TNE logo

Cracks in the market

It could save the rainforests of Borneo, slow climate change and the international community backs it. But a plan to pay tropical countries not to chop down trees risks being discredited by opportunists even before it starts

20/08/2009 | By Gerard Wynn and Sunanda Creagh

Article tools

A forest carbon market is emerging in anticipation of a global UN climate deal in December in Copenhagen, expected to allow rich countries to pay to protect rainforests as a cheap alternative to cutting their own greenhouse gases.

Officials in Papua New Guinea (PNG) have underlined how things may go awry. Reuters has uncovered evidence of a multi-million-dollar offer of assistance from carbon brokers to a government agency, and confusion over whether offset sales were from valid projects.

There is growing interest from countries and companies in the developed world to buy the rights to the carbon stored in trees as they grow, to offset their own emissions of the greenhouse gas carbon dioxide.

But development and environment groups have long warned that suddenly placing a big value on rainforests could spur friction and even conflict in some developing nations, because of uncertain tenure rights, corruption and inadequate policing.

At a conference on the Indonesian island of Bali, Interpol environmental crime official Peter Younger told Reuters he expected fraudulent trading of carbon credits, as organised crime infiltrates the system of companies and countries in the developed world buying rights to the stored carbon.

Indonesia became the first country to set out some form of regulation for how its scheme will work, but stressed it has not yet developed a model for the most sensitive issue of revenue collection.

Papua New Guinea, which has some of the world’s fastest-disappearing rainforest and has championed the forest carbon market, established its Office of Climate Change and Environmental Sustainability (OCCES) in 2008 to develop forest protection projects.

The agency suspended in January all plans to sell rights to the carbon stored in its rainforests after deals sparked land ownership disputes, a senior official told Reuters. “All projects are suspended while we get some experience,” said Theo Yasause, executive director of OCCES.

One such project included the department’s own proposal to give exclusive rights to a large area of rainforest to two brokers which would in return donate $8m to fund the agency’s creation.

Brokers develop projects for landowners to sell the carbon stored in their forests in return for a share of those rights. In government papers dated June 12th 2008, seen by Reuters that Yasause signed and has authenticated, two brokers offered to help fund the OCCES agency. They were named in the memo as Earth Sky and Climate Assist PNG but could not be located for comment. “That memo was in June, by January everything was stopped,” said Yasause. “I said ‘no, let’s set a policy first.’”

In the memo Yasause asked PNG Prime Minister Michael Somare to counter-sign a certificate allowing the brokers to sell forest carbon offsets valued at $500m.

“The (two brokers are) prepared to put in 10 million Australian Dollars to assist the establishment of the Office of Climate Change,” Yasause wrote in the June 2008 memo. The OCCES would also earn 20 percent of any proceeds from carbon sales. When the OCCES was created, Prime Minister Somare said it should be self-sufficient through funds generated from forest projects.

When asked why he thought his agency should receive such a large sum, Yasause said: “Initially we thought we should get some of that. It wasn’t meant to set it as a policy. When I started I thought (it) could come as a tax to government. “It was only a proposal. Nothing came through,” he added.

PNG is now crafting an “open tendering” policy to sell rights to the carbon stored in its rainforests, Yasause said. That would apply to one project initially, called April Salome, when the policy was up and running.

“We suspended all communications and dealings with the brokers at this stage. I put a notice up saying ‘there’s no dealings as of January.’”

However, another broker and project consultant, Swiss-based South Pole Carbon Asset Management, said it had rights to sell carbon credits from a certain portion of the April Salome project and would continue to do so.

“We have all kinds of letters of (government) support, approval and so on, including letters after January,” said Christian Dannecker, principal at South Pole, who also referred to written authorisation for the project from 160 landowner groups in the region.

South Pole is already selling the carbon rights before the project is approved by a third party, called validation, a common practice in carbon markets. The timing of approval was unsure given it was “in an early phase”, said Dannecker.

The company estimates April Salome will generate one million tonnes of avoided carbon dioxide emissions per year, but that was not formally audited. “We’re still putting together data,” said Dannecker. “It’s not done, just estimates.”

One buyer of the credits from South Pole was a Spanish environment group promoting ecological projects, CeroCO2, which in turn has sold the offsets to individuals, small companies and an event in Zaragoza, for example to offset travel.

The company has sold 660 tonnes at about ¤10 each. The buyers paid up∞front but the group would replace the credits if the project was never approved, a group spokeswoman said. CeroCO2 had told their clients that the project was at an early stage and that the carbon offsets were still hypothetical, she added.
 
CeroCO2’s Web site said the offsets met a standard devised by US-based auditors called the Climate, Community & Biodiversity Alliance (CCBA), but they did not. “We have not received any documents about this project,” said Joanna Durbin, a director at the CCBA.

“It was a mistake in our Web site,” the CeroCO2 spokeswoman said. “We are human.” CeroCO2 removed the project from its Web site after speaking to Reuters.

“It all goes to show what a horrible mess will ensue when there is neither a basic level of governance in the countries where the forestry credits are supposedly being generated, nor any regulation in the international markets where they are being traded,” said Simon Counsell, director of the Rainforest Foundation UK.

Counsell urged much slower adoption of forest carbon rules, rather than rushing these in time for a December climate deal. Industrialised countries already pay developing nations to avoid greenhouse gas emissions, for example to build dams, wind farms or improve the efficiency of their factories, in a $6.5bn trade in carbon offsets.

