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Iowa Farm Bureau Carbon Credit Aggregation

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Title: Iowa Farm Bureau Carbon Credit Aggregation


1
Iowa Farm BureauCarbon Credit Aggregation
2
Topics to be Covered
  • What is Carbon Sequestration?
  • Background on the Chicago Climate Exchange
  • Exchange Offsets
  • Soil Offsets
  • Methane Offsets
  • Forestry Offsets
  • Exchange Offset Sales Contracts

3
Carbon Jargon
  • Carbon Pool
  • Stock
  • Carbon Flow
  • Sequestration
  • Sources
  • Sinks

4
Surface Carbon
  • Only 40 x 1018 grams of carbon are present at
    the Earths surface.
  • Of this "mobile" carbon, the major pool occurs in
    inorganic substances (largely bicarbonate)
    dissolved in seawater
  • Each of the other active reservoirs contains
    approximately 1 x 1018 grams C.
  • Agricultural ecosystems represent about 11 of
    the earths land surface and include many of the
    most productive and carbon-rich soils.

5
Carbon Storage
  • Carbon is continuously cycled between land and
    sea, in inorganic and organic form.
  • Most of the carbon stored in organic matter is
    nonliving, occurring either in soil humus or
    dissolved organic carbon (DOC) in seawater.
  • The atmosphere, in addition to comprising a major
    carbon reservoir, plays a critical role as a
    medium for rapid global exchange of CO2 and other
    bioactive elements.

6
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7
Modeling Carbon in the Soil
8
Carbon Sequestration
  • Carbon sequestration can be defined as the
    capture and secure storage of carbon that would
    otherwise be emitted to or remain in the
    atmosphere.
  • What are Carbon Credits?
  • Carbon credits encompass two ideas
  • (1) Prevention/reduction of carbon emissions
    produced by human activities from reaching the
    atmosphere by capturing and diverting them to
    secure storage.
  • (2) Removal of carbon from the atmosphere by
    various means and securely storing it.

9
What is carbon sequestration?
  • Transformation of atmospheric carbon to a
    fixed-state carbon.
  • Trees
  • Soil Organic Matter (SOM)
  • Underground traps
  • Carbonate rock
  • Dissolved Carbon (in seawater)

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11
The Carbon Cycle
12
Crop Biomass
  • Contribute to potential soil carbon source
  • Protects the soil surface from extreme conditions
    (temperature moisture) to allow microbial
    activity to function optimally.
  • Undisturbed biomass on soil surface prevents
    rapid decomposition.

13
Loss of Soil Carbon
  • Shifting Land Use
  • Grass or trees to crops or development
  • Cultivation
  • Increased aeration
  • Increased soil temperature
  • Soil Erosion
  • Carbon Transport
  • Lower Productivity

14
Increasing Carbon Pools
  • Soil Pool
  • Increase organic matter inputs, roots, litter
  • Reduce cultivation, aeration
  • Improve crop yields
  • Improve water management
  • Improved carbon management in agricultural soils
    improves soil quality.

15
Value of Increasing SOM
  • Improves soil structure
  • Decreases erosivity
  • Increases infiltration
  • Increases soil water holding capacity
  • Increases cation exchange capacity
  • Decreases the energy requirement for cultural
    operations

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18
What is carbon sequestration?
  • Transformation of atmospheric carbon to a
    fixed-state carbon. Land-based carbon
    sequestration is typically done through
  • Forestry
  • Increased Soil Organic Matter (SOM)
  • Reduced tillage
  • Grass plantings

19
Soil Carbon Sequestration
  • Changes in agricultural management can
    potentially increase the accumulation rate of
    soil organic carbon (SOC), thereby sequestering
    CO2 from the atmosphere.
  • On average, a change from conventional tillage
    (CT) to no-till (NT) can sequester between 40 and
    70 g C m-2 per year (.17 to .35 t/acre/yr C)
    which is equivalent to (.5 to 1 t/acre/year of
    CO2)
  • Soil Organic Carbon Sequestration by Tillage and
    Crop Rotation A Global Data Analysis, Soil
    Science Society of America Journal 661930-1946
    (2002) Tristram O. West and Wilfred M. Post

20
Carbon changes
21
Soil Carbon Sequestration
  • Carbon sequestration rates, with a change from
    conventional tillage to no-till, can be expected
    to peak in 5-10 yr with SOC reaching a new
    equilibrium in 15-20 yr.
  • Following initiation of an enhancement in
    rotation complexity, SOC may reach a new
    equilibrium in approximately 40-60 yr.

