Carbon Credits - Big Dams Disqualified
By Molyneux Rush, Wednesday 29 July, 2009
Clutha River Guardian
The international community is moving to prevent large dam projects from qualifying for carbon credits.
Climate change and the push for renewable energy has given a new incentive to dam builders. Newly added to the dam equation is the emerging market for so-called carbon credits. The credits are part of a strategy to place "caps" on damaging greenhouse gas emissions while allowing companies that can't meet the restriction to buy credits from ones that achieve significant savings. The cap would be gradually lowered to reduce overall emission levels.
Hydroelectric power is a prime candidate for carbon trading, selling credits because it is largely emission-free. The credits typically would be granted only for new or additional power.
The market for the credits is tiny now, but US legislation is moving forward that would create caps and a national market that could ultimately reach US$120 billion a year. The international market place, by necessity, will move to regulate the eligibility playing-field for potential traders.
Globally, the increasing mandates for power utilities to expand their portfolios of renewable energy are prompting dam operators to take a second look at thousands of dams, once shelved or thought uneconomic.
In New Zealand, energy companies have been watching market developments closely, keen to take advantage of a projected carbon credit opportunity. Contact Energy has dusted off old dam plans for the Clutha River, midst a flurry of energy project activity nationwide.
The carbon trading incentive has made building or upgrading hydroelectric facilities a more alluring prospect.
The small rural Chelan County Public Utility District last year became the first hydropower facility in the U.S. to begin trading carbon credits on the Chicago Climate Exchange.
The money the district has made from selling credits -- about $1.6 million so far -- is going back to Chelan County and its customers for new investments in carbon-free electricity.
But the possibility of more hydroelectric construction around the world has set off alarm bells among some groups of environmentalists, critical of the destructive large dam development model.
"Rivers in the U.S. have been seriously impacted by dam construction," the conservation group International Rivers said in urging California authorities to disqualify hydropower projects producing more than 10 megawatts of power from receiving carbon credits.
"Fortunately, some of this damage is now starting to be reversed by dam removals," the group said. "California climate action should not act as an incentive to increase damage to rivers and prevent efforts to restore them."
California gets about 9.6% of its power from large hydro generators. The state has said it will consider as renewable energy only those hydro projects smaller than 30 megawatts that do not require the diversion of any new water.
Climate-change activists and environmental groups worldwide balk at the idea of offering carbon credits for large hydropower projects, and are lobbying for changes to Kyoto's CDM (Clean Development Mechanism) to curb widespread abuse estimated to exist in 40-60% of carbon credit/offset trading.
The U.S. Senate has defined Renewable Portfolio Standards for electricity producers. However, definitions of “renewable” vary among different state incarnations of the RPS. Some programs define upgrading “incremental hydropower” as renewable, others grant credit to “small” dams (e.g. less than 30 MW), while others exclude dams from the list of qualifying renewable resources.
Internationally, megawatt limits and greater scrutiny of the carbon credit certification process will be needed to maintain carbon market integrity. Analysts believe that the carbon credit door is closing for large hydro power.
Wednesday, July 29, 2009
Carbon Credits - Big Dams Disqualified
Labels:
Carbon Trading,
Clutha dams,
Contact Energy
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