Asia-Pacific Climate Week 14 December 2017 SUPPORTING CAPACITY BUILDING AND FINANCING DECISIONS THROUGH THE MITIGATION ACTION ASSESSMENT PROTCOL ( MAAP ) Presentations by: • VK Duggal, Senior Climate Change Specialist, Asian Development Bank • Rachel Mok, Climate Change Analyst, World Bank • Aryanie Amellina, Policy Researcher, Climate and Energy, IGES
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Asia-Pacific Climate Week
14 December 2017
SUPPORTING CAPACITY BUILDING AND FINANCING DECISIONS THROUGH THE
MITIGATION ACTION ASSESSMENT PROTCOL (MAAP)
Presentations by:
• VK Duggal, Senior Climate Change Specialist, Asian Development Bank
• Rachel Mok, Climate Change Analyst, World Bank
• Aryanie Amellina, Policy Researcher, Climate and Energy, IGES
MITIGATION ACTION ASSESSMENT PROTOCOL (MAAP)
CASE STUDY DEEP DIVE
Asia-Pacific Climate Week
14 December 2017
AGENDA
2 CASE STUDY DEEP-DIVE
3
1 OVERVIEW OF MAAP
3 CONCLUSION
INTRODUCTION VIDEO
5
International markets (and other forms of cooperation) are desirable
Governments and market participants need information
about the underlying carbon assets
Lack of comparability as a result of the bottom-up development of
mitigation actions
6
Program
Definition & Scope
Objectives & Targets
Planning
Documents, document control and records
Emissions reductions from interventions
Monitoring and reporting
Management Entity
Management Framework
Financial and Investment
Programs management
Infrastructure at theprogram level
Financial Structure
Financial coherence
Financial stakeholders
Monitoring financial flows
Development Benefits
Development objectives and targets
Planning and participation
Monitoring of development benefits
Environmental integrity
MAAP-Design and MAAP-Implementation
1 2 3 4
7
National and
Subnational
Jurisdictions
Project
Developers
Donor and
Investors
Multilateral
Development
Banks
Carbon Market
Regulators
Suppliers: Self-assessment to enhance
design/implementation
Buyers: Financing decisions Regulators: Basis for accepting
carbon assets
8
Ambassadors, Carbon
Trust and Government in
Mexico: NAMAs and
Jalisco’s State Climate Plan
Government in
Ecuador: National
Energy Efficiency Plan
Government in Peru:
NAMAs WB Pilot in Thailand:
Low carbon city programs
IGES in Mongolia and
Vietnam: JCM projects
Perspectives in
Mediterranean Region:
Low carbon city programs
UNEP DTU Partnership / Gold Standard in
Costa Rica, Ecuador, Jamaica, El Salvador,
Morocco, Indonesia, Chile, Sri Lanka,
Ghana, Kenya, Peru, Tunisia, Colombia,
Armenia Cambodia, Mexico: mitigation
actions including NAMAs, energy programs
waste management programs etc
TERI in India: Green
certificate (REC) and
white certificate (PAT)
schemes
9
Government of Jalisco &
Carbon Trust Mexico
To inform the design and track progress of the State of
Jalisco’s Climate Change Action Plan (PEAC)
MAAP Ambassadors &
Government of Mexico
Gold Standard and
UNEP-DTU Partnership
To inform the Partnership for Market Readiness’s (PMR)
capacity building activities for Mexico’s Sustainable Housing
Nationally Appropriate Mitigation Action (NAMA)
To enhance the transparency and comparability of mitigation
outcomes generated from a wide range of climate actions
10
GOLD STANDARD & UNEP-DTUPARTNERSHIP
A
11
• Design and pilot a step-by-step process for independent MAAP assessments to enhance
the transparency and comparability of mitigation outcomes
• Supports Gold Standard and UNEP-DTU Partnership’s capacity building/financing
activities
• The process aims to initially assess mitigation actions based on publicly available
information, as a basis for engaging with counterparts responsible for the actions’
design, implementation and/or financing
12
Initial Screening
• Long list of 50 climate actions
• Actions shortlisted based on selection criteria
Independent Assessment
• Design documents
• Publicly available information
Counterpart Engagement
• Sharing results with counterparts
• In-country assessments
Revised Assessment
• Incorporating new information
• Discuss and refine
13
Name Sector Country
Green Growth
Program
Electricity and heat
production
Jordan
Renewable Energy
Scaling up NAMA
Jamaica
Electricity and heat
production
Jamaica
Wind NAMA Electricity and heat
production
Vietnam
✓ Enhance transparency and
comparability of carbon assets
✓ Facilitate knowledge sharing,
inform financing decision.
