This section will provide links to reports of interest
on significant environmental issues and may morph into
a news service or blog at some point in the future.
Really - who thinks up these things? And why don't
we get these stories in the Canadian media?
From the Guardian, July 14, 2010 -
Rich countries to pay energy giants to
build new coal-fired power plantsUN's Clean Development Mechanism
to use European carbon offset credits to subsidise 20 'efficient'
coal plants in India and China
The UN is set to channel billions of pounds of
public money from rich countries to giant energy companies to
build 20 heavily polluting coal-fired power plants on the basis
that they will emit less carbon dioxide than older ones.
Data seen by the Guardian shows that 12 companies
have applied to the UN for hundreds of millions of emission
reduction credits to subsidise "efficient" coal-fired
power stations in China and India. Many of the plants would
be paid for with carbon offsets bought by British and European
companies in lieu of cutting their own emissions.
If, as expected, the power company applications
are approved by the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change
(UNFCCC), they will earn around £3.5bn at current carbon
market prices. This would make the UN body set up to promote
clean energy and reduce global climate emissions one of the
world's largest provider of funds for new coal burning.
The rush by companies to take advantage of the
UN's Clean Development Mechanism (CDM) subsidies follows the
successful application for credits by the Indian Adani coal
group for two large power stations at Mundra in Gujarat, India.
Adani will earn around £25m a year for the lifetime of
its power stations in return for using "super-critical"
technology, which burns the coal at lower temperatures and emits
up to 30% less carbon dioxide than conventional power plants.
An Adani company spokesman said that its application
had been approved by the UN only after a "complex and gruelling"
evaluation process by national government, independent inspectors
and a UN committee.
Others companies are now examining if they qualify.
Eskom, the giant South African coal mining company controversially
loaned £3.75bn by the World Bank in April to build what
one of the largest coal-fired power stations in the world, has
said it will apply for emission reduction credits. If built,
the Medupi plant will emit nearly 25m tonnes of CO2 a year,
more than the national output of 115 individual countries.
If Medupi is allowed to sell carbon offsets to
Britain and other rich countries, it will be able to discount
6.5m tonnes of CO2 every year for 10 years, earning it tens
of millions of pounds. It would be able offset all the emissions
from a major new coal power station in the UK, effectively allowing
the British government to meet its carbon-reduction targets
by subsidising a plant in South Africa that would have been
built anyway.
Eva Filzmoser, director of CDM-watch said: "It's
completely unacceptable for the UN to keep issuing an inflated
number of bogus credits that create vast profits for carbon
trading groups and chemical companies. If the UN wishes to avoid
irreparable damage to its reputation and show that is truly
serious about climate mitigation, it must put the current methodology
on hold with immediate effect and halt issuing credits until
the methodology is revised."
David Abbass, a Unfccc spokesman, said the CDM
has features that prevent projects supported by the scheme from
inadvertently prolonging fossil fuel use or competing against
renewable energy sources. "Fossil fuel will be a part of
the energy mix for many years to come. It makes sense that the
CDM should be used to reduce the emissions associated with that
fossil fuel use."
"The methodology has a phase-out feature
that limits the number of certified emission reduction credits
that can be earned. As well, the number of projects eligible
in a given country is limited, based on a percentage of the
fossil fuel, covered by the project, used in the country."
The news comes at the same time as a report into
the EU Emissions Trading Scheme (ETS) by the campaign group
Sandbag. In 2009, European companies bought €860m of international
offsets to comply with caps imposed by the ETS, but the report
found that companies were directly subsidising competing industries
in developing countries. Sandbag says this undermines claims
by these companies that caps on their emissions force business
to countries outside the EU and so lead to "carbon leakage".
The largest purchaser of offsets, for example - Salzgitter's
Glock Satzgitter steel production plant - bought 40,000 offsets
from an Indian steel project.
"Frustratingly, it seems that EU installations
seem to have a greater incentive to fund abatement projects
amongst their competitors rather than invest in these improvements
themselves," said Sandbag founder and director, Bryony
Worthington, "While it is perfectly legal and on one level
economically rational to do this, it begs the question of why
companies would choose to send a direct subsidy to their international
competitors if fears of carbon leakage were so pronounced."