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LP Gas Use and the MDG Carbon Facility

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Public private partnership between the World LP Gas Association and the UNDP. Designed to create viable and sustainable markets for LP Gas delivery and consumption ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: LP Gas Use and the MDG Carbon Facility


1
LP Gas Use and the MDG Carbon Facility
  • Andrew YAGER
  • United Nations Development Programme

2
LP Gas Rural Energy Challenge
  • Public private partnership between the World LP
    Gas Association and the UNDP
  • Designed to create viable and sustainable markets
    for LP Gas delivery and consumption
  • Directly targets rural and peri-urban areas with
    the objective of expanding access to cleaner LP
    Gas, thereby contributing to achieving the
    Millennium Development Goals (MDGs)

3
Environmental Finance
  • The Kyoto Protocol broke new ground with the
    introduction of a cap-and-trade carbon market to
    place a value on climate stabilization services.
    Carbon Finance could raise resources 10 times
    greater than what is available through ODA.
  • This emerging environment finance provides
    unprecedented opportunities to developing
    countries but also poses new challenges.
  • Access Carbon finance puts high demands on
    planning, legal, and financial institutions of
    developing countries.
  • Combining/sequencing different instruments Given
    the diversity and complexity of sources of
    environmental funding, a key challenge for
    developing countries will be to identify the most
    suitable financial instruments to achieve
    specific national targets (e.g. ODA, public
    transfers, direct private investments,
    environmental commodity markets)

4
MDG Carbon MissionCurrent Mix of Projects by
Country
  • Host-Country Distribution of Confirmed Projects
    (countries with 2 percent share of projects)

Distribution of confirmed projects by top host
countries
Others 52 (18)
India 96 (32)
Malaysia 8 (3)
Argentina 6 (2)
South Korea 5 (2)
Honduras 9 (3)
Chile 13 (4)
China 18 (6)
Brazil 64 (22)
Mexico 22 (8)
5
Distribution of CDM Projects
LDCs 3
Other countries 97
6
What is MDG Carbon
CDM projects
MDG projects
Poverty alleviation Biodiversity
Education Gender
HIV/AIDS Other

Renewable Energy
Energy Efficiency
MDGCarbonPool
Methane Mitigation
Biosequestration
Cleaner Energy
7
Overview of UNDP's MDG Carbon facility
8
Core Objectives of MDG Carbon Facility
  • Increase access to carbon finance to a broader
    range of developing countries and project types
    through providing a one-stop shop service in
    carbon finance in pre-market situations. (Build
    capacity)
  • Maximize the carbon development dividend through
    developing an MDG Carbon portfolio that strikes a
    balance between cost-effective projects (e.g. gas
    flaring reduction, landfill methane recovery) and
    high development impact projects (e.g. small
    community alternative energy, LP Gas delivery).
  • Develop capacity of programme countries to
    combine and sequence different funding sources to
    achieve specific national development targets

9
MDG Carbon MissionCurrent Mix of Projects by
Type
  • Distribution of CERs to 2012 from Confirmed
    Projects by Project Type

CERs up to 2012 from confirmed by project type
Agriculture (AWM) 4
Afforestation-Reforestation
Biomass/biogas energy 6
Transportation
Landfill gas 10
Renewables 6
Energy efficiency 5
Fugitive emissions 2
Fossil Fuel Switvh
Cemet 1
HFC N2O reduction 66
10
Barriers to MDG Carbon Project Development
  • A number of sectors that have promising
    opportunities for successful carbon reduction
    projects with high sustainable development
    benefits are suffering from the lack of
    applicable methodologies. Commercial carbon
    financiers are reluctant to develop such
    methodologies due to the perceived complexity or
    risks associated with them.
  • Most project proponents in low income countries
    find it difficult to advance the funds for the
    preparation of the carbon project document, its
    validation by a DOE and registration by the CDM
    board
  • Analysis of the typical impact of carbon finance
    on the IRR of different type of projects shows
    that in many cases the additional revenue stream
    created by carbon finance is not likely to be
    sufficient for transforming a project into an
    attractive investment (MDG benefits)

11
Access to Capital
  • Carbon finance provides only an additional
    revenue stream
  • To expand the carbon market into new countries
    and economic sectors, national development
    agencies need to address the fundamental market
    barriers that limit the attractiveness of
    underlying projects to potential investors in
    general
  • This could call for the development of
    industry-specific policy instruments to
    complement the potential effect of carbon credits
    on the profitability of underlying projects
  • By managing ODA,GEF and carbon finance under one
    roof, UNDP is able to assist host countries in
    sequencing/combining different funding sources to
    implement national environment energy
    development priorities

12
Overview of UNDP Role in Carbon Finance
Long Term Framework Agreement
Financial Services Partner
UNDP
Delivery of Carbon Credits
Payment for Credits
Payment of Cost Recovery Fee
Project Management Services
Emissions Reduction
Purchase Agreement (ERPA)
Cost Recovery Service Agreement
Project Proponents
13
Relationship of LP Gas Challenge to Gas Flaring
Initiative
  • The GGFR programme contributes to poverty
    reduction by developing concepts for how local
    communities close to flaring sites can use
    natural gas and liquefied petroleum gas (LP Gas)
    that may otherwise be flared.
  • LP Gas is often overlooked. LNG is produced and
    exported.
  • Industry has an important role to provide cleaner
    fuels to the local population.

14
LP Gas Challenge success
  • The LP Gas Challenge has successfully forged
    relationships with governments in pilot countries
    where policies and programmes are now in place to
    increase LP Gas use for domestic and small
    industrial purposes.
  • Important to develop positive actions within an
    effective local partnership between government
    and industry
  • In South Africa, ESKOM is replacing electric
    cookers with LP Gas stoves and cylinders

15
Energy Access for the MDGs
  • The LP Gas Challenge partnership has experience
    creating conditions for the local market to grow
    in a sustainable manner
  • There are immediate local benefits through job
    creation and local investment directly related to
    poverty reduction
  • A portion of the CERs in MDG Carbon projects can
    be directly targeted to MDG projects in
    non-energy sectors (e.g. health, HIV, education)
  • Combining carbon finance with LP Gas use to
    achieve the MDGs can make the associated gas
    usage more attractive
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