Source: https://slideplayer.com/slide/1522859/
Timestamp: 2018-07-21 16:19:28
Document Index: 136567551

Matched Legal Cases: ['Art 2', 'Art 3', 'Art 3', 'Art 3', 'Art 3', 'Art 3', 'Art 3']

LULUCF in the negotiations AWG-KP-5 Bangkok April 2008 Jim Penman. - ppt download
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Presentation on theme: "LULUCF in the negotiations AWG-KP-5 Bangkok April 2008 Jim Penman."— Presentation transcript:
1 LULUCF in the negotiations AWG-KP-5 Bangkok April 2008 Jim Penman
2 Introduction LULUCF and agriculture: ~ 30% of anthropogenic emissions and mitigation potential identified in AR4 needed to achieve the objective of the Convention – as an integral part of commitments, not just a flexibility. should be considered together to deliver the optimal contribution from sequestration, materials substitution and energy to meeting UNFCCC Art 2
3 Kyoto to Marrakesh – why so complex? Countries a) wanted flexibility from LULUCF to meet commitments already agreed, but b) had concerns about LULUCF – the issues of scale, uncertainty, and risk. Resolving the tension between a) and b) produced entry into force, but only via the trauma of COP6. Agreement finalised at COP11 Will these ghosts haunt the path to Copenhagen?
4 Scale In 1997 the Kyoto LULUCF contact group negotiated Art 3.3 activities (ARD since 1990). Art 3.4 activities were to be agreed later, for 2 nd CP. Late in Kyoto Art 3.4 activities were included as possibilities for meeting 1 st CP commitments – but not specified Deciding the activities and how to include required thousands of person-hours of negotiating time.
5 Scale COP6 bis agreed Art 3.4 activities (forest management (FM), crop land management (CLM), grazing land management (GLM) and revegetation (RVeg) This deal enabled entry into force. It controls scale by: FM caps – provide certainty on maximum allowances but give little incentive to additional action. Net-net accounting CLM, GLM, RVeg; much better incentives, helps factor out any background trends in the emissions or removals.
6 Scale - factoring out - history Historical concern: could the residual uptake overwhelm the commitments? Residual uptake is the mismatch between known sources of GHG emissions, known sinks and the rate of atmospheric CO 2 increase RU is significant: possible causes – young forests, carbon fertilisation, nitrogen fallout Anxiety removed by Art 3.4 forest management caps and net-net accounting for other activities. Could factoring out anxiety return?
7 Scale - factoring out - future CLM, GLM, RVeg are under net-net accounting – already agreed that this deals with the issue Risk of unforeseen uptakes entering system much reduced by better understanding of what drives forestry emissions and removals, and better inventory data that can be linked to projections. This causal understanding essential to negotiating forest management uncapped in future agreements.
8 Uncertainty LULUCF inventories very underdeveloped at the time of Kyoto Have seen big advances since then, a) agreement of IPCC Good Practice Guidance for LULUCF (2003), the 2006 Guidelines, and b) development of inventory systems and review under KP reporting requirements - LULUCF data now much improved. Need to continue to apply IPCC methods in a consistent fashion and maintain the UNFCCC/KP review system.
9 Risk Risk (= permanence risk) not an issue where there is long term responsibility for carbon stocks. In a legally binding regime this translates permanence risk into compliance risk. Carbon stocks vary e.g. due to fire incidence or pest attack. These are predictable, on average. But they produce statistical fluctuations in national inventory totals – potentially problem for compliance
10 Risk - cont Even without LULUCF statistical fluctuations occur, up to a few % of national total emissions over a 5 year commitment period - countries allow for this when accepting commitments. Increasing averaging period would reduce LULUCF (and other) fluctuations but complicate accounting if the commitment period was different. Alternatively countries could sign up to commitments on the basis of a conservative assessment of what LULUCF will achieve, taking the statistical fluctuations into account
11 Particular issues CDM: Consider simplification of rules including possibility of sectoral approach – part of package Achieving continuity: provided Art 3.3 and 3.4 activities are a subset of any broader inclusion, and common IPCC methodologies are used, there will be continuity. Accounting rules Net-net and gross-net treat the sector the same way in the commitment period. The difference is in the base year – gross-net accounting omits LULUCF emissions. But this is unbalanced; should consider LULUCF in the base year too, so adopt net-net accounting.
12 Particular issues Special rules – Full coverage would reduce the need for special rules HWP: methodologically, harvested wood products are a dead organic matter pool and can be treated as such in determining a countrys emissions to or removals from the atmosphere from LULUCF. Anthropogenic emissions – use of managed land gives responsibility for carbon stocks were management takes place, including disturbances on unmanaged land leading to change from unmanaged to managed land.
13 In summary… solutions exist we can have full coverage, proper incentives to optimise the contribution from sequestration, materials substitution and energy the ghosts of the past need not haunt the future.
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