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Developing The Technology Matrix for India and Ukraine (Draft Report) (Paperback)
Loot Price: R555
Discovery Miles 5 550
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Developing The Technology Matrix for India and Ukraine (Draft Report) (Paperback)
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Loot Price R555
Discovery Miles 5 550
Expected to ship within 18 - 22 working days
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Over the last decade, concern about the issues of global climate
change and rising greenhouse gas emissions has grown significantly.
This concern has spurred an elaborate series of international
meetings and agreements seeking to stabilize atmospheric greenhouse
gas concentrations. In 1992, at Rio de Janeiro, more than 160
countries, including the United States, signed the United Nations
Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC). The signatories
were in agreement regarding the potential negative effects of
climate change under a business as usual future. Under the
Convention, the developed countries (referred to as Annex I
countries) were assigned primary responsibility for addressing the
climate change issue. However, at the first two Conferences of
Parties1 called to discuss methods for implementing the Convention,
a strong debate ensued regarding what policy instruments should be
used to curb global climate change, and what, if any, targets and
timetables should be set for achieving emission reductions. Most
Annex I nations announced a series of voluntary targets and
initiatives for meeting emission reduction goals. By 1996, it had
become clear that greenhouse gas emission levels in most Annex I
countries were rising despite voluntary efforts to reduce
emissions. A consensus for firmer targets and timetables was
building. At the Third Conference of Parties, held in Kyoto, Japan
in December 1997 a series of firm emission reduction targets were
agreed to by the Parties. Developed countries agreed to reduce
their greenhouse gas emissions by an average of 5.2 percent from
1990 levels by 2008-2012. While the resulting "Kyoto Protocol" was
signed in 1997 by the United States and other industrialized
countries, it was never ratified by the U.S. Senate, and the
Administration recently announced its intention of dropping out of
the negotiations surrounding the Protocol. Nonetheless, the general
scientific consensus that global warming is a real, significant
issue is not in dispute. The Administration is calling into
question only the appropriate response to the issue, while
explicitly recognizing the need for some response. Regardless of
whether this response takes the form of a domestic voluntary
program, an international treaty, or something in between these two
extremes, it is likely that it will incorporate "market mechanisms"
in some form or another. The concept of flexible, market-based
mechanisms is an essential element to the Convention and the Kyoto
agreement. Market mechanisms are designed to facilitate low-cost
solutions to environmental problems. This new concept awards
credits for emission reduction activities undertaken beyond a
country's borders. In order to estimate emission reductions arising
from such market-based emissions reduction projects, the emissions
generated by the project itself must be measured and subtracted
from some baseline representing what emissions would have been in
the absence of the project. The technology matrix, originally
proposed by the National Energy Technology Laboratory (NETL) in the
report Developing Emission Baselines for Market-based Mechanisms: A
Case Study Approach, is a potential method for estimating the
baseline. It consists of a selected list of greenhouse gas abating
technologies, along with emission rate benchmarks for each
technology. In this document, a technology matrix was developed for
ten selected technologies, for the countries of India and Ukraine.
The basic technology matrix development approach was the same for
all of the stated technologies, and for both countries. For a
technology to "qualify" for the selected list of greenhouse gas
abating technologies, it must first be subjected to a rigorous test
to demonstrate that projects utilizing the technology are
"additional" to those that would have been implemented under
"business as usual" circumstances.
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