22
Carbon Storage on Ag Land
  • U.S. crop land can store 142 MMT of carbon per
    year
  • 8-9 percent of total U.S. emissions.
  • Private grasslands could store an additional 70
    MMT of carbon per year
  • 4-5 percent of total U.S. emissions.
  • CRP lands currently store 10 MMT of carbon per
    year.
  • According to Marlen Eve, USDA/ARS, Fort Collins

23
Carbon Storage Potential in Iowa
24
The Chicago Climate Exchange
  • 4-year Pilot Project
  • 2003 - 2006

25
The Chicago Climate Exchange
  • The Chicago Climate Exchange (CCX) is a
    greenhouse gas (GHG) emission reduction and
    trading pilot program for emission sources and
    offset projects in the United States and for
    offset projects undertaken in Brazil. CCX is a
    self-regulatory, rules-based exchange designed
    and governed by CCX Members.
  • These members have made a voluntary, legally
    binding commitment to reduce their emissions of
    greenhouse gases by four percent below the
    average of their 1998-2001 baseline by 2006, the
    last year of phase 1 of the pilot program.

26
CCX Founding Members
American Electric Power Ford Motor Company Baxter
DuPont Waste Management Inc. Equity
Office Properties International Paper
  • Manitoba Hydro
  • MeadWestvaco
  • Motorola
  • STMicroelectronics
  • Stora Enso
  • Temple-Inland
  • City of Chicago
  • Many more entities have joined the CCX, with new
    members joining almost daily.

27
CCX Mission Statement
  • The CCX mission is to provide its members from
    the private and public sectors with
    cost-effective methods for reducing their
    greenhouse gas emissions by building and
    operating a market-based emission reduction and
    trading program that is flexible, has low
    transaction costs, is environmentally rigorous
    and rewards environmental innovation.

28
Goals of the Exchange
  • demonstrate that a cross-section of North
    American entities can reach agreement on a
    voluntary commitment to reduce Greenhouse Gas
    emissions and implement a market-based emission
    reduction program
  • establish proof of concept by demonstrating the
    viability of a multi-sector and multi-national
    Greenhouse Gas emissions cap-and-trade program
    supplemented by Project-based emission offsets
  • establish a mechanism for achieving price
    discovery as well as developing and disseminating
    market information
  • facilitate trading with low transaction costs

29
Goals of the Exchange
  • allow flexibility in the methods, location and
    timing of emission reductions so that Greenhouse
    Gas emissions can be reduced cost-effectively
  • build market institutions and infrastructure and
    develop human capital in Greenhouse Gas emissions
    trading
  • encourage improved emissions management
    harmonize and integrate with other international
    or sovereign trading regimes and,
  • develop a market architecture that rewards
    innovative technology and management and
    encourages sustainable farming and forestry
    practices.

30
Greenhouse Effect
  • The greenhouse effect refers to the temperature
    regulation effect that certain atmospheric gases
    have on the earth.
  • The temperature-regulating gases, called
    greenhouse gases or GHGs, form a blanket around
    the earth that traps some heat from the sun
    within the earths atmosphere, keeping the planet
    warm and habitable.

31
Global Warming
  • Global warming, or climate change, can occur
    when the blanket of GHGs gets thicker.
  • The six types of GHGs covered under global
    warming policies and in trading programs are
  • Carbon dioxide (CO2)
  • Methane (CH4)
  • Nitrous Oxide (N2O)
  • Sulfur hexafluoride (SF6)
  • Perfluorocarbons (PFCs)
  • Hydrofluorocarbons (HFCs)

32
Successful Trading Models
  • The first major environmental success of the
    emissions trading concept was demonstrated in the
    1980's U.S. program to phase out lead from motor
    fuel.
  • This was followed by the highly successful U.S.
    Environmental Protection Agency sulfur dioxide
    (SO2) emissions trading program, which continues
    to prove the concept on a large scale.
  • To reduce acid rain, an overall cap on SO2
    emissions was imposed on electic power plants.
    Power generators that find it expensive to cut
    sulfur emissions can buy allowances from those
    that make extraordinary cuts at low cost.
  • While the first compliance year was 1995, trading
    started several years earlier. The first EPA
    auction was administered by the Chicago Board of
    Trade in 1993. Through private transactions and
    annual auctions, electric power generators trade
    emission allowances to arrive at an efficient use
    of mitigation resources.

33
Sulfur Dioxide
  • The SO2 program has been extremely successful
    emissions were reduced faster than required and
    costs are far below most forecasts.
  • There has also been steady growth in the trading
    of allowances, from 700,000 tons of registered
    trades in 1995 to approximately 12 million tons
    in 2001.
  • The market has now reached a value of
    approximately 2 billion each year for registered
    trades.

