1 / 44

Clean Development Mechanism ( CDM )

Clean Development Mechanism ( CDM ). Session on Finance Sidharth Sinha Indian Institute of Management, Ahmedabad.

chaney
Télécharger la présentation

Clean Development Mechanism ( CDM )

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Clean Development Mechanism(CDM) Session on Finance Sidharth Sinha Indian Institute of Management, Ahmedabad The views expressed here are those of the presenter and do not necessarily reflect the views or policies of the Asian Development Bank (ADB), or its Board of Directors, or the governments they represent.

  2. Kyoto Protocol (1 December 1997) • Parties to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change, New York, May 9, 1992 • The Parties included in Annex I shall, individually or jointly, ensure that • their aggregate anthropogenic carbon dioxide equivalent emissions of the greenhouse gases listed in Annex A do not exceed their assigned amounts, • calculated pursuant to their quantified emission limitation and reduction commitments inscribed in Annex B and in accordance with the provisions of this Article, • with a view to reducing their overall emissions of such gases by at least 5 per cent below 1990 levels in the commitment period 2008 to 2012.

  3. Kyoto Protocol (continued) • The Kyoto Protocol broke new ground by defining three innovative “flexibility mechanisms” to lower the overall costs of achieving its emissions targets.  • These mechanisms enable Parties to access cost-effective opportunities to reduce emissions, or to remove carbon from the atmosphere, in other countries. The three Kyoto mechanisms are: • Joint implementation (JI) under Article 6 Annex I Parties to implement projects that reduce emissions, or remove carbon from the atmosphere, in other Annex I Parties, in return for emission reduction units (ERUs). • Emissions trading, as set out in Article 17, provides for Annex I Parties to acquire units from other Annex I Parties, and,

  4. Clean Development Mechanism • The clean development mechanism (CDM) defined in Article 12 provides for non Annex I Parties to implement project activities that reduce emissions resulting in certified emission reductions (CERs).  • The CERs generated by such project activities can be used by Annex I Parties to help meet their emissions targets under the Kyoto Protocol.

  5. Clean Development Mechanism (continued) • CDM project activities must reduce emissions below those emissions that would have occurred in the absence of the CDM project activity (baseline). • Article 12 also stresses that such project activities are to assist the developing country host Parties in achieving sustainable development and in contributing to the ultimate objective of the Convention. • The CDM is supervised by the CDM Executive Board.

  6. Annex 12 (5) Kyoto Protocol • Emission reductions resulting from each project activity shall be certified by operational entities to be designated (DOE) by the conference of the Parties serving as the meeting of the Parties to this Protocol, on the basis of: • Voluntary participation approved by each Party involved; • Real, measurable, and long-term benefits related to the mitigation of climate change; and • Reductions in emissions that are additional to any that would occur in the absence of the certified project activity.

  7. Types of Carbon Projects • Hydroelectric power offsetting the need for coal- or gas-fired generation • Extending grid to reach customers currently using diesel or kerosene • Reducing CO2 and possibly methane (a potent greenhouse gas) by generating energy and bio-fuels from sugar industry by-products -- bagasse and molasses • Replacing firewood/kerosene/cowdung with biogas from livestock and human wastes

  8. Types of Carbon Projects (continued) • Extracting methane from landfills or avoiding its generation through composting organic waste in urban dumpsites • Extracting methane from disposal of sewage sludge • Capturing N20, a powerful greenhouse gas, from fertilizer production • Sequestering CO2 by tree planting, small plantations, land restoration

  9. CDM Project Participants • Project developer (sellers) • CDM investors (buyers) • Host country designated national authority (DNA) (approver) • Designated operational entities (DOEs) (auditor) • CDM executive board (EB) (regulator)

  10. CDM Project Stages • Project design and development • Approval • Validation and registration • Implementation • Monitoring • Verification and certification • Issue of CERs (certified emissions reductions)

  11. Project Owner Project Design & Development Operational Entity National Authority Approval / Validation / Registration Executive Board Implementation / Monitoring Project Owner Verification / certification Operational Entity Executive Board Issuance ER CDM Project Cycle: Overview

  12. Steps • Project activity design Project participants shall submit information on their proposed CDM project activity using the Project design document. • Proposal of a new baseline and/or monitoring methodologyThe new baseline methodology shall be submitted by the designated operational entity to the Executive Board for review, prior to a validation and submission for registration of this project activity, with the draft project design document.

  13. Steps (continued) • Use of an approved methodologyThe approved methodology is a methodology previously approved by the Executive Board and made publicly available along with any relevant guidance. In case of approved methodologies the designated operational entities may proceed with the validation of the CDM project activity and submit project design document for registration. • Validation of the CDM project activityValidation is the process of independent evaluation of a project activity by a designated operational entity against the requirements of the CDM, on the basis of the project design document.

