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The Case for the Land-use Sector in the Post-2020 Agreement Paulo Canaveira Climate Change Expert Group Global Forum OECD, Paris, France 16-17 th September 2014
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Page 1: Land sector canaveira(terraprima sa) ccxg gf-sep2014

The Case for the Land-use Sector in the Post-2020 Agreement Paulo Canaveira Climate Change Expert Group Global Forum OECD, Paris, France 16-17th September 2014

Page 2: Land sector canaveira(terraprima sa) ccxg gf-sep2014

The Communication Challenge

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Gross-net, Net-net, Reference Levels,

LULUCF, REDD+, Caps, Carbon Equivalent

Forests, Natural Disturbances

Waga daga daga waga daga

Land Sector Negotiator Heads of Delegation

Page 3: Land sector canaveira(terraprima sa) ccxg gf-sep2014

Other Stakeholders

A Politically Sensitive and Important Sector

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Gross-net, Net-net, Reference Levels,

LULUCF, REDD+, Caps, Carbon Equivalent

Forests, Natural Disturbances

Land Sector Negotiator Heads of Delegation

Biodiversity Market access

Adaptation

Desertification

Food security

Indigenous peoples

Page 4: Land sector canaveira(terraprima sa) ccxg gf-sep2014

The land sector is (not) different and (not so) special

Putting the differences in perspective

Page 5: Land sector canaveira(terraprima sa) ccxg gf-sep2014

The land sector...

• Is the only sector responsible for emissions and removals

• Is affected by inter-annual variability – But so is the power sector; and the need for heating and

cooling; and the emissions from manure management;and the waste sector...

– The more dependent we get on renewable energy, the more inter-annual variability in the energy sector

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Page 6: Land sector canaveira(terraprima sa) ccxg gf-sep2014

Natural Effects and Electricity Production Example from Portugal

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Emissions Power sector

Difference 2009 – 2010

≈ 9% of total annual emissions

Page 7: Land sector canaveira(terraprima sa) ccxg gf-sep2014

The land sector... • Is affected by past management decisons and legacy

effects – But so are decisions in other sectors

• Coal power plants or Nuclear reactors limit energy options for 40+ years

• Hydropower plants limit energy options for 100+ years

• Is reported with high uncertainty (20-100%) – But so are emissions in other sectors / gases

• CH4 is reported with 50-70% uncertainty in all non-LULUCF sectors – 11% in all A1 emissions w/o LULUCF in 2012

• N2O is reported with 100-1000% uncertainty in all non-LULUCF sectors

– 6% in all A1 emissions w/o LULUCF in 2012

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Land Sector not Accounted

Low investment in GHG

Inventories

Inventories have poor quality

Land Sector Accounted

High investment in GHG

Inventories

Inventories have good quality

Page 9: Land sector canaveira(terraprima sa) ccxg gf-sep2014

The land sector is too big...

• Mitigation in the land sector should not replace other sectors

• Mitigation in the other sectors is not enough to offset land sector emissions

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Compliance strategies of countries usually rely on several sectors, not

single sectors

Page 10: Land sector canaveira(terraprima sa) ccxg gf-sep2014

Message for lead climate negotiators: Don’t be afraid of the big scary trees…

• Sure, it’s a sector with it’s own set of challenges… – Other sectors also have their own sets

of challenges

• These challenges need to be addressed, but can be overcome – with good and proper accounting – based on informed technical

discussions

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Page 11: Land sector canaveira(terraprima sa) ccxg gf-sep2014

Message for lead climate negotiators: …land sector is part of the solution

• There is a significant mitigation potential in the sector – Its CO2, CH4 and N2O looks the same as in other

sectors – In some countries it’s the only possible

(meaningful) contribution – Huge recent improvements in reporting quality

• It’s all about (good) rules…

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Page 12: Land sector canaveira(terraprima sa) ccxg gf-sep2014

Reporting and Accounting

• Reporting: process of accumulating, organising, storing, and accessing the information on activity data, emission factors and calculation equations – Describe the amount and trends in emissions and

removals of a particular country, sector, gas, etc. – Assess the quantities that are relevant for accounting

• Accounting: process of comparing the reported quantities with a pre-defined standard or emission target, a comparison which is made using a pre-defined set of accounting rules

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Page 13: Land sector canaveira(terraprima sa) ccxg gf-sep2014

My understanding of “Proper Accounting”

• In a properly developed accounting framework one would expect to see: – Rules for reporting emissions and removals i.e.,

• Common metrics (e.g. use of the same IPCC guidance, GWP, etc.) • Common reporting formats • Review process • [what happens when reported quantities don’t comply with

guidance / when quality of reporting is insufficient] – Rules for accounting emissions and removals i.e.:

• Standard or emission target (per country; sector; or activity...) • Review process • [how to generate and trade credits between countries] • [what happens when targets are not met]

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Page 14: Land sector canaveira(terraprima sa) ccxg gf-sep2014

Elements of the Paris Agreement [the easier ones]

Rules for Reporting • Agreement to use 2006 IPCC Guidelines

– Same calculation procedures and approaches for all countries (flexibility retained by still allowing different “tiers”)

– Standard for time series consistency, transparency, consistency, comparability, completeness and accuracy

• Agreement to use IPCC AR4 GWPs – Same metrics to convert between different

GHGs for all countries • Agreement to require mandatory

recalculations – Every time better data becomes available;

when review processes detects serious problems in data reporting or methodologies used

Rules for Accounting • Agreement on long term objective to

converge towards full carbon accounting • Agreement on once in, always in

– Lands accounted towards pre-2020 mitigation goals/targets/pledges should remain under accounting post-2020

– Any lands that start being accounted post-2020 are expected to remain under accounting in the future

• Agreement on flexibility over time to add new land uses / activities / pools / gases

– Phased approach – Subject to “once in, always in” and

“recalculations” • Agreement to focus on anthropogenic

emissions and removals – Exclude from accounting non-anthropogenic

sources and sinks to the extent that these can be calculated

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Page 15: Land sector canaveira(terraprima sa) ccxg gf-sep2014

Possible Conflicting Objectives for Paris Land Sector Perspective • Rules before targets • Same rules for all countries

– Requires 3 to 5 years of negotiations

Overall Negotiaton Perspective • Certainty of commitements • Targets before Paris

– Requires that Parties DECIDE their own land-sector rules

– Very unlikely that rules are comparable

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Page 16: Land sector canaveira(terraprima sa) ccxg gf-sep2014

Elements of the Paris Agreement [the difficult and the impossible ones]

Rules for Reporting • Agreement to have expert technical

reviews of inventories of all countries – Same public scrutiny for all countries

• Agreement for the provision of support for inventory development

– Allow all countries to upgrade to the required level

• Agreement to develop common reporting formats by [2018]

– [or agreement to use the CRF reporting tables for A1 UNFCCC reporting as a basis for accounting for all countries]

Rules for Accounting • Agreement on common accounting

rules for all countries – Agreement on requirements for

information on the accounting rules each country is using

– Agreement to account for Key categories – Agreement to negotiate how information

relevant for accounting is to be reported by [2018]

and/or – Agreement to negotiate common

accounting rules by [2018] • Agreement on land sector

participation in carbon markets [will there be a “CDM or JI type” of mechanism?; will there be any other type of market or non-market financial instruments under the UNFCCC?] – Agreement to negotiate terms and

conditions for land sector involvement in carbon markets by [2018]

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