34
CCX Reduction Timetable
  • 2003-2006 Reduce emissions to 1, 2, 3, 4
    below 1998-2001 baseline

35
Farm Bureau Aggregation
  • Aggregating 3 types of Credits
  • Exchange Soil Offsets (XSOs)
  • Exchange Methane Offsets (XMOs)
  • Exchange Forestry Offsets (XFOs)

36
XSO Eligible Land
  • Land must be in the eligible pilot project area
  • Land must be capable of being cropped
  • Must be farmed with no-till, strip till or ridge
    till practices
  • Crop land can be in hay, but if row-cropped must
    be done in compliant manner
  • Crop land that was recently converted to
    permanent grass (after Jan 1, 1999)

37
XSO Eligible Grass Land
  • For this enrollment, old grass is not eligible.
  • Cropland that is in harvested hay as part of a
    crop rotation is eligible as no-till.
  • Eligible grass lands must be croppable lands that
    were planted to grass after Jan 1, 1999.

38
UU.S. Central Region for CCX Soil Offsetssets
Offsets for no-till or grassesOffsets for
grasses only
39
Exchange Soil Offsets (XSOs)
  • Commitment to 5 years of conservation tillage
  • Annual certification of compliance
  • Credits transferred to FB on Jan 1
  • 20 reserve held until end of pilot project
  • Transfer price will be the price as determined by
    sale through CCX less a 10 service fee.

40
Documentation For CCX Ag sector offsets
  • Enrollment form information
  • legal description of acreage, practice(s)
    employed
  • FSA maps and 2005 crop report
  • lessees reasonable expectation that acres are
    under control though 2010.
  • Failure to keep land in compliance throughout the
    pilot program voids all credits on non-compliant
    land during the pilot program.
  • Submit annual signed attestation to aggregator
  • acknowledge that CCX verifiers will be given
    access to fields and CCX documents

41
Definition of Conservation Tillage
  • For CCX purposes these practices are as defined
    in the Natural Resources Conservation Service
    National Handbook of Conservation Practices.
  • No-till/Strip-till - Managing the amount,
    orientation, and distribution of crop and other
    plant residue on the surface year-round while
    growing crops in narrow slots or tilled or
    residue-free strips in soil previously untilled
    by full width inversion implements
  • Ridge-till - Managing the amount, orientation,
    and distribution of crop and other plant residue
    on the soil surface year-round while growing
    crops on preformed ridges alternated with furrows
    protected by crop residue.

42
Tillage Equipment
  • Full width inversion
  • Moldboard plow
  • Chisel plow
  • Field cultivator
  • Tandem disk
  • Offset disk
  • Row crop cultivator
  • Okay to use
  • No-till/ridge-till planter
  • No-till drill
  • Rolling harrow
  • Subsoiler/ripper
  • Anhydrous applicator
  • Manure knife applicator
  • General Guideline After the implement has been
    through the field, there must still be a
    substantial amount of surface residue present and
    the soil disturbance must not be full width. If
    use of the implement would require that a
    leveling or smoothing activity follow, it would
    probably result in too much soil disturbance.

43
Mechanics of Ag Offset Aggregation in CCX
  • CCX
  • issues offsets to aggregators registry account
  • commissions verifiers

documentation
offsets
  • Aggregators
  • accepts initial registrations from producers
  • assembles annual attestations of activities from
    producers
  • receives offsets into CCX registry account from
  • executes sales on CCX trading platform on behalf
    of growers
  • manage multi-grower reserve account

documentation
sales proceeds
Individual Growers - register undertake actions
as per 4-year contract sign annual attestations
allow access to CCX verifiers ultimate owner of
offsets
44
XSO Enrollment Application
Farm Bureau Management Corp.
Contract No.__________________ 5400
University Ave West Des Moines, Iowa 50266
APPLICATION FOR PARTICIPATION IN SOIL CARBON
POOL and SALES CONTRACT for EXCHANGE
SOIL OFFSETS (XSOs) Seller_______________________
____________ Phone_________________
Date__________________ Address___________________
______________ City/State/Zip_____________________
_____________
I, ______________________________, hereby apply
for participation in a soil carbon pool managed
by the Iowa Farm Bureau that registers Exchange
Soil Offsets (XSOs) with the Chicago Climate
Exchange (CCX) for the years 2006-2010 on
property that I own or control. I hereby agree
that _______ acres shall be in continuous
conservation tillage as defined in this Agreement
and that ______ acres shall be in continuous
grass cover that was established on or after
January 1,1999. I further agree that I will
abide by the rules of the CCX as they pertain to
XSOs and to the conditions for Pool participation
as set forth in this agreement. Signed___________
______________________ Date_______________________
___
  • Purchaser agrees to buy and seller agrees to sell
    and deliver to purchaser free from liens and
    encumbrances at 5400 University Ave, West Des
    Moines, Iowa, the rights to the Exchange Soil
    Offsets (XSOs) created during the years 2006
    through 2010 through the application of
  • Conservation Tillage to ___________ acres and/or
    Permanent Grass Cover to ____________ acres as
    submitted on the Exchange Soil Offset Enrollment
    Worksheet
  • Please complete and attach the Exchange Soil
    Offset Enrollment Worksheet

