Title: India project not used
1India project not used
2Summary Areas of Potential Cooperation to
Realize Sinks Potential
- Perform pilot project analyses issues.
- Stimulate development of standard methods
guidance for US and developing country offsets. - Improve models to handle socioeconomic and
technical issues. - Dialog on potential activities issues with
stakeholders. - Assess rural livelihood, biodiversity effects.
- Assist key countries in assessing international
offsets opportunities, barriers, institutional
arrangements.
3General, Evolving Steps for Quantifying
LULUCF Project GHG Benefits
- 1 Establish Baseline Without Project.
- Access data, tools for candidate area and
activities. (Assumes future data sets available
in 2 years). - Identify appropriate spatial and temporal
boundaries for without-project baseline and
project. - Quantify probability of current land use
changing without project by
activity and location. - Estimate the initial C stock without project
and project changes in it.
4DRAFT Steps for Quantifying LULUCF Project
GHG Benefits
2 Identify and Assess the Project Case Identify
project activities and location. Determine the
relative additionality of proposed project
activities land use drivers and
policies. Estimate change in C stock with
project. 1
5DRAFT Steps for Quantifying LULUCF Project
GHG Benefits
- 3 Address GHG accounting issues leakage,
duration, etc. in Project Case. - Determine likelihood of leakage, and select
estimated leakage factor. - Adjust accounting for duration, saturation,
policies, other factors. - 4 Develop monitoring, verification, reporting
approaches - 5 Adjust Baseline and Project Cases, if
Changes Occur over Time.
6Baselines Conceptual Framework
Source IPCC LUCF SR, 2000 presentations
7Option Spatial Approach to Baseline Setting,
Projections, Emissions
- Can identify 3-4 predisposing or driving factors
roads, population change, land tenure. - Regional resolution can establish subregions to
provide finer resolution and higher
predictiveness. - Factors set baseline by activity location,
estimate future land use change and emissions. - Spatial approach allows much finer baseline
resolution than tablular approaches (activity,
location, tenure), model verification with
historic data.
8Leakage cut this??
- Leakage may be quantified by
- Monitoring key indicators of leakage, e.g.,
timber or agricultural output, movement of
dwellers - Using standard risk coefficients that are
specific to type of project and region - Leakage may be offset by
- Creating buffer zones as in the PAP project in
Costa Rica - Reducing the estimated carbon benefits as in the
Reduced Impact Logging (RIL) Project in Malaysia.