Agricultural Protocols within the Alberta Offset System Tom Goddard, Agriculture & Rural Development...

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Agricultural Protocols within the Alberta Offset System Tom Goddard, Agriculture & Rural Development June 17, 2010, Washington DC

Transcript of Agricultural Protocols within the Alberta Offset System Tom Goddard, Agriculture & Rural Development...

Page 1: Agricultural Protocols within the Alberta Offset System Tom Goddard, Agriculture & Rural Development June 17, 2010, Washington DC.

Agricultural Protocols within the Alberta Offset System

Tom Goddard, Agriculture & Rural Development

June 17, 2010, Washington DC

Page 2: Agricultural Protocols within the Alberta Offset System Tom Goddard, Agriculture & Rural Development June 17, 2010, Washington DC.

Alberta Overview

Energy: 86% of emissions in Alberta• Most electricity generated from coal• Oil and natural gas• Oilsands represent 13% of total global

reserves, less than 10 % of global emissions, 18% of Allberta’s emissions

Agriculture: 8% of emissions in Alberta• Rainfall 300 to 450 mm (12 to 18 in) • Average temperatures of – 24 0C

in Jan to 24 0C in July (-11 to 75 0F) • 53 M ac farmland• 1/3 of Canada’s agricultural land• Small grains, oil seed, pulses• 40% of Canada’s beef, $ 1.8 M exported in ‘08• Irrigation - potatoes, sugar beets, sp crops

2006

2020

Alberta’s GHG emissions in the Canadian context

Page 3: Agricultural Protocols within the Alberta Offset System Tom Goddard, Agriculture & Rural Development June 17, 2010, Washington DC.

Carbon Market Context: Canada and AB

1997 – National Table GHG Reduction – Agricultural Sinks 1990’s – National collaboration GHG research 2002 / 3 – Alberta initiated Climate Change Action Plan

– Specified Gas Emitters Regulation (SGER)– Applies to all facilities producing over 100,000 t CO2e per year – Required to report average emission intensities– Pork Protocol

2007 – Alberta amended SGER legislation to require mandatory emission intensity reductions of 12% per year - Applies to 103 facilities3 options:

i. Reduce emissions, trade performance creditsii. Pay Climate Change Emissions

Management Corporation at $15 / T CO2e i. Purchase offsets

Oil Sands18%

Power Plants48%

Forest Products

0.5%

Other12%

Gas Plants8%

Heavy Oil7%

Chemicals7%

Profile of AB companies emitting more than 100,000 T CO2e / yr

Page 4: Agricultural Protocols within the Alberta Offset System Tom Goddard, Agriculture & Rural Development June 17, 2010, Washington DC.

Alberta Approach

• Long term issue – Need to start with practical, achievable objectives

• Policy certainty for industry– Large investments being made now – expensive to retrofit,

investment is for 40 years+• Implementation of new technology will be a big part of the

long-term solution.– Linked to our unique role as North America’s energy supplier

• Market instruments - bridge gap between current emissions and long-term solutions.

• All Albertans must be part of the solution• Requires strategic and focused investment in transformational

changes (technology, behavioral)• Remain globally competitive

Page 5: Agricultural Protocols within the Alberta Offset System Tom Goddard, Agriculture & Rural Development June 17, 2010, Washington DC.

Alberta Government Approved Protocols

– Offset must be quantifiable, real, verifiable– ISO 14064-2 compliant– Science-based– Rigorous technical review – Internationally compatible – Streamlined use– Transparent and consistent – Verifiable by independent 3rd party– Reduced costs and administration– Provides certainty for investors – GHG tonnes reduced– Of 28 protocols currently approved, 10 are agricultural

Page 6: Agricultural Protocols within the Alberta Offset System Tom Goddard, Agriculture & Rural Development June 17, 2010, Washington DC.

Alberta Protocol Development ProcessCheck Carbon Offset Solutions website for

draft protocols, protocols under development

Develop & compile Technical Seed Document(s) (TSD) for protocol foundation

Prepare Technical Protocol Plan (TPP)

Submit TPP & TSDs to Alberta Government for review

Provide feedback to protocol developers – 60 days*

Adapt into Alberta protocol format (Standardization)

1st round of reviews – expert technical reviewNo sustained objections, then move forward.

2nd round of reviews – broader stakeholder reviewNo sustained objection, then move forward

3rd round of reviews – posting for public review30 days

Finalization of protocol & review of public comments by Alberta Environment**

Government approval & posting of protocol

2-10mo

4-6mo

10-30days

1-2mo

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Protocol Developer

Alberta Government

Protocol Developer

Coordination by Climate Change Central (C3)

“All parties involved”

Alberta Government

Page 7: Agricultural Protocols within the Alberta Offset System Tom Goddard, Agriculture & Rural Development June 17, 2010, Washington DC.

Agricultural Protocol Topics and Stages

Approved: Reduced Tillage Pork Beef - Days on Feed Beef – Lifecycle Beef - Edible Oils Energy Efficiency Afforestation Biomass Biogas Dairy

National in scope

In Review: • Summerfallow• Beef - Residual Feed Intake • Nitrous Oxide Emission

Reduction

Developing: • Conversion to Perennials• Pasture Management• Wetlands Restoration and

Preservation • Covered Manure Storage

Page 8: Agricultural Protocols within the Alberta Offset System Tom Goddard, Agriculture & Rural Development June 17, 2010, Washington DC.

Reduced Tillage Protocol

• Applies to annual crops

• Equipment definition

• - Geometry – opener width / spacing

• Dry Prairie versus Parkland boundary

• Soil C sequestration coefficient, N20 and energy coefficients drawn from research compiled for Canada’s GHG Inventory Methodologies (Tier II)

• Discounted baseline adjustment allocates incremental rates of new carbon sequestered to early adopters

• Soil C sequestration coefficient also discounted for:

– Risk of reversals using probability of reversal (10 – 12%)

– Assurance based on tonnes registered, now 0.4 Mt CO2e

• Revised every 5 years as new research informs

Zones of soil carbon change coefficients

Page 9: Agricultural Protocols within the Alberta Offset System Tom Goddard, Agriculture & Rural Development June 17, 2010, Washington DC.

Experiences Implementing Reduced Tillage Protocol

Successes • Relatively easy to apply, large interest and uptake

• 3.2 M T CO2e registered since July 1, 2007

• 41% of all offsets used for compliance in 2009

• 15% of total GHG reductions required by SGER

• Range from $ 8 – $ 12 / T CO2e in ’09 to $10 - $14 in ‘10

Challenges• Guidance – practical use of protocol, e.g. crop yr vs calendar yr

• Ownership – must be specified in contracts

• Verification – types of farm records vs digital data

Opportunities• Supports continuous improvement, accelerated practice change

• Knowledge is transferrable to other environmental attributes that need verification data, e.g. certification, footprinting

Page 10: Agricultural Protocols within the Alberta Offset System Tom Goddard, Agriculture & Rural Development June 17, 2010, Washington DC.

Manure as Soil Amendment, Injection

Fuel Use Efficiency, Irrigation Swath Grazing Crop Nitrogen Use EfficiencyBiofibresOther …. Beef LCA “hotspots”?

Future Protocol Possibilities