45
XSO Enrollment Form Contd
  • XSOs accrue at the rate of 0.5 XSO per acre per
    year for eligible minimum till/No-till.
  • XSOs accrue at the rate of 0.75 XSO per acre per
    year for permanent grass cover.
  • 20 of the accrued XSOs shall be held in reserve
    by the Purchaser until Dec 31, 2006.
  • Seller warrants that the XSOs covered by this
    contract comply with all rules of the Chicago
    Climate Exchange. In particular Seller warrants
    that the land from which the XSOs covered by this
    contract arise shall be in continuous
    conservation tillage or permanent grass cover, as
    applicable, during the period January 1, 2006
    through December 31, 2010. In the event that the
    land fails to meet these requirements, all XSOs
    from such land shall be null and void and any
    payments for XSOs delivered prior to January 1,
    2011 shall be repaid subject to interest and
    penalties as provided in this agreement.
  • The transfer price of the XSOs covered by this
    contract shall be the sales price as determined
    by sale through the Chicago Climate Exchange less
    a 10 service fee.
  • Sale of XSOs covered by this contract shall be at
    the sole discretion of the Purchaser, however all
    XSOs shall be priced no later than June 30, 2011.

46
Terms Conditions
  • The enrolled project meets all applicable
    eligibility rules of the Chicago Climate
    Exchange.
  • CCX will issue to the CCX Registry account of the
    project owner or its designated aggregator a
    quantity of Exchange Offsets that conforms to the
    applicable CCX Rules.
  • Each sale of Exchange Offsets executed through
    the Chicago Climate Exchange shall represent a
    complete transfer of all legal rights associated
    with the mitigation of greenhouse gases that
    relate to the quantity and time periods
    associated with the Exchange Offsets that are
    established through fulfillment of the Terms of
    this contract.
  • The project owner or its CCX-registered
    aggregator may sell or retain the Exchange
    Offsets earned under the provisions of this
    agreement.
  • The project owner shall retain full legal
    ownership of all greenhouse gas mitigation rights
    that may accrue (a) on lands or via activities
    not included in the CCX-registered project (b)
    in excess of the quantity of Exchange Offsets
    issued by CCX to CCX-registered projects (c)
    before or after the years 2003 through 2006 for
    the CCX- registered project.

47
Terms Conditions
  • CCX makes no warranty as to the marketability or
    market value of CCX Exchange Offsets.
  • Each project owner, and, when applicable, its
    aggregator, is required to periodically submit a
    signed project report that confirms conformance
    with the terms herein. Representatives of CCX
    may conduct on-site inspection of registered
    projects and related documents. Each project
    owner agrees to provide access in such cases in a
    prompt and cooperative manner. All CCX offsets
    projects and project reports and verification
    reports are subject to inspection and audit by
    the provider of regulatory services designated by
    CCX and by other independent experts as may be
    engaged by CCX.
  • CCX may request additional information and/or
    access to registered projects for the purpose of
    advancing understanding of greenhouse gas
    mitigation projects. Project owners may decline
    such access without penalty. In no cases shall
    research findings cause a reduction in the
    quantity of Exchange Offsets to be issued to a
    registered project.
  • Failure to conform to the rules provided herein
    may result in termination of enrollment in CCX
    and prohibition from all further participation in
    CCX.

48
XSO Enrollment Worksheet
49
Enrollment Forms
  • Enrollment forms are available at
  • www.iowafarmbureau.com
  • http//www.iowafarmbureau.com/special/carbon/defau
    lt.aspx

50
Enrollment Summary
  • Complete Enrollment contract
  • Complete Enrollment worksheet
  • Obtain copies of FSA maps, 2005 acreage report
    (CCC578)
  • Mail materials to Iowa Farm Bureau.

51
IFBF/CCX Database
52
Enrollment/Parcel Report
53
Certification Report
54
Contact Information
  • David Miller
  • Director, Commodity Services
  • Iowa Farm Bureau
  • 5400 University Ave
  • West Des Moines, IA 50266
  • Ph 515-225-5430
  • E-mail damiller_at_ifbf.org

55
  • Thank You
  • Would you like to enroll?
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