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Puerto Vallarta News NetworkEditorials | Environmental | June 2009 

Mexico Yet to Cross Clean Energy Threshold
email this pageprint this pageemail usEmilio Godoy - Tierramérica
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June 10, 2009



Mexico City - Despite its great potential for energy from the sun, wind and water, Mexico has not taken advantage of the Clean Development Mechanism laid out in the Kyoto Protocol on climate change.

Mexico, responsible for 1.5 percent of the world's greenhouse gas emissions, was chosen by the United Nations as the global host for World Environment Day on Jun. 5.

The latest official data on greenhouse gas emissions, from 2002, indicate that this country released into the atmosphere 643 million tons of carbon dioxide per year: 61 percent from energy generation and consumption, 22 percent from industry and 14 percent from deforestation.

Electricity, which is produced primarily in plants run on fossil fuels, contributes some 114 million tons of carbon emissions annually in Mexico.

Based on that tally, Mexico could make better use of CDM projects to develop wind, solar and geothermal sources, improve energy efficiency and replace fossil fuels, which would allow the country to cut its emissions by some 130 million tons, according to the Mexican Carbon Fund (FOMECAR).

Mexico registered 115 CDM projects, but just 10 percent are actually being implemented. By May, 5.7 million carbon emissions reduction certificates had been issued.

The aim of the CDM is for industrialised nations to invest in projects to cut emissions in developing countries as a way to offset emissions in their own countries.

In this way, the countries of the North obtain credits in their favour, as if they had reduced their greenhouse emissions.

But "the CDM is in a transition phase, it's been exhausted. In Mexico's case, the number of projects and quantity of credits issued have been somewhat disappointing," Gabriel Quadri, former director of the government's National Ecology Institute and director of the Ecosecurities company, told Tierramérica.

His company is dedicated to advising CDM initiatives and to issuing carbon emission credits. The entities in developing countries that engage in CDM efforts must register their projects and demonstrate that they capture or reduce greenhouse gases in order to sell those carbon credits to industrialised countries.

The Kyoto Protocol, in force since 2005, requires industrialised countries that ratified it to curb their climate changing emissions by an average of five percent below 1990 levels by 2012.

But "the CDM has turned into a way of marketing the credits, and has not lived up to its mission of promoting sustainable development," argued María José Cárdenas, Greenpeace Mexico’s head of energy and climate change.

In Mexico, "there is great potential for energy efficiency. A great deal of energy is consumed and there is a lot of waste," said Miguel Breceda, a researcher with the Autonomous University of Mexico City (UACM) Energy Programme.

The World Bank report "State and Trends of the Carbon Market 2009" estimated that in 2008 there were 705 million dollars in transaction, with certificates equivalent to 123 million tons of carbon. Latin America represents just four percent of that market.

A credit issued in Mexico is traded on the international carbon markets at 11 to 14 dollars, about a third of the value it had in July 2008. In this country, only 45 companies voluntarily reported their carbon emissions and 27 trade their reductions on the market.

FOMECAR, established in 2006, is a multidisciplinary trusteeship to provide technical and financial assistance to sustainable development and climate change mitigation projects.

The entity, created by the government's National Bank of Foreign Commerce and the non-governmental Mario Molina Centre, receives contributions in Mexico and from European donors.

FOMECAR has already authorised nine projects at a budget of one billion dollars, equivalent to about 2.7 million carbon credits, and has identified 80 potential projects worth approximately 13.4 billion credits annually.

The trusteeship aims to establish a national carbon market, encouraging more Mexican companies to take part.

In May, the Renewable Energy and Energy Efficiency Partnership announced financing for a study on the creation of a carbon credit market for Mexico's automotive industry, to be carried out by the non-governmental Centre for Sustainable Transport.

The goal of the Partnership, based in Vienna, is to give a boost to the global market for sustainable energy.

The evolution of the CDM depends on the negotiation of a treaty that will replace the Kyoto Protocol after it expires in 2012. The talks are slated for an international meet to take place in December in Copenhagen.

Breceda proposes simplifying the CDM paperwork and processes. "They were developed to avoid projects that don't demonstrate viability or that had overlapping subsidies. The legislation needs to be more flexible," he said.

In Quadri's opinion, Mexico should assume binding commitments under the new climate change treaty, which would help strengthen its carbon market.

"The CDM would remain in place for countries that are not as developed, the smaller ones, not like Mexico, which can no longer depict itself as a country in transition," said Cárdenas, who proposes an emissions reduction programme for the most heavily polluting sectors, like the oil, power and cement industries.

The World Bank report concluded that, so far, the CDM has failed to register more than 430 projects per year. In March there were more than 4,500 projects awaiting approval worldwide.

This story was originally published by Latin American newspapers that are part of the Tierramérica network. Tierramérica is a specialised news service produced by IPS with the backing of the United Nations Development Programme, United Nations Environment Programme and the World Bank.



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