UEA: shake-shake-shake up your Carbon at Durban

University of East Anglia
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From the University of East Anglia  some news that a Major shake-up of carbon markets is called for. To that I ask: what carbon market? Seems they are pretty much DOA now.

Research from the University of East Anglia calls for a major shake-up of carbon markets

Research from the University of East Anglia and University of Sussex calls for a major shake-up of carbon markets

A panel of experts will meet ahead of the Durban climate summit to discuss a new report from the University of East Anglia and University of Sussex which calls for an overhaul of how markets in carbon emissions are governed.

Environmental, economic and development experts will debate whether the commitment to carbon markets is the right approach to tackle climate change at the public event ‘Carbon Markets for the Poor – A Contradiction in Terms?’ on November 15 at UEA London.

The event will launch a new research briefing paper which calls for a major shake-up of the way the Kyoto Protocol’s Clean Development Mechanism (CDM) is governed – to promote transparency and accountability, create channels for greater public input, and ultimately ensure the benefits of sustainable development are passed to poor communities.

The paper, entitled ‘Governing Clean Development: what have we learnt?’ is the third in a series published as part of the Governance of Clean Development project at UEA.

The three-year Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC) funded research programme was set up to explore the politics and governance of clean development in the energy sector.

It investigates which actors, institutions and policy-making processes involved in clean development are resulting in effective climate action and development benefits, which are not, and why.

The findings show why the CDM falls short on its promise to provide sustainable development benefits in developing countries.

The paper has been authored by Prof Peter Newell, from the University of Sussex (formerly of UEA) and Jon Phillips, from UEA’s School of International Development.

Key findings:

  • Stronger and more effective institutions from local to international level are required to steer the CDM toward climate and development goals.
  • Local communities and the public have few opportunities to directly engage with CDM procedures and little political influence over CDM policy. Improved access to information is important but it does not do away with the need for representation of stakeholders.
  • The CDM’s potential to reach citizens bypassed by other forms of finance can be enhanced by aligning the mechanism with national policies and coordinated donor initiatives.
  • Crucially, the political barriers to the uptake of clean technologies run deeper than carbon markets and the scope of technocratic reform programmes that have been proposed to date. Wider political changes are required in the way institutions function and politics are conducted to reward the winners from a low carbon energy economy as well as address the potential losers.

Prof Newell said: “Our research shows that important aspects of the politics and governance of clean development are performing badly, resulting in poor outcomes for both the climate and for development. Reform is vital if the CDM is to credibly position itself as a ‘win-win’ mechanism for climate change mitigation and sustainable development.

“These twin goals of the CDM are undermined by poor governance and the political realities of overcoming vested interests in the energy sector. We have found a strong link between who takes the decisions and who benefits. There is a real danger that the CDM could become a ‘rich man’s club’ of project developers, emissions verifiers and government officials, in roles that overlap and lack transparency.”

Jon Phillips added: “The potential of the CDM lies in reaching sectors, regions and people that are unlikely to benefit from other forms of carbon finance. Better public engagement coordinated planning and accessibility for poor communities is needed to ensure the mechanism benefits the majority of people.”

The paper will be launched and discussed at the event by leading actors and specialists in the field, including Prof Newell, who will speak about the project’s findings and open a public debate on the role of carbon markets in climate policy.

The panel will be made up of leading carbon market specialists – including Adrian Rimmer, chief executive of the Gold Standard Foundation – a certification body which aims to improve the pro-poor outcomes of CDM projects, Cambridge University’s Prof Michael Grubb, who is also editor in chief of the journal Climate Policy, Craig Bennett, director of Policy and Campaigns at Friends of the Earth and Dr Emily Boyd, Reader in Environmental Change and Human Communities at the University of Reading.

The UK government’s Martin Hession, chair of the CDM Executive Board, will provide reflections on key messages at the end of the debate and Simon Maxwell, a Senior Research Associate at the Overseas Development Institute (ODI) in London and chair of the Climate Change and Development Knowledge Network (CDKN), will chair the panel.

The public event takes place on November 15 at the UEA London Study Centre, from 7-9pm. To attend, contact Peter Quinn at p.quinn@uea.ac.uk or call 44-1603-592329.

