Forest carbon market already shows cracks

LONDON/NUSA DUA, Indonesia, (Reuters) – It could save  the rainforests of Borneo, slow climate change and the  international community backs it. But a plan to pay tropical  countries not to chop down trees risks being discredited by  opportunists even before it starts.

A forest carbon market is emerging in anticipation of a  global, U.N. climate deal in December in Copenhagen, expected to  allow rich countries to pay to protect rainforests as a cheap  alternative to cutting their own greenhouse gases.

Officials in Papua New Guinea (PNG) have underlined how  things may go awry.
Reuters has uncovered evidence of a multi-million-dollar  offer of assistance from carbon brokers to a government agency,  and confusion over whether offset sales were from valid  projects. There is growing interest from countries and companies in  the developed world to buy the rights to the carbon stored in  trees as they grow, to offset their own emissions of the  greenhouse gas carbon dioxide.

But development and environment groups have long warned that  suddenly placing a big value on rainforests could spur friction  and even conflict in some developing nations, because of  uncertain tenure rights, corruption and inadequate policing.

At a conference on the Indonesian island of Bali last week,  Interpol environmental crime official Peter Younger told Reuters  he expected fraudulent trading of carbon credits, as organised  crime infiltrates the system of companies and countries in the  developed world buying rights to the stored carbon.
Indonesia last month became the first country to set out  some form of regulation for how its scheme will work, but  stressed it has not yet developed a model for the most sensitive  issue of revenue collection.

Papua New Guinea, which has some of the world’s  fastest-disappearing rainforest and has championed the forest  carbon market, established its Office of Climate Change and  Environmental Sustainability (OCCES) in 2008 to develop forest  protection projects.

The agency suspended in January all plans to sell rights to  the carbon stored in its rainforests after deals sparked land  ownership disputes, a senior official told Reuters.
“All projects are suspended while we get some experience,”  said Theo Yasause, executive director of OCCES.

One such project included the department’s own proposal to  give exclusive rights to a large area of rainforest to two  brokers which would in return donate A$10 million ($8 million)  to fund the agency’s creation.

Brokers develop projects for landowners to sell the carbon  stored in their forests in return for a share of those rights.
In government papers dated June 12 2008, seen by Reuters  that Yasause signed and has authenticated, two brokers offered  to help fund the OCCES agency. They were named in the memo as  Earth Sky and Climate Assist PNG but could not be located for  comment.

“That memo was in June, by January everything was stopped,”  said Yasause. “I said ‘no, let’s set a policy first.’“
In the memo Yasause asked PNG Prime Minister Michael Somare  to counter-sign a certificate allowing the brokers to sell  forest carbon offsets valued at $500 million.
“The (two brokers are) prepared to put in 10 million  Australian Dollars to assist the establishment of the Office of  Climate Change,” Yasause wrote in the June 2008 memo. The OCCES  would also earn 20 percent of any proceeds from carbon sales.

When the OCCES was created, Prime Minister Somare said it  should be self-sufficient through funds generated from forest  projects.
When asked why he thought his agency should receive such a  large sum, Yasause said: “Initially we thought we should get  some of that. It wasn’t meant to set it as a policy. When I  started I thought (it) could come as a tax to government.
“It was only a proposal. Nothing came through,” he added.

MESS
PNG is now crafting an “open tendering” policy to sell  rights to the carbon stored in its rainforests, Yasause said.  That would apply to one project initially, called April Salome,  when the policy was up and running.

“We suspended all communications and dealings with the  brokers at this stage. I put a notice up saying ‘there’s no  dealings as of January.’“
However, another broker and project consultant, Swiss-based  South Pole Carbon Asset Management, said it had rights to sell  carbon credits from a certain portion of the April Salome  project and would continue to do so.

“We have all kinds of letters of (government) support,  approval and so on, including letters after January,” said  Christian Dannecker, principal at South Pole, who also referred  to written authorisation for the project from 160 landowner  groups in the region.

South Pole is already selling the carbon rights before the  project is approved by a third party, called validation, a  common practice in carbon markets. The timing of approval was  unsure given it was “in an early phase”, said Dannecker.

The company estimates April Salome will generate 1 million  tonnes of avoided carbon dioxide emissions per year, but that  was not formally audited. “We’re still putting together data,”  said Dannecker. “It’s not done, just estimates.”
One buyer of the credits from South Pole was a Spanish  environment group promoting ecological projects, CeroCO2, which  in turn has sold the offsets to individuals, small companies and  an event in Zaragoza, for example to offset travel.

The company has sold 660 tonnes at about 10 euros each. The  buyers paid up-front but the group would replace the credits if  the project was never approved, a group spokeswoman said. CeroCO2 had told their clients that the project was at an  early stage and that the carbon offsets were still hypothetical,  she added.
CeroCO2’s Web site said the offsets met a standard devised  by U.S.-based auditors called the Climate, Community &  Biodiversity Alliance (CCBA), but they did not.
“We have not received any documents about this project,”  said Joanna Durbin, a director at the CCBA.

“It was a mistake in our Web site,” the CeroCO2 spokeswoman  said. “We are human.” CeroCO2 removed the project from its Web  site after speaking to Reuters.
“It all goes to show what a horrible mess will ensue when  there is neither a basic level of governance in the countries  where the forestry credits are supposedly being generated, nor  any regulation in the international markets where they are being  traded,” said Simon Counsell, director of the Rainforest  Foundation UK.
Counsell urged much slower adoption of forest carbon rules,  rather than rushing these in time for a December climate deal.

ELIGIBLE
Industrialised countries already pay developing nations to  avoid greenhouse gas emissions, for example to build dams, wind  farms or improve the efficiency of their factories, in a $6.5  billion trade in carbon offsets.

They view such offsets as a cut-price way to meet their  carbon caps under the Kyoto Protocol, instead of taking more  costly action at home, for example imposing carbon taxes on  industry or households.

Payments to conserve trees are not eligible under Kyoto, but  there is enormous pressure to widen the scheme to include  rainforests under the successor climate pact to be thrashed out  in Copenhagen.

Papua New Guinea helped found the 40-nation Coalition for  Rainforest Nations which wants support for the system, Reduced  Emissions from Degradation and Deforestation (REDD), under a new  treaty.

Most PNG rainforest is owned by communities and indigenous  groups, but the government still hands out concessions, said  Andy White at Washington-based Rights and Resources Initiative. The head of the Office of Climate Change, Yasause, produced  papers in a PNG court on Monday confirming that he had suspended  a deal — which he had originally approved — involving another  carbon fund, after complaints from landowners that they had not  been consulted over sales of carbon rights in a forested area  called Kamula Doso.

“I am not working with them until I get clarity in this  landowner dispute, we cannot do REDD in those places if there is  fighting between landowners, it will kill it,” Yasause told  Reuters.