Carbon Markets for Landowners

25
Carbon Markets for Landowners Agriculture, Forestry, and Biocarbon Teresa Koper

description

The benefits of climate friendly practices for landowners and how to engage in the carbon markets.

Transcript of Carbon Markets for Landowners

Page 1: Carbon Markets for Landowners

Carbon Markets for LandownersAgriculture, Forestry, and Biocarbon

Teresa Koper

Page 2: Carbon Markets for Landowners

About The Climate Trust

501(c)(3) nonprofit Over 16 years of carbon financing

experience

Mission:Provide expertise, financing, and inspiration to

accelerate innovative climate solutions that endure

www.climatetrust.org

Page 3: Carbon Markets for Landowners

Resilience and Adaptability

Page 4: Carbon Markets for Landowners

Benefits of Climate Friendly Practices

• Benefit financially by earning environmental credits

• Co-Benefits: • e.g. build soil fertility and resilience, while

improving water quality

• Mitigate climate instability• Be part of the solution for

others

Page 5: Carbon Markets for Landowners

Introduction to Carbon Markets

• Rewarding greenhouse gas (GHG) emission reductions and/or sequestration practices

• Market purpose?• Why Carbon?

Page 6: Carbon Markets for Landowners

Carbon Markets

• Voluntary Markets• Compliance Market - CA

Cap and Trade • Pacific Coast Climate Action

Plan CA, OR, WA, BC Agree to put a price on Carbon

Page 7: Carbon Markets for Landowners

Standards

Voluntary Standards• American Carbon Registry (ACR)• Climate Action Reserve (CAR)• Verified Carbon Standard (VCS)Compliance Standard• California Air Resources Board

(CARB)

Page 8: Carbon Markets for Landowners

Carbon Accounting Rules

• Baseline – business as usual scenario• Additionality – reducing GHG

emissions to below the baseline (additional to business as usual)

• Permanence – permanent reduction of emissions

• No Leakage – direct emissions elsewhere caused by the emission reduction in the project/program

Page 9: Carbon Markets for Landowners

Agricultural Method Types

• Nutrient Management• No-till or low-till farming• Avoided Land

Conversion• Improved livestock

grazing on rangeland

Page 10: Carbon Markets for Landowners

Soil has great potential to capture GHG

• Carbon Sequestration• Undisturbed land • Soil building practices–

• no-till • compost • biochar soil amendment

Page 11: Carbon Markets for Landowners

Avoided Conversion of Land

• Keep undisturbed soil/vegetation intact

• Conservation Easements (timing matters)

• While Federal funds for conservation may be decreasing, environmental markets are picking up momentum

Page 12: Carbon Markets for Landowners

COMET Farm – explore scenarios

• See what specific practices save, in terms of GHG emissions and sequestration

• Whole farm and ranch – carbon and greenhouse gas accounting

• cometfarm.nrel.colostate.edu

Page 13: Carbon Markets for Landowners

ForestryForests sequester large amounts of

GHGs• Avoided Conversion• Improved Forest

Management• Afforestation/Reforestation• Reduced Emissions from

Deforestation and Degradation (REDD)

Page 14: Carbon Markets for Landowners

Many commonalities across Standards, but differences matter

• Project Start Date and timing of first and subsequent Verifications

• Included carbon pools• Length of commitment, flexibility

mechanisms• Forest Certification requirements• Treatment of Aggregation

Page 15: Carbon Markets for Landowners

Biocarbon natural systems play an essential role in climate stability

• Compost• Dairy Waste Digestion• Organic Waste Digestion• Biochar and Biofuels

Production• Carbon Sequestration

Page 16: Carbon Markets for Landowners

Projects that digest eligible feedstocks and combust biogas can earn carbon

credits for avoided methane emissions.

Avoided Methane Carbon Credit

Page 17: Carbon Markets for Landowners

Livestock Protocol Organic Waste Digestion Protocol

• Dairy or swine manure • Post-consumer food waste• Industrial waste previously managed in an anaerobic lagoon

Eligible Feedstocks

Page 18: Carbon Markets for Landowners

Avoided Methane Carbon CreditRule of Thumb: 2,500 cow digester

generates ~3.5 credits per cow per year or 8,750 credits/yr

Carbon price Voluntary$4.00

Pre-Compliance$8.50

Compliance$15.00

Average Annual Net Revenue

$25,000 $64,000 $120,000

Net Present Value(10 years, 7%)

$163,000 $440,000 $840,000

% of Capital Cost(~ $2.1 million)

8% 20% 40%

Page 19: Carbon Markets for Landowners

Net Carbon Revenue=

Creditsx

Carbon Price-

Transaction Costs

Page 20: Carbon Markets for Landowners

Transaction Costs

1. Meters2. Monitoring3. Registry fees4. Verification-

$8,500 every 12-24 months

Page 21: Carbon Markets for Landowners

Renewable Energy Certificates

Renewable IdentificationNumber

Nutrient Management Carbon Credits

Methane Avoidance Carbon Credits

Page 22: Carbon Markets for Landowners

How to receive credits for a practice

1. Project developer prepares project development plan

2. Register the project with a standard body under a specific methodology

3. Third party validation and verification process to ensure the project will “additionally” reduce/sequester GHG emissions, not cause “leakage”, be “additional” and “permanent”

4. Be periodically monitored and credited

Page 23: Carbon Markets for Landowners

Credits Received – then what?

• Credits can then be sold• Credits are only worth what

the market is willing to pay for them

• Dependent on market demand from a compliance buyer or have a voluntary buyer

Page 24: Carbon Markets for Landowners

Key takeaways:• Carbon projects work best when they fit

overall land management goals.• Carbon projects need to make business

sense: Costs Carbon offset volumes Timing matters

• Identifying a buyer willing to make a contractual commitment to purchase offsets at volume and terms sufficient to cover the costs of developing and maintaining the project is critical