  14. Steps (continued) • Registration of the CDM project activityRegistration is the formal acceptance by the Executive Board of a validated project as a CDM project activity. Registration is the prerequisite for the verification, certification and issuance of CERs related to that project activity. • Verification is the periodic independent review and ex post determination by the designated operational entity of the monitored reductions as a result of a registered CDM project activity during the verification period.

  15. Steps (continued) • Certification is the written assurance by the designated operational entity that, during a specified time period, a project activity achieved the reductions in emissions by sources of greenhouse gases as verified.

  16. Risk in CDM Projects • Two main types of risk inherent in CDM projects: • Carbon specific risks and standard project risks • Both give rise to delivery risk • Carbon asset risks • Whether the project, and ultimately the ERs, will be registered with the CDM Executive Board • The most significant component of regulatory risk is additionality risk, which relates to whether the project will be deemed additional by the CDM Executive Board • Approval of registration depends on the weight of evidence required to be submitted to the Executive Board.

  17. Risk in CDM Projects (continued) • This is related to the baseline risk, which relates to the reliability of the baseline (the estimate of emissions that would have occurred without the project) e.g. does a hydro project replace a coal or gas plant • CDM projects face structural difficulties in obtaining financing- • Tend to be highly capital-intensive • They are not competitive with fossil fuel technologies in economic terms • Financing generally is not available at low enough interest rates or for sufficient tenors to permit adequate debt service coverage • Moreover, many banks require additional coverage for country risk

  18. Carbon Funds • The World Bank manages nine carbon funds and facilities comprised of public and private participants. • These funds are public or public-private partnerships managed by the World Bank as a Trustee. They operate much like a closed-end mutual fund; they purchase greenhouse gas emission reductions from projects and pay on delivery of those emission reductions. • All the emission reduction credits are purchased on behalf of the public and private sector participants in the funds.

  19. Carbon Funds (continued) • The World Bank is acting as an honest broker to ensure that the benefits of carbon finance make their way also to the developing world and to countries with economies in transition. • The role of the Bank through its Carbon Finance Unit has been one of market facilitator and catalyst. • Sale of emission reductions can help secure financing for CDM projects by providing an additional high quality revenue stream -

  20. Carbon Funds (continued) • Contracts are denominated in hard currency - usually US dollars or euros - as the known carbon buyers to date are in OECD countries. • Contracts are typically multi-year; for example, the Prototype Carbon Fund’s (PCF) typical ER contracts are for deliveries expected over a 10-year period or longer. • The counter parties are highly-rated: AAA-rated governments accounted for about half of known CDM and JI carbon purchases in 2002-03, with investment-grade multinationals, largely banks and power companies, accounting for most of the rest.

  21. Carbon Funds (continued) • To enable project sponsors to borrow against these revenue streams, the Emission Reduction Purchase Agreement (ERPA) developed by the World Bank’s Carbon Finance Business has the facility to enable ER payments to be placed in escrow. • This has permitted project sponsors to use the ERPA proceeds to service debt. • Placing the escrow account outside the host country mitigates currency convertibility and transfer risk.

  22. Nova Gerar (“New Generation”)Landfill Gas Project, Brazil • SA Paulista, a Brazilian engineering and waste management company, with the concession to manage the Marambaia and Adrianopolis landfills on the outskirts of Rio de Janeiro • EcoSecurities, a multinational environmental finance company, specializing in greenhouse gas mitigation Bruce Usher, CEO, EcoSecurities Group Limited, Carbon Finance Risk Mitigation Workshop, PPIAF, 19 November 2003, Paris

  23. Project Nova Gerar • The objective of the Nova Gerar joint venture is to develop the landfill gas collection system on the landfills managed by SA Paulista. • This involves investing in a gas collection system, leachate drainage system, and a modular electricity generation plant at each landfill site (with expected final total capacity of 12 MW), as well as a generator compound at each site. • The generators will combust the methane in the landfill gas to produce electricity for export to the grid. • Excess gas, and all gas collected prior to a grid connection will be flared.

  24. Project Nova Gerar (continued) • Combustion and flaring combined reduce emissions of 11.8 million tons of CO2 equivalent over 21 years. • Nova Gerar is negotiating an Emission Reduction Purchase Agreement (ERPA) with the World Bank to purchase all of the emissions reductions generated by the project up to 2012, and a right of first refusal for emissions reductions generated beyond that date. • The World Bank is purchasing the emissions reductions as trustee for the Netherlands Clean Development Facility (NCDF), a CDM project facility.