They view such offsets as a cut-price way to meet their carbon caps under the Kyoto Protocol, instead of taking more costly action at home, for example imposing carbon taxes on industry or households. Payments to conserve trees are not eligible under Kyoto, but there is enormous pressure to widen the scheme to include rainforests under the successor climate pact to be thrashed out in Copenhagen.

Papua New Guinea helped found the 40-nation Coalition for Rainforest Nations which wants support for the system, Reduced Emissions from Degradation and Deforestation (REDD), under a new treaty. Most PNG rainforest is owned by communities and indigenous groups, but the government still hands out concessions, said Andy White at Washington-based Rights and Resources Initiative.

The head of the Office of Climate Change, Yasause, produced papers in a PNG court confirming that he had suspended a deal – which he had originally approved – involving another carbon fund, after complaints from landowners that they had not been consulted over sales of carbon rights in a forested area called Kamula Doso.

“I am not working with them until I get clarity in this landowner dispute, we cannot do REDD in those places if there is fighting between landowners, it will kill it,” Yasause told Reuters.

Leave a comment

5 		stars5 stars5 stars5 stars5 stars
 4 stars4 stars4 stars4 stars4 stars
 3 stars3 stars3 stars3 stars3 stars
 2 stars2 stars2 stars2 stars2 stars
 1 star1 star1 star1 star1 star

Energy Articles

Also in this section

Oil turns focus back to tradition

While common sense might suggest the biggest oil companies should concentrate on the biggest undevel...Read more

Leading the charge

Society faces a critical challenge: Increasingly expensive fossil fuel reserves, which so many indiv...Read more

Sanctions tighten pressure on Iran's oil industry

A new round of US and European sanctions targets Iran's dilapidated oil sector from top to bottom, m...Read more

Australia on track to meet Kyoto target

Australia is on track to meet its greenhouse gas emissions target under the UN's Kyoto Protocol clim...Read more

Scientists examine causes for lull in warming

Climate scientists must do more to work out how exceptionally cold winters or a dip in world tempera...Read more

US stands out for climate-change skepticism

Many Americans are skeptical about global warming and that makes it harder to get a bill through Con...Read more

Lobbyists for US cap and trade face daunting task

The US Senate's stalled climate bill is getting a last big push from an unlikely ally - a group of e...Read more

US solar thermal firm in deal for China power project

US solar thermal power company eSolar, whose investors include Google Inc, said it has reached a dea...Read more

French nuclear deals need bespoke flavour

France could miss out on more multi-billion dollar deals to build new nuclear power plants unless it...Read more

Crunch time for the planet

Rich nations have to do more – a lot more – to slash their CO2 output. CCS technology can help, says...Read more

Seeing REDD

Accounting for more than half of the world's standing forest and 55 percent of Brazil's greenhouse g...Read more

A hub for energy

Niedersachsen, the German state up north, with Hanover as its capital, is the state of wind energy: ...Read more

Taking electric cars mainstream

Fundamental to the success of combating global climate change and reducing dependence on oil is chan...Read more

Waste not want not

The generation of electricity from WtE plants is often cited as an environmentally friendly and effe...Read more

An inseparable pair

Water and energy are critical to the world's expanding population, but what often is overlooked is t...Read more

A necessary technology

New CCS technology can now pipe carbon dioxide from coal and gas power stations to underground stora...Read more

Taking on the challenge

Addressing climate change and moving toward a more sustainable environment have become every-day cha...Read more

A dim view

Red tape, a lack of political will and local opposition have cramped the development of an otherwise...Read more

A global effort

Steps by the Obama administration to recognise the harmful impact of industrial emissions on the pla...Read more

Eye on the future

Through one of the most severe global recessions in a generation, Anadarko Petroleum Corporation con...Read more

Wast(ing) water

Much of what we flush away can be converted into valuable resources, write Petter D. Jenssen and Ing...Read more

Water worries cloud future

With climate change concerns mounting and drought becoming more of a problem in many areas, the wate...Read more

Our energy future

The New Economy's Hywel Jones speaks with Fluor's Chairman & CEO Alan Boeckmann, Senior Group Pr...Read more

Developing solutions

Huw Thomas and Nick Williamson of Ashurst LLP take us through the ups and downs of small to medium s...Read more

Smoke and mirrors?

New geo-engineering proposals have to overcome wide criticism that they are fanciful and could have ...Read more

Leading the industry

Carbon capture and storage (CCS) is a very important technology for worldwide climate mitigation...Read more

It won't cost the Earth to save the planet

The earth's temperature is rising. Climate change affects every surface of the world; immediate acti...Read more

Virtual edition

In this issue, we list our 40 most innovative companies in the world and bring you the facts and figures from the latest developments making the news...
Report: NASA'S outdated labs jeopardise research

Report: NASA'S outdated labs jeopardise research

Many of NASA's research labs are old, and budget cuts have seriously jeopardised scientific research at the space agency, according to a National Research Council report

Are US regulators dropping the ball on biocrops?

Are US regulators dropping the ball on biocrops?

Robert Kremer, a US government microbiologist who studies Midwestern farm soil, has spent two decades analysing the rich dirt that yields billions of bushels of food each year and helps the US retain its title as breadbasket of the world

Russia's Black Sea navy is burden for Ukraine

Russia's Black Sea navy is burden for Ukraine

Russia's Black Sea fleet might not carry much weight in strict military terms but its presence in the port of Sevastopol will burden Ukraine's future for generations to come, critics of the move say

US trade gap widens in March to $40.4bn

US trade gap widens in March to $40.4bn

The US trade deficit hit its widest point in more than a year in March, with a jump in imports swamping a rise in exports as the global economy strengthened, a government report shows