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  03.01.05   Community Development Carbon Fund Gets Unexpected Boost; Public & Private Partners Invest $128 Million
  03.01.05   The Host Country Committee Meeting, Washington DC February 15-16, 2005
  02.25.05   TERI, IETA and World Bank host GHG Forum in India Feb 1-2, 2005
  02.22.05   Book Launch: Legal Aspects of Implementing the Kyoto Protocol Mechanisms - Making Kyoto Work
  02.22.05  Carbon Expo Press Release
  02.16.05  Kyoto Protocol Enters into Force

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Carbon finance is a means of leveraging new private and public investment into projects that reduce greenhouse gas emissions, thereby mitigating climate change and promoting sustainable development. An increasing number of governments and companies are entering the market, which is projected to grow significantly.

  Global Context
  Committed to Reduce Carbon
  Carbon Emission Reductions as a Tool for Development
  What are the World Bank Strategic Objectives in the Carbon
     Finance Business?

 

Global Context

In June 1992, over 180 countries at the "Earth Summit" in Rio de Janeiro adopted the United Nations Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC), a legal framework that commits Parties to the Convention to start the process of stabilizing climate-altering greenhouse gases in the atmosphere. The Kyoto Protocol, which was adopted under the UNFCCC, commits industrialized countries to reduce their carbon emissions by an average of 5.2 percent below their 1990 levels in the period 2008-2012.

To meet these commitments in the most cost-effective manner, the Protocol contains provisions allowing Annex I countries some flexibility to meet their obligations through projects generating Emission Reductions (ERs) elsewhere. Two provisions are particularly important:
  • Article 6 allows for the Joint Implementation (JI) whereby an Annex I country may acquire emission reduction units when it helps to finance projects that reduce net emissions in another industrialized country (including countries with economies in transition).
  • Article 12 provides for a similar project-based mechanism, the Clean Development Mechanism (CDM) to assist developing countries in achieving sustainable development by permitting industrialized countries to finance emissions-avoiding projects in developing countries and receive credit for doing so.
The purpose of both mechanisms is to assist host countries with sustainable development through the transfer of cleaner technology and financial resources for specific projects, while at the same time contributing to the objectives of the UNFCCC by lowering emissions of greenhouse gases.

Committed to Reduce Carbon

Companies can supplement their commitments at home by purchasing potentially lower-cost emission reductions in developing countries and countries with economies in transition. As a result, projects in these countries will get a new source of financing for sustainable development in the energy, industrial and waste management sectors, land rehabilitation, and in the introduction of clean and renewable technologies. Industrialized countries can meet part of their Kyoto obligation, while the threat of climate change is reduced at a lower overall cost. The Prototype Carbon Fund (PCF) was created as a response to the need to understand and test the procedures for creating a market in project-based emission reductions under the Kyoto Protocol's flexible mechanisms. The PCF has played a pioneering role in developing the market for greenhouse gas emission reductions, while promoting sustainable development, and offering a learning by doing opportunity to its stakeholders, and has paved the way for the additional carbon funds established by the World Bank.


Carbon Emission Reductions as a Tool for Development

The private market for project–based emission reductions, still in an early stage, does not yet have significant volume, and the potential benefits have not reached many developing countries. The World Bank’s carbon finance products help grow the market by extending and expanding carbon finance to both developing countries and economies in transition—linking private sector buyers of carbon credits with climatefriendly projects seeking financing. These carbon finance products are helping to create an environment in which the private sector can more easily use their resources in support of climate–friendly and environmentally and socially responsible projects.

Mitigating climate change by reducing global greenhouse gas emissions is classified as an important priority for World Bank operations, leading to substantial benefits for Bank borrowing member countries. The limited existing capacity in developing countries in originating Clean Development Mechanism (CDM) and Joint Implementation (JI) projects and undergoing CDM/JI transactions led the World Bank Group to undertake a pioneering role in developing the market for greenhouse gas emission reductions through the establishment of the Prototype Carbon Fund (PCF).

The World Bank’s carbon finance initiatives, including the PCF, are an integral part of the Bank’s mission to reduce poverty through its environment and energy strategies. The threat climate change poses to long-term development and the ability of the poor to escape from poverty is of particular concern to the World Bank. The impacts of climate change could unravel many of the development gains of the last several decades. The Bank is therefore making every effort to ensure that developing countries can benefit from international efforts to address climate change.

A vital element of this is ensuring that developing countries and economies in transition are key players in the emerging carbon market for greenhouse gas emission reductions. The role of the Bank’s Carbon Finance Business is to catalyze a global carbon market that reduces transaction costs, supports sustainable development and reaches and benefits the poorer communities of the developing world.

Carbon finance plays an important role in the Bank’s efforts to achieve a broad range of institutional goals and to meet commitments made (a)
through sector strategies in the infrastructure and environment sectors, (b) at the Johannesburg World Summit on Sustainable Development, and (c) under the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs). Over and above its impact on reducing greenhouse gases—a specific MDG indicator in itself—carbon finance can directly catalyze sustainable investment in a broad range of areas, ranging from afforestation and biodiversity, to renewable energy and solid waste management.

What are the World Bank Strategic Objectives in the Carbon Finance Business?

The lessons of experience have profoundly influenced the strategic direction of the World Bank's Carbon Finance Business (CFB). Based on the founding premise of the Prototype Carbon Fund (PCF)—"learning-by-doing"—the strategic direction of the Bank's CFB today has been informed by its unique operational experience and by in-depth and ongoing consultations with Parties to the Kyoto Protocol, the private sector, and NGOs. Therefore the current strategic objectives are:
  • Expanding support for core carbon market development under CDM and JI, the Kyoto Protocol's project-based market mechanisms, through OECD funds;
  • Extending the benefits of carbon finance to the least developed countries and to the poorer communities in all developing countries;
  • Demonstrating carbon finance for carbon sinks (sequestration) to achieve sustainable natural resource use, conservation, and sustainable rural livelihoods; and
  • Strengthening and expanding capacity building initiatives for mitigation and adaptation.
 





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