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Introduction of International Law Related to the CDM Development Process

Introduction of International Law Related to the CDM Development Process. Peter Corne China Business Group Eversheds LLP November 2007. I. Overview of the International Legal Framework. Basic International Treaties on CDM.

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Introduction of International Law Related to the CDM Development Process

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  1. Introduction of International Law Related to the CDM Development Process Peter Corne China Business Group Eversheds LLP November 2007

  2. I. Overview of the International Legal Framework

  3. Basic International Treaties on CDM • United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (“UNFCCC”) was signed in 1992 and came into force on 21 March 1994 • Kyoto Protocol (the “Protocol”), aimed at reducing greenhouse-gas (“GHG”) emissions, was signed in 1997 and became a legally binding treaty on 16 February 2005 • The Marrakesh Accords were adopted in 2001 to flesh out the Protocol rulebook and further advance implementation of UNFCCC To-date, 175 countries have ratified the Protocol

  4. Inside the Kyoto Protocol The Protocol sets up quantitative objectives for reducing GHG emissions up to 2012 • Annex I countries are obliged to reduce their collective emissions by at least 5% during 2008-2012 • Credits obtained from 2000 to 2008 may be used to achieve compliance

  5. Three Flexible Mechanisms • Three mechanisms set out in the Protocol for emission reduction • JI: Joint Implementation (Article 6) (Annex I countries Annex I countries) • CDM: Clean Development Mechanism (Article 12) (Annex I countries Non Annex I countries) • IET: International Emission Trading (Article 17) (Annex B countries Government Annex B countries Government)

  6. Implementation of Kyoto • EU: launched the European Climate Change Programme in 2000 • UK: successful emission control and a centre of emission trading • Canada: behind target - recent legislation

  7. Different Approaches: China Vs India • India has the most issued CERs • China has the highest overall projected CER volumes • Unfettered competition Vs government regulation

  8. Indian Vs Chinese Project Development • More than 50% (11 out of 20 projects) rejected by the CDM Executive Board until August 2007 are from India, none from China • 55 out of 136 projects that have been available for public comment before the end of 2005 but not been registered so far are from India, but only three from China • Most of the Indian projects have not been developed on account of the CDM incentive and thus do not fulfil the additionality criterion

  9. Indian Vs Chinese Project Development (ii) • Indian DNA thus far does not seen its role as providing a PDD quality check • Indian DNA supports principle of unilateral CDM • China's DNA has a list of far-reaching requirements that project developers have to fulfil • Unilateral CDM is now allowed but only takes up a small proportion of Chinese submissions ?? Which approach is more efficient to encourage environment-friendly projects?

  10. II. Fundamental Legal Principals of CDM

  11. Key Rules Affecting CDM • The use of CERs must be supplementary to domestic action • The requirement of additionality • The “Baseline” scenario • CDM projects are defined by reference to strict conceptual boundaries • CDM projects must account for “Leakage”

  12. Supplementarity • The Marrakesh Accords demand that emission reduction targets of Annex B Countries cannot be met solely through JI, ET or CDMs (“Flexible Mechanisms”) • At present there is no numerical definition of supplementarity • Although not directly binding on private sector participants in CDM projects, the supplementarity requirement raises commercial risks both on the supply and purchase side of CDM trades

  13. Supplementarity – Risks of Infringement • Annex I Governments purchasing CERs may seek to impose contractual terms on a project permitting them to reduce or terminate purchasing commitments where they have a supplementarity problem

  14. Supplementarity – Risks of Infringement (ii) • Annex I Governments may unexpectedly withdraw support for a project in development (which otherwise meets requirements) on these grounds. • This poses a development risk to sponsors

  15. Supplementarity – Risks of Infringement (iii) • Inability of individual Annex I investors to manage this risk (as they cannot control the activities of other investors of the same country) may dampen demand from the private sector for CERS

  16. III. Recent Negotiations and Discussions On International Rules

  17. Negotiations on Post-2012 Arrangements • Negotiations on-going • Participants all recognize achievements through UNFCC and the Protocol • Abandonment of the Protocol post 2012 will be a global tragedy • CDM: a good tool to mobilize climate-friendly policies and investments, but need to be improved • Further discussion in Bali next month

  18. Difficulties • Commitments from developing countries? • India • China

  19. Difficulties • Voluntary vs Compulsory

  20. Difficulties • Energy resources are limited • Energy policy is strategic for national economy • Energy consumption countries and energy production countries have different perspectives • Internationally, there are different interest groups, e.g., OPEC and IEA • Even within a country, there are different interest groups • Difficult to reconcile positions of different countries, difficult to reconcile positions within a country, US withdrawal from the Kyoto Protocol is an example • Difficult to established a international mechanism: after UNFCCC was signed in 1992, it took 5 years for the Kyoto Protocol to be signed in 1997, and another 8 years for it to be approved and took effect in 2005 • Wise to stick to the established Kyoto mechanism and aim to improve it

  21. Discussions on Post-2012 Arrangements • Pending formal agreement, there are discussions about: • Unilateral declaration by Annex I countries to extensively utilize post-2012 CERs; • Extension of the period of the next commitment to 10 years or more; • Goal for developing countries: pledge to reach intensity level in given sector, rewarded if achieved, no penalty if not achieved • Proactive support for post-2012 CERs by multilateral financial institutions • Post-2012 Carbon Fund launched by EIB

  22. EU ETS Discussion on Post-2012 Improvement • Post-2012 cap: consistent with 2020 reduction target of at least -30% compared to 1990 levels • Allowances: to be auctioned as from 2013 • Limits: to set quantitative and qualitative limit on the use of CDM/JI credits in the EU ETS • Expansion of coverage: sector (e.g., aviation) and GHG (e.g., N2O and CH4 from coal mine) • No inclusion of domestic offsets and JI credits from EU countries into the EU ETS

  23. IV. Key Documents in CDM Project Transaction

  24. Key documents in CDM Project transaction • Traditional project documents: construction agreement, purchase agreement, project finance agreement, power purchase agreement etc. • Contract with CDM project consultant • Contract with DOE • ERPA

  25. Key features of an ERPA • International sale and purchase agreement • Subject matter – a special type of good • Different degrees of risks at different stages: approval, construction, cost overruns, project underperformance, delays, DOE fails to verify GHG emission reductions, rejected by CDM EB, changes in laws

  26. Allocation of risks in an ERPA

  27. Allocation of risks in an ERPA (continued)

  28. Eversheds China Business GroupAn integrated team of experts delivering the advice you need • Experienced China practitioners in both London and Shanghai • Strong Renewable Energy / CDM focus • Work for both foreign companies pursuing deals in China and Chinese corporations in transactions outside the PRC • Advice across time zones

  29. Eversheds LLP Shanghai Office: Peter Corne Managing Director +86 (21) 6137 1001 +86 138 1818 3382 petercorne@eversheds.com

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