在发展中国家进行碳补偿:从中国风能争议中吸取的教训

Gang He, Richard K. Morse
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引用次数: 44

摘要

清洁发展机制(CDM)是领先的国际碳市场,也是全球可持续发展的推动力。但围绕中国风力发电的碳补偿问题爆发的争议,暴露了发展中经济体碳信用额验证的核心问题。几乎不可能确定来自中国风电的抵消是否是“额外的”,以及它们实际上代表了超出常规业务的“真正”减排。除非这个问题能够得到解决,否则它可能会蔓延到中国风能以外的领域,并可能威胁到碳市场实现国际气候政策所要求的减排的能力。2009年,清洁发展机制执行委员会(EB)对中国多个风电项目是否满足《联合国气候变化框架公约》的附加要求进行了前所未有的审查,震惊了碳市场。当最安全的CDM赌注变成最危险的赌注时,CDM投资者感到震惊;中国政府公开批评联合国对碳市场的监管;清洁发展机制EB也为如何在世界上最大的清洁发展机制市场验证碳抵消做好了准备。当欧洲委员会观察到中国国家发展和改革委员会(NDRC)授予风电项目的电价随着时间的推移而下降时,它开始担心中国可能在操纵电价,以保证附加性,并通过国际融资补贴其国内风电发展。如果中国政府控制了额外量,那么清洁发展机制验证碳补偿的能力将受到近乎致命的打击,因为中国风电带来的问题几乎延伸到每个发展中国家的所有电力部门项目。如果补偿不能得到可信的验证,那么《京都议定书》设定的排放上限的完整性就会受到直接威胁。因此,中国风能的争议对《京都议定书》后续协议的设计和谈判有着直接的影响。尽管在哥本哈根的谈判基本上失败了,但设计可靠、高效的碳市场仍然是世界上最重要的国际合作前景。发达国家已承诺到2012年提供300亿美元的气候援助,但其中大部分资金可能必须是通过市场提供的私人资本。为了使碳市场避免争议并有效运作,必须利用中国风电争议的教训来实施关键改革。本报告探讨了附加性在中国风电市场的应用,并为设计有效的全球碳抵消政策提供启示。它展示了风电争议的原因,强调了中国如何应用额外性的潜在结构性缺陷,并描绘了一条可以增强全球碳市场可信度的改革之路。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Making Carbon Offsets Work in the Developing World: Lessons from the Chinese Wind Controversy
The Clean Development Mechanism (CDM) is the leading international carbon market and a driving force for sustainable development globally. But the eruption of controversy over offsets from Chinese wind power has exposed cracks at the core of how carbon credits are verified in developing economies. It has become almost impossible to determine whether offsets from Chinese wind are "additional" and that they in fact represent "real" reductions beyond business as usual. Unless this problem can be resolved, it threatens to spread beyond wind in China and could threaten the ability of carbon markets to deliver the mitigation demanded by international climate policy.In 2009 the CDM Executive Board (EB) shocked the carbon market by forcing an unprecedented review of whether multiple Chinese wind projects satisfied UNFCCC additionality requirements. CDM investors reeled as the safest CDM bet became the riskiest; the Chinese government publicly criticized the UN's oversight of carbon markets; and the CDM EB prepared itself for an unprecedented fight over how carbon offsets could be verified in the world's largest CDM market.When the EB observed decreases over time in power tariffs granted by China's National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC) to wind projects, it became concerned that China might be manipulating power tariffs in order to guarantee additionality and subsidize its domestic wind development with international finance. If the Chinese government were controlling additionality, then the CDM's ability to validate carbon offsets would be dealt a near‐lethal blow because the problems posed by Chinese wind extend to nearly all power sector projects in almost every developing country. If offsets cannot be credibly verified, then the integrity of emissions caps set by the Kyoto Protocol is directly threatened.The Chinese wind controversy therefore has direct implications for the design and negotiation of any successor to the Kyoto Protocol. Despite largely failed negotiations in Copenhagen, the design of reliable, efficient carbon markets remains the world's most serious prospect for international cooperation. The developed world has committed USD 30 billion in climate aid by 2012, but the majority of these funds will likely have to be private capital delivered through markets. In order for carbon markets to avoid controversy and function effectively, the lessons from the Chinese wind controversy must be used to implement key reforms.This report examines the application of additionality in the Chinese wind power market and draws implications for the design of effective global carbon offset policy. It demonstrates the causes of the wind power controversy, highlights underlying structural flaws in how additionality is applied in China, and charts a reform path that can strengthen the credibility of global carbon markets.
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