Canada Missing out on Growing Global Environmental Market

 
Despite the slow recovery of the global economy and a lack of political will for addressing environmental and climate change issues, a report by the Environmental Business Journal estimates that the annual value of the global environmental market was $866 billion in 2011, up 4% from the year before. While the US, Western Europe and Japan remain the three largest and most mature environmental markets, growth in the global environmental market in 2011 was led by Africa (up 10%), followed by the Middle East and the rest of Asia (both up 9%). In terms of business sectors, the largest is solid waste management, followed by water utilities and treatment. Recycling, green building, energy efficiency and other areas under the resource recovery and clean energy categories are all growing at faster rates than the overall economy in most nations.

In Canada, there is a large untapped potential for environmental markets.  A report released by Sustainable Prosperity in November 2012 estimates that Canada’s combined environmental marketplace is worth between $462 million and $752 million annually.  The wide gap between the high and low estimates is due to a lack of transparency and the definition of “environmental market”. In the report, an environmental market is defined as a market having a buyer, a seller and the exchange of an environmental attribute.  57 markets were covered in the report and it is anticipated that the value of the Canadian environmental marketplace will increase as new programs such as Quebec’s greenhouse gas cap-and-trade system develop. Sustainable Prosperity’s analysis indicates that markets addressing biodiversity and habitat conservation, water quality, water quantity, climate change, and air quality can provide environmental benefits inexpensively if they are well-designed markets. For investors, they also represent an opportunity for exposure to a new and growing asset class.  These markets may represent a significant financial sum as a whole, but most of the individual ones are small and underdeveloped in terms of their infrastructure and scope. Greater certainty in terms of environmental policy and regulatory flexibility to allow for the increased use of markets would help attract the necessary capital from the private sector to expand and grow Canada’s environmental marketplace.


 

Sustainable Business Practices

Sustainability is a very complex and far-reaching concept. Inspired by the ISO 14000 set of standards , but also incorporating our practical experience of balancing the characteristics of user-friendliness and comprehensiveness we have developed our own set of user friendly GHG Accounting Services criteria for Sustainable Business Practices for SMEs, they are:

1. Public Statement of Commitment

2. Chosen Program Authority and Transparency

3. Systematic Information and Data Recording and Analysis

4. Acts and Activities to Reduce or Remove Adverse Effects

5. Continuous Activity

6. Review Practices and Continuous Improvement

©2009-2011GHG Accounting Services

 

ICLEI seeks public input on draft Community-Scale GHG Emissions Accounting and Reporting Protocol

In response to the needs of its member local governments, ICLEI-Local Governments for Sustainability USA (ICLEI was originally established as the International Council for Local Environmental Initiatives) has released a draft Community-Scale GHG Emissions Accounting and Reporting Protocol for public comment.

In response to the needs of its member local governments, ICLEI-Local Governments for Sustainability USA (ICLEI was originally established as the International Council for Local Environmental Initiatives) has released a draft Community-Scale GHG Emissions Accounting and Reporting Protocol for public comment. The deadline for comments is February 11, 2011 and a final Protocol will be established and adopted no later than August 2011.

Rationale for the Community Protocol

Local governments are increasingly looking to create policies that will reduce emissions from the activities of their residents, businesses, and visitors. The emissions reduction process begins with identifying primary sources of emissions and quantifying the scale of emissions from these sources. By establishing standards for community-scale inventories, communities can ensure the consistency and quality of their inventories. In addition, such standards will allow for accurate monitoring of progress against emissions targets, and provide standard guidance as local governments pursue environmental review, inventory certification and other relevant processes in their day-to-day operations. A national standard will form the foundation of future climate actions, thereby enabling communities to address the challenges of climate change more effectively.

The Community Protocol will complement the Local Government Operations Protocol and serve as a U.S. Supplement to the International Emissions Analysis Protocol. The draft framework is available for review online.