✓ Basis for more detailed, in-
country assessments
14
Climate change infrastructure at the program level (Total 42.50/100.00)
Key indicator Max Score Observation
Climate change authorities and their
responsibilities affecting the MA
15 7.5 Unclearly described: MINAE is the ministry in charge of climate change and energy, although, decision
making responsibilities are not clearly defined.
National MA Registry and authorities
towards UNFCCC MA Registry (If
applicable)
30 15 Pre visit: There is no national registry available.
Post visit: A registry is envisioned (Plan de Acción Estrategia Nacional de Cambio Climático)
Registry and double counting 25 5 No national registry available - SINAMECC in design process though.
Transparency on climate financial support
received
30 15 Pre visit: No provisions on climate financing tracking.
Post Visit: Financial supervision – internally, there are very basic project registries and registries of
financial flows, also from international projects controlled by SEPSA but the ongoing project EC-LEDS
shall improve this as an effort to clearly monitor the impact of all associated financing for the NAMA.
Livestock NAMA in Costa Rica
Policy-based NAMA seeking
support for implementation. Aims to
modernize the meat and milk
production through adoption of
new, low-carbon technologies and
processes
1
2
3
15
GOV OF JALISCO & CARBON TRUST
B
16
• Analyze the mitigation impact of the State of Jalisco’s previous Climate Change Action
Plan (PEAC), a cross-sector, state-level plan
• Carbon Trust, at the request of the Government of Jalisco, applied all four modules of
the MAAP to identify areas for improvement and areas of strength to inform the design
of the current PEAC
• Re-apply the MAAP to the draft PEAC design to track progress, finalize the plan
design, and mobilize climate finance for more targeted capacity building
17
60.5
66.5
32.6
62.364.25
72.13
44.00
72.20
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
Program Design Mitigation action management entity Financial estructure Development benefits
PEAC asessment comparative results
1st 2nd
Δ 6.2% Δ 8.5% Δ 35% Δ 15.9%
18
Module 1: Plan design (64/100)
• Strengths: Objectives and targets (A2), Planning (A3)
• Areas for improvement: Emission reductions from intervention (A5), Monitoring and reporting (A6).
• Special attention to: Methodologies to evaluate uncertainty (A5.6), strengthen the monitoring and
reporting enforcement mechanisms (A6.2)
Module 3: Financial structure (44/100)
• Areas for improvement: Financial coherence (C1), financial stakeholders (C2), monitoring of
financial flows (C3).
• Special attention to: Map the full financial value chain (C1.1), financial risk assessment (C1.2),
diversify financial mechanism/source (C1.4-5)
19
MAAP AMBASSADORS & THE GOV OF MEXICO
C
20
• There are currently 259 NAMAs in 69 countries unevenly spread across regions and
sectors. Only 8.5% of the NAMAs are under implementation
Source: MitigationMomentum Annual Status on NAMAs 2017
Regional overview of NAMAs under development and implementation in 2017
21
• The Partnership for Market Readiness (PMR) is currently supporting the National
Housing Commission’s (CONAVI) implementation of the Sustainable Housing NAMA,
which seeks to improve residential buildings’ overall energy performance
• Apply the MAAP to identify capacity building priorities under PMR
22
• As part of the MAAP Ambassador Program in Latin America, CONAVI invited Ambassadors to
assess Mexico’s Sustainable Housing NAMA
• 11 Ambassadors applied the MAAP Online tool to assess the NAMA using the documents
provided by CONAVI
• Evaluate Program Design (Module 1) and Management Entity (Module 2)
• Use the average scores to inform PMR’s capacity building support