  25. Nova Gerar Financing • Uses • Working capital: $250,000 • Capital investment • Phase 1 - Flaring: $620,000 for flaring equipment and gas plant works • Phase 2 - Electricity generation (8 MW) • $ 350,000 for grid connection • $ 4,800,000 for power generators • Sources • Senior loan secured by ERPA: $1,220,000 • Leasing: Modular power generators will be leased as needed.

  26. Monetisation of the ERPA CERs ($125,000 to 450,000 pa) (9 years) Nova Gerar (Brazil) World Bank (US) $243,000 to $1,472,000 pa $1,220,000 lent today $472,000 to $1,701,000 pa Debt Reserve Account Lender $229,000 pa for 9 years (12% discount rate, declining principal balance)

  27. CDM Case Study: Jincheng Coalmine Methane Power Project

  28. Project Rationale • The project is at the Sihe coalmine located near the city of Jincheng in Shanxi Province. Shanxi is the largest coal-producing province in China. • Methane gas in underground coalmines is an extremely explosive gas and a certain portion must be collected and vented to the atmosphere from coal seams to ensure miners’ safety. • As required by law, JMC has installed a gas collection system in its mines to vent the methane directly to the atmosphere, thereby releasing a highly potent GHG. Methane is approximately 21 times more potent than carbon dioxide (CO2).

  29. Project Rationale (continued) • The proposed project will collect a majority of the mine’s vented methane gas to fuel the proposed 120 MW power plants. • GHG emission will be reduced when • the vented methane (CMM) is captured and used for power generation, and • when the generated electricity displaces electricity from coal-fired power plant in the grid.

  30. Role for CDM • The revenue from the electricity sales alone will provide a low rate of return for the project because of the low power tariff rate in Shanxi Province. • The additional revenue stream provided by selling carbon emission credits to the World Bank’s Prototype Carbon Fund (PCF), improves the economics of the project and reduces the investment risk. • A baseline scenario would be that the recovery and utilization of methane is limited solely to internal mine and household usage, and most of the methane would be vented to the atmosphere for the safety of mine operations. The coal-fired plant would supply the least-cost power production.

  31. Project Development Objective & Key Indicators • The project development objectives are to create and trade GHG emission reduction (ER) credits under the CDM by reducing GHG emissions through • capturing methane for power generation, and • replacing grid electricity generated by coal-fired power plants. • Project outcomes will be measured by three groups of indicators: • The volume of methane captured annually. • The amount of electricity from coal replaced annually. • The ER credits created and traded annually.

  32. Project Components The project consists of the following four subcomponents: • Underground CMM recovery. • The use of new equipment and technologies is expected to increase CMM drainage efficiency by 100 percent and the methane content of the drained CMM by 80 percent • The 120 MW power plant. • A power plant comprising a total of about 32–96 internal combustion (IC) engines with a total capacity of 120 MW • The IC engines are installed during a four-year period. • The power transmission line. • Capacity building and consulting services.

  33. Project Cost Estimates

  34. Financing Plan (US $ million)

  35. Financing Terms • The ADB loan will have a 24-year term including a grace period of 4 years. In calculating WACC, • It is assumed that a fixed interest rate of 4.3% will apply. • The local commercial bank loan is expected to have a 15-year repayment period, including a grace period of 4 years, • Currently the interest rate is fixed at 5.76% per year. • Foreign exchange costs are estimated at US$ 82 million and local currency costs at US$ 56.69 million equivalent. • This matches the currency of financing Weighted Average Cost of Capital = 4.96%

  36. Institutional & Implementation Arrangements • The sponsor of the project is JMC, a corporatized entity fully owned by the Shanxi provincial government. • It has a large operation in developing coalmines, selling coal and generating power. • The project will be implemented according to the Emission Reduction Purchase Agreement (ERPA) to be signed between JMC and the World Bank, as trustee of the PCF. • A monitoring plan (MP) will be agreed between parties to the ERPA.

  37. Implementation Arrangements (continued) • ERPA and MP define the quantity, price and other delivery conditions for ERs to be purchased by the PCF, as well as monitoring and verification systems and methods. • Verification and certification of ERs generated annually by JMC will be coordinated by the PCF, which will ultimately purchase the ERs. • The PCF will retain the services of an internationally recognized, fully independent third party to verify and certify the project ERs.

  38. Implementation Arrangements (continued) • The verifier will determine whether the project complies with the design and implementation specifications and meets the requirements. • Annual verification of ERs generated for the previous year will be recorded in a verification report. A certification will allow the ERs to be internationally traded. • The PCF will purchase only ERs that are verified. • According to requirements of the Kyoto Protocol, the Government of China will operate a registry to manage the transfer of ERs generated by the project.

  39. Risk Mitigation

  40. Risk Mitigation (continued)

  41. Sensitivity Analysis

  42. Sensitivity Analysis

More Related