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For further details of the event, including a map, visit http://www.uea.ac.uk/dev/gcd/UEA+London+Public+Debate+on+Carbon+Markets

For more information on the Governance of Clean Development project visit http://www.clean-development.com

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Gail Combs
November 14, 2011 8:26 pm

Camburn says:
November 14, 2011 at 6:35 pm
If anyone has a question as to where the money would go from a Cap and Trade scheme, here it is in black and white:
http://www.rollingstone.com/politics/news/the-great-american-bubble-machine-20100405
_______________________________
GEE, the same company responsible for the 2008 food riots and the starvation of millions of children. What a coincidence… NOT!
http://www.independent.co.uk/opinion/commentators/johann-hari/johann-hari-how-goldman-gambled-on-starvation-2016088.html
Matt Taibbi also did a great job of explaining the stuff behind “Foreclosuregate” http://www.democracynow.org/2009/3/25/aig_and_the_big_takeover_matt
More on Foreclosuregate and why Obama’s Loan Modification plan plays right into the banker’s hands by setting a homeowner up for foreclosure. (I have been there)
http://www.realtytrac.com/content/news-and-opinion/how-the-aig-bailout-could-be-driving-more-foreclosures-4861

morgo
November 14, 2011 8:49 pm

IF you know some going cheap the australian Govt needs some

Louis
November 14, 2011 9:21 pm

“…a Major shake-up of carbon markets is called for.”
I hope they shake them up really, really hard just before the markets open.

November 14, 2011 9:36 pm

Lets guess: will the benefits to be funnelled to the poor go through the hands of governmental and international bodies before being “distributed”? That’s a true “trickle-down” system; a trickle is all that escapes.

Pete H
November 14, 2011 10:25 pm

“The panel will be made up of leading carbon market specialists!”
It matter not one jot what any “Expert” panel or University come up with when the money market is involved. If dealers can see a way of making a $/£ they will trade in it. Is it not obvious (apart from our poor Antipodean friends government) that the dealers know its a crock and will not touch carbon trading with a barge pole? The real shakers and movers can see all the experts need to keep the AGW farce running or they are out on their ears but its the old “Would you buy a second hand car from this man”!
Hell, with the current demise in Europe of the Euro there simply is not the money to support this rubbish. Its just taking them a little time to wriggle out of it without looking to stupid!

Roger Carr
November 14, 2011 10:38 pm

Gail Combs: Some threads back when I was unable to respond you railed against the dosing of children for various “hyper” conditions, mostly imaginary. I just wish to endorse your remarks and encourage you to “maintain the rage”.

peter miller
November 14, 2011 10:56 pm

I have said it before here, so I will say it again:
The best analogy to a seller in the carbon market is a hooker.
You have it, so you sell it. But you still have it, so you sell it again, but you still have it so you sell it again, and again……………
The buyer has a fleeting feel good factor, while the seller has found the mythical fountain of money by the continuous selling of something intangible.
No wonder the carbon market, like organised prostitution, is a magnet for organised crime.

November 14, 2011 11:49 pm

So, it never was about the science then. Who knew?

Steeptown
November 14, 2011 11:53 pm

Who pays for all this garbage which passes for research? As always, we the taxpayers do. We are ripped off right, left and center. Democracy no longer exists.

DirkH
November 15, 2011 1:43 am

Consensus climate scientists (I’ll simply count these carbon market specialist scientists as ordinary consensus climate scientists; cogs in the machine just like Phil Jones or James Hansen) obviously have been given the order to devise new embezzlement schemes; the old ones aren’t working anymore.

John Marshall
November 15, 2011 1:50 am

A meeting of experts?
Definition of expert:- X the unknown quantity. Spurt a drip under pressure.

Shevva
November 15, 2011 5:06 am

Someones not getting there share. I’d look at who finaced this study. Sorry got my day job to do or I’d do more than a drive-by comment.

November 15, 2011 6:01 am

Here is another half-dead euromarket
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/quote?ticker=PNXCSPT2:IND
No volume for some time; Frankenstein was a European invention, too….

Roger Longstaff
November 15, 2011 6:34 am

Incredible!
From the fraudsters who gave us Climategate – and they now want to lecture to us on carbon markets!
Send a clear message to the UK government, and get rid of these clowns:
http://epetitions.direct.gov.uk/petitions/2035

higley7
November 15, 2011 7:17 am

So, basically they are going to push the Kyoto Protocol version New as if their purpose for begin is sinking like the Titanic. It’s as if the captain of the Titanic kept steering the ship while it up-ended and sank. Do we give him credit for NOT knowing when to quit? NO!
These clowns all know that carbon trading has nothing to do with climate and all to do with wealth redistribution and profit-taking.

G. Karst
November 15, 2011 9:10 am

And little Red Riding Hood said “My what big teeth you have grandma!” GK

George E. Smith;
November 15, 2011 12:32 pm

I’d pay more attention; well maybe some, anyway, if the UEA gurus, at least had some inkling of the difference between adjectives and adverbs.

November 15, 2011 2:46 pm

You cannot create a commodity with intrinsic value out of thin air.
Every time its tried, it falls flat on its face.
Of course, scam artists like Maurice Strong profit handsomely in the between time.

ozspeaksup
November 16, 2011 3:42 am

Roger Carr says:
November 14, 2011 at 6:33 pm
Never forget what grandma said:
Mighty hoax from little Enrons grow.
=============
Very good!

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