1 / 12

Biofuels Certification Initiatives

Making certification work for sustainable development: The case of biofuels Simonetta Zarrilli UNCTAD Geneva, September 2009. Biofuels Certification Initiatives. What for?

ciro
Download Presentation

Biofuels Certification Initiatives

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Making certification work for sustainable development:The case of biofuelsSimonetta ZarrilliUNCTADGeneva, September 2009

  2. Biofuels Certification Initiatives What for? Ensuring that biofuels contribute to GHG emissions reduction, to energy security and to rural development, without having detrimental side-effects on food security, environmental protection, biodiversity preservation, etc. • National governments and regional groupings: Belgium, the Netherlands, UK, Germany, Switzerland, US, Canada, Brazil, European Commission • Companies: e.g. BP, Shell, Electrabel, Essent • NGOs: e.g. WWF • International Bodies and Initiatives (e.g., GBEP) • International Networks and Roundtables: e.g. Roundtable on Sustainable Biofuels (12 Principles and related Criteria), Roundtable on Sustainable Palm Oil

  3. Steps for developing certification schemes • Principle- general starting points that describe the objective of certification. A principle is usually formulated in an abstract and non-quantifiable way • Criteria- statements that translate objectives into substantive requirements that have to be complied with. A criterion is much more specific than a general principleIndicator/ Verifiers - quantitative or qualitative minimum parameter by which a criterion becomes testable • Reporting- Information that is requested when testable indicators are not available; in reporting information is requested, but no minimum requirements are set that have to be met

  4. Some examples (Kramer Report – NL) • Principle – Biomass production must not be at the expense of important carbon sinks in the vegetation and in the soil • Criterion - conservation of above-ground carbon sinks when biomass units are installed • Indicator – The installation of new biomass production units must not take place in areas in which the loss of above-ground carbon storage cannot be recovered within a period of 10 years of biomass production

  5. Some examples (RSB) • Principle – Biofuel production shall avoid negative impacts on biodiversity, ecosystems, and areas of High Conservation Value. • Criteria – (i) High Conservation Value areas, native ecosystems, ecological corridors and other public and private biological conservation areas shall be identified and protected; (ii) Ecosystem functions and services shall be preserved; (iii) Buffer zones shall be protected or created; (iv) Ecological corridors shall be protected or restored.

  6. Some concerns related to implementation Traditional instrument applied to a new sector But certification will be linked to: • Compliance with blending and utilization obligations • Tax breaks and other incentives • Consumer acceptance

  7. Problems for foreign producers, especially from developing countries: • The proliferation of initiatives creates opacity and confusion in the market and may become an obstacle to international trade • Cost of compliance • Conformity assessment proves to be a major obstacle • Local conditions are not sufficiently taken into account • Inadequate participation in the standard-setting process Lessons from Past Experiences

  8. Specific difficulties • Measurable criteria/indicators • GHG emissions, methodologies • Macro level effects • Leakage effects • Food security

  9. An Internationally Agreed Programme as a Viable Alternative to Individual Programmes Benefits: • Increases transparency in the market and provides clear indicators for producers • Avoids market fragmentation • Provides for a broad participatory process & reflects the views and concerns of producers in different regions BUT • An international process is long and complex • UN processes are particularly slow • The extended time period needed to set it may hinder its merger with existing initiatives

  10. Would this help? • Using existing Forums and building upon their achievements • Strengthening analytical work • Launching pilot projects • Providing capacity building both for compliance and conformity assessment • Linking compliance with support services, market information, etc. • Striking a balance between comprehensiveness and feasibility • Supporting the setting up of coherent policy strategies

  11. WTO Implications • « Grey area » • WTO coverage of initiatives developed by private bodies • RSB – international standard? • The “Like products” issue • “Less favourable treatment” (EC-Biotech) • The General Exceptions of GATT Art. XX Risk The simultaneous implementation of unilateral measures that may be WTO-consistent: who will be able to comply?

  12. THANK YOU Simonetta.Zarrilli@unctad.org

More Related