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Kyoto CDM projects mostly sound: Un Official |
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LONDON - Unscrupulous projects falsely claiming to cut greenhouse gas
emissions under the Kyoto Protocol on global warming are isolated
incidents, if they exist at all, the UN's climate change chief said on
Tuesday. Under Kyoto rich countries can meet greenhouse gas reduction
targets by paying poor countries to make cuts for them, in a trade in
carbon offsets worth US$5 billion last year. Yvo de Boer heads the UN
body which administers the scheme, and fended off recent allegations of
fraudulent claims. Unscrupulous behaviour was to be expected in the
early stages of a brand new market, he told Reuters. "We're in a very
new area, so it's logical we don't get it right 100 percent right first
time," he said on the sidelines of an energy conference in London
hosted by the Financial Times. "(We're) not at the moment
re-considering projects which have been approved." The environmental
group WWF last week said it was "concerned" that the UN process wasn't
stopping projects from fraudulently cashing in on the new trade, by
submitting claims for emissions-cutting activities that they were
planning anyway. "We have a very rigorous process to allow NGOs to
react to a project proposal," said de Boer. Britain has a strong
interest in seeing carbon trade work under Kyoto's so-called Clean
Development Mechanism (CDM), not least because London financial
institutions cornered half the market last year. "There are some very
good projects and some which have received a lot of flak," British
Environment Minister David Miliband told Reuters. "CDM will have an
important role. There's a perpetual (review) process." WWF was
particularly concerned about a project in Equatorial Guinea which is
still awaiting UN approval, after getting the thumbs up from Britain.
That first step was needed because the carbon credit buyer is based in
Britain. "Our key concern is that construction of the plant started in
1998," said WWF's Keith Allott. "We've got serious concerns about why
Britain approved this project." The project involves making methanol
from natural gas, and according to WWF it fails a key Kyoto principle
called "additionality," which says carbon credits can only be claimed
if it shown that the emissions cuts wouldn't have happened without the
Kyoto Protocol. The fact construction started so long ago showed the
project was profitable without Kyoto and already under way, Allott
said. "The UK doesn't check CDM projects for additionality," said
consultant and academic Axel Michaelowa. "There's pressure from carbon
businesses based in London to make a buck." Britain's environment
ministry wasn't immediately available for comment. Story by Gerard Wynn
thanks to REUTERS NEWS SERVICE
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