carbon footprint can be broken down into two parts, the primary footprint and the secondary footprint.
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What is considered “green” or not has always had, and will always have, different meanings depending on a particular point of view as well as the point in time. At the beginning of the green movement, issues such as forest conservation, protection of wildlife and recycling were the focal points. However this has evolved to encompass more comprehensive strategies which we now understand are required to enable meaningful change. These strategies include more holistic approaches to sustainability, biodiversity and climate change. One of the most interesting things in recent years has been the realisation that these strategies make good business sense and result in positive impacts. Examples of these positive impacts include better yields due to crop diversity, lower energy costs due to energy savings, and lower risks and costs associated with having a smaller carbon footprint.

A fundamental key to effectively managing your business risk and cost in an increasingly carbon-constrained world is an understanding of your organization’s carbon footprint, which covers all greenhouse gas (“GHG”) emissions generated by all human direct or indirect activities within the boundaries of direct (Scope 1) or indirect control (Scope 2) of your organisation. In order to calculate your carbon footprint, an analysis of your organization’s GHG inventory is essential.

What is a “Carbon Footprint”?

A “carbon footprint” represents a measure of the total amount of GHG emissions that are directly and indirectly caused by an activity, organisation or is accumulated over the lifecycle of a product (Product footprint). The carbon footprint captures activities of individuals, communities, companies, processes, or industry sectors and takes into account all direct and indirect GHG emissions. A carbon footprint can be broken down into two parts, the primary footprint and the secondary footprint.

  1. The primary footprint is the sum of direct GHG emissions and includes activities such as energy consumption and transportation.
  1. The secondary footprint is the sum of indirect GHG emissions from the entire lifecycle of products used by an individual or organization.

Although carbon footprints are reported in tons of carbon dioxide equivalent (CO2e) emissions, they actually represent a measure of total GHG emissions. GHGs that are regulated include CO2, nitrous oxide, methane, hydrofluorocarbons (HFCs), perfluorocarbons (PFCs), and sulfur hexafluoride. CO2 is used as the reference gas against which the other GHGs are measured and the impact of all GHGs is measured in terms of equivalency to the impact of CO2 by way of global warming potentials. For example, methane is a far more potent GHG than CO2, so one metric tonne of methane is measured as 21 metric tons of carbon dioxide equivalent, or CO2e.

The accurate calculation of an organization’s carbon footprint is important in ensuring that GHG emissions are not under-counted or double-counted, particularly where emission reductions will be used in carbon trading and carbon off-setting transactions. A careful review of a organization’s methodology for calculating its carbon footprint will play a significant role in reducing the risks inherent in carbon trading and carbon off-setting, as well as ensure the credibility of carbon transactions.

GHG Inventories

A GHG inventory is a breakdown of emissions by activity for an organization, expressed in terms of CO2e. GHG inventories provide the basis for (i) identifying organizational, geographic, temporal and operational GHG inventory boundaries, (ii) identifying all direct and indirect emissions sources, and (iii) determining appropriate methods to calculate emissions through protocols.

The effective accounting and management of carbon requires unambiguous, verifiable specifications. This will ensure that a tonne of carbon can be consistently calculated. To that end, an internationally agreed upon standard for measuring, reporting and verifying GHG emissions was introduced in 2006 by the International Organization for Standardization (ISO) and is referred to as ISO 14064.

ISO 14064 Standard

ISO 14064 consists of three standards, which provide guidance at the organizational and project levels, as well as for validation and verification:

  • ISO 14064-1 specifies the requirements for designing and developing GHG inventories.
  • ISO 14064-2 sets out requirements for quantifying, monitoring and reporting emission reductions and removal enhancements from GHG projects.
  • ISO 14064-3 sets out guidance for conducting GHG information validation and verification.

What GHG Accounting Can Do For You

GHG Accounting Services Ltd. (GHG Accounting) provides specialized GHG consulting and accounting services, including (i) emissions reporting and footprint inventory quantification, (ii) emissions reduction project planning, and (iii) quantification, documentation and carbon offset credit registration.

Contact us today to see how GHG Accounting can assist your organization in measuring and reducing its carbon footprint.

