The Gold Standard in Sustainable Land Management
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Transcript of The Gold Standard in Sustainable Land Management
The Gold Standard in Sustainable Land Management
Ellen May ZanoriaSouth East Asia Regional Manager
Workshop on SLMAugust 29 – September 1, 2011Vientiane, Laos
What is the Gold Standard?• Non-profit foundation based in Geneva, Switzerland • The global benchmark certification scheme for high quality carbon
reduction projects in both compliance and voluntary carbon markets• Independently verified to deliver real, measurable, permanent
greenhouse gas reductions and sustainable development• The only standard to incorporate Monitoring, Reporting & Verification for
sustainable development and environmental co-benefits - for all projects• Actively supported by 75 NGOs worldwide, including WWF, Greenpeace
& Mercy Corps• Buyers include Swiss Post, Deutsche Post, DHL, Nokia, Virgin Atlantic,
H&M, TUI Travel, FIFA and multiple governments• Trusted by the United Nations as the standard for its carbon projects
• Focus on Renewable Energy and Energy Efficiency projects
• 100+ project types (methodologies)• 160+ project developers• 600+ projects in over 50 countries• 40m+ GS tonnes CO2e issued and
pending• Approx 40:60 ratio of compliance to
voluntary market projects
Robust carbon mitigation worldwide
Geographic location of GS projects
Gold Standard projects and offices worldwide
1 – 20 projects
21 – 100 projects
101 – 150 projects
150 + projects
GS headquarters, Geneva, Switzerland
GS global officesKEY:
Strong market recognition“The Gold Standard continues to be recognized as the flagship for demonstrating real carbon reductions plus additional sustainability
benefits.” ENDS Report 2010
• NGO category winner in Climate Change Business Journal’s Business Achievement Awards 2010
• Non-profit category runner-up in the Association for Climate Change Officers’ Climate Leadership Awards 2010 (winner is GS project developer)
• Ranked “most desirable standard for corporate buyers when purchasing carbon credits”, Carbon Management and Offsetting Trends Survey 2009
• Stockholm Environmental Institute commended Gold Standard as ‘the most fully-developed and rigorous standard in the voluntary market’ March 2008
• Gold Standard project recognition, includes two GS projects (GS685 and GS832) winning awards at the PCIA Special Achievement Awards 2011
UN projects – an inspiring use of carbon marketsUNHCR (High Commissioner for Refugees): Kakuma Refugee Camp, Kenya• Community focused solar energy project supporting Sudanese refugees• Solar cookers, public solar light and personal solar lanterns for students• Full documentation can be found on the GS registry – project GS924• http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Md-WxgHqdtQ
UN World Food Programme ‘SAFE’ Project in Darfur• WFP and the IASC are implementing SAFE (Safe Access to Firewood and
alternative Energy in Humanitarian Settings) in Darfur• WFP plans to provide and assist c.100,000 women with fuel-efficient stoves and
innovative fuel technologies in combination with alternative income opportunities, and to provide fuel-efficient stoves and equipment to 170 schools to alleviate the household burden of school meals.
• http://www.wfp.org/videos/stove-building-contest-darfur
Case study: Proyecto MiradorGS690 VER Energy EfficiencyHonduras 38,149 tCO2e/yr
This project reduces indoor air pollution by disseminating improved wood stoves called “La Justa” to the local areas around the Santa Barbara Province of Honduras. The La Justa was engineered to burn hotter and use less wood compared to a traditional fogon stove.
A field study showed that the replacement of one traditional fogon stove with one La Justa (Model 2x3) stove reduces greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions by 1.9 mtCO2e/year. This project is estimated to reduce emission over 38,000 emissions annually. That is the equivalent of taking more than 12,000 tonnes of rubbish out of landfill.
Case study cont: Contribution to sustainable development• Health benefits:
• Improves air quality, • Decreases child and adult mortality• Helps prevent respiratory illnesses caused by toxic
gases • Economic Benefits:
• Reduces living costs for families • Creates local employment opportunities• Reduces time devoted to wood collection and/or
money spent on wood • Facilitates transfer of technical knowledge• The stoves require less fuel, is more convenient and has
shorter cooking times • Helps reduce the burden on limited and remaining forest
reserves
Fogon vs. La Justa
Project: Sustainable Deployment of LifeStraw® Family in rural Kenya
GS886 VER Energy EfficiencyKenya 2,073,328 tCO2e/yr
This domestic energy efficiency project is based in rural Kenya and seeks to sustainably deploy 1 million point-of-use microbial water treatment systems to 4 million people from low-income families. The system can filter up to 18,000 liters of EPA-quality drinking water, enough to supply a family of 5 with clean drinking water for 3 years.
The LifeStraw® Family decreases the use and demand for firewood to boil water, reducing the direct release of CO2 emissions. It is estimated that this project will generate more than 2 million emission reductions per year, this equates to taking 345,000 passenger vehicles off the road for one year.*
Case study cont: contribution to sustainable development
• Provides access to safe drinking water to over 4 million rural Kenyans
• Helps combat disease e.g. waterborne and/or diarrheal diseases
• Helps reduce the burden on limited natural resources such as firewood
• Reduces living costs for families • Reduces child and adult mortality • Increases productivity and reduces time spent provisioning water• Creates thousands of employment opportunities• Represents a direct investment in the public health and future of Kenya• Reduces the disconnect between funding and public health goals and offers
an economically viable alternative to unsustainable charity and aid
Why do people trust and value Gold Standard?
• Detailed, robust engagement and monitoring procedures• All projects must host and document a two-step interactive ‘Local
Stakeholder Consultation’ in both the design phase & feedback rounds• Sustainable Development Matrix including social, economic and
environmental benefits for local communities • “Do no harm” assessment - UNDP safeguarding principles derived from
international conventions for environmental, social, economic impact• Measurement, Reporting and Verification of sustainable development
indicators and other environmental co-benefits• Active engagement of independent technical experts & NGOs• UN accredited auditors, supplemented by GS in-house experts• Constant innovation in all areas e.g. appeals process
What is the role of Gold Standard in SLM?The Gold Standard is the benchmark global carbon standard,
recognized by the market, resulting to a price premium
• A quality standard helps by delivering the full benefits desired from a market mechanism– Serves as steering tool for policy
makers– Stabilises and builds markets– Attracts capital– Promotes adoption and change– Promotes linking between schemes
• Template for:• Sustainable development assessment• Measurement, Reporting and Verification (MRV) and Monitoring• Local Stakeholder Consultation
What is the role of Gold Standard in SLM?• Methodology and process model (Less bureaucracy in approval)• Use of existing approved GS methodologies which lower use of NRB
– introduction of alternative ignition technique as measure to improve energy efficiency of domestic coal fires.– Technologies and practices to displace decentralized thermal energy consumption – efficient cook stoves, biodigesters, water
filters– Ecologically Sound Fuel Switch to Biomass with Reduced Energy Requirement– Large-Scale Supply and Distribution of Efficient Light Bulb, Showerheads and Water Saving Products to Households– Fuel switch from fossil fuels to biomass residues in boilers for heat generation
• Innovative concepts – micro-scale scheme, fast-track rule, retroactive registration, standardized baselines
• Market recognition of credibility, integrity, and robustness = reduced reputational risk for project and buyers/funders
• Strong international and local support (75 NGOs worldwide, host country authorities as partners)