WRI Releases Greenhouse Gas Protocol for U.S. Public Sector

The World Resources Institute (WRI) and LMI have released a protocol entitled the “GHG Protocol for the U.S. Public Sector: Interpreting the Corporate Standard for U.S. Public Sector Organizations”. This protocol outlines how federal, state and local governments can account for their greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions and serves as a resource for U.S. public sector organizations implementing Executive Order 13514, which requires federal agencies to report and reduce their GHG emissions.

The World Resources Institute (WRI) and LMI have released a protocol entitled the “GHG Protocol for the U.S. Public Sector: Interpreting the Corporate Standard for U.S. Public Sector Organizations”. This protocol outlines how federal, state and local governments can account for their greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions and serves as a resource for U.S. public sector organizations implementing Executive Order 13514, which requires federal agencies to report and reduce their GHG emissions.

The protocol interprets and applies the GHG accounting principles established by WRI’s “Corporate Standard” to the unique structures of the public sector.  The term “public sector” is a broad one that includes any organization owned, controlled or operated by the government and includes government agencies, school systems, quasi-governmental organizations and utilities, as well as public-private partnerships. The protocol aims to help managers of organizations at all government levels design and develop a GHG inventory. For organizations that have already created GHG inventories through voluntary or mandatory programs that are based on the Corporate Standard, the protocol provides useful information on key accounting issues.

The protocol was developed in response to the need of public organizations for tailored guidance on interpreting the Corporate Standard for the public sector. Public sector activities often involve shared resources between multiple organizations and leasing arrangements for buildings, vehicles, and land that can pose challenges attributing ownership or control of GHG emissions. For organizations that already monitor and report energy use and other environmental metrics, GHG emissions reporting represents a new and integrative performance indicator.

As stated by the WRI, the objectives of the protocol are as follows:

•         To help public organizations prepare a GHG inventory that represents a true and fair account of their emissions, through the use of standardized approaches.

•         To simplify the process and reduce the costs of compiling a GHG inventory.

•         To provide public sector organizations with information for use in building an effective strategy to manage and reduce GHG emissions.

•         To support voluntary and mandatory GHG reporting.

•         To increase consistency and transparency in GHG accounting and reporting among public sector organizations and GHG programs.

While the protocol was developed primarily for U.S. government organizations, the principles contained in the protocol can be applied to governments worldwide since it is based on the internationally accepted Corporate Standard.

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Background on the GHG Protocol Initiative

The Greenhouse Gas Protocol Initiative was launched in 1998 with the objective of developing internationally accepted GHG accounting and reporting standards. Designed as a multi-stakeholder partnership of businesses, non-governmental organizations (NGOs), and governments, it was convened by the WRI and the World Business Council for Sustainable Development (WBCSD).

The cornerstone document of the GHG Protocol Initiative is the GHG Protocol Corporate Accounting and Reporting Standard (Corporate Standard, 2004), which provides a step-by-step guide for quantifying and reporting GHG emissions. The Corporate Standard was designed to be program and policy neutral, allowing users the flexibility to adapt the core methodology and concepts to specific accounting and reporting needs. To provide guidance on how to build GHG policies, reporting programs, and tools based on the concepts of the Corporate Standard, two accompanying documents were developed:

•         Measuring to Manage: A Guide to Designing GHG Accounting and Reporting Programs (2007); and

•         Designing a Customized Greenhouse Gas Calculation Tool (2007).

GHG Audit

Beyond the requirements of current and pending GHG reporting regulations, due diligence and financial evaluations of your business will increasingly need to consider the costs and risks associated with GHG emissions. As part of the process for preparing your risk management strategy or carbon neutrality strategy, GHG Accounting Services offers a comprehensive and cost effective GHG audit service that will help you develop and manage these strategies. The audit report prepared by our team of experts will identify the GHG emission characteristics of different branches or products and services of your business, evaluate potential costs and regulatory risks as well as identify cost and emissions reduction opportunities.

GHG Inventory

Whether you are required to reduce emissions by regulation or if you choose to reduce emissions voluntarily (for purposes such as marketing, brand management or corporate social responsibility), GHG Accounting Services can assist you in quantifying your total GHG emissions based on the requirements and relevant protocols of ISO 14064-1. This will enable you to comply with required reporting standards or it could be the first step in becoming carbon neutral.