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Carbon-Neutral
The New Oxford American Dictionary Word of the Year 2006

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Additionality: Emissions reductions are "additional" if they occurred because of the presence of incentives associated with the existence of GHG markets, voluntary or mandatory. A variety of stakeholders have proposed many different additionality "tests," but at its root, demonstrating the additionality of a carbon offset means showing that the emissions reductions being used as offsets are not "business as usual." Business-as-usual emissions are generally referred to as the emissions "baseline".

Carbon-Neutral: The idea of helping consumers, organizations, and businesses neutralize their personal or corporate greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions (their "carbon footprint") by offsetting all or some of the emissions associated with their lives and activities. Terms such as "climate neutral," "carbon neutral," "climate friendly," "footprint neutral," "Climate CooITM," and other terms are used to characterize the same concept.

Carbon Footprint: The estimated emissions of carbon dioxide (C02) and other GHGs associated with a particular activity (e.g., a plane trip), use of your car, your family's overall lifestyle, or use of a particular product or service. The scope of carbon footprint analyses can vary, and mayor may not include all GHGs or reflect a "life cycle" approach to quantifying "upstream" and "downstream" GHG emissions. When it includes all GHGs, the footprint is commonly expressed in "C02 equivalent" (C02e) units. The personal carbon footprint of a typical individual in the United States is approximately 10 tons of C02e per year, reflecting emissions from the activities listed above that are under a person's direct control, e.g., home energy use and personal transport. U.S. per capita emissions (calculated by dividing total national GHG emissions by total population) are more than 20 tons per year.

Carbon Offset: The act of reducing or avoiding GHG emissions in one place in order to "offset" GHG emissions occurring somewhere else. Unlike most conventional pollutants, GHGs mix well in the atmosphere and can travel around the planet quickly. As a result, it doesn't really matter from the standpoint of global warming mitigation where a reduction takes place. Carbon offsets are intended to take advantage of the radically different costs and practicalities of achieving GHG emission reductions by sector and geography.

Certified Emissions Reductions (CER): A tradable certificate reflecting the reduction or avoidance of one ton of C02e. CERs are the currency used by the Clean Development Mechanism (CDM) under the Kyoto Protocol for GHG trading between developing countries (countries without emissions reduction tar.gets)_and industrialized countries...(those with emissions reduction targets).

Chicago Climate Exchange (CCX): The CCX operates a voluntary GHG cap-and-trade program U.S and has branched out into Europe and other countries. The U.S. program is a pilot program to generate learning and test how a domestic GHG cap-and-trade system might function. CCX members contractually commit to GHG emissions reductions of a certain magnitude per year from their original baseline. Reductions beyond that level can be sold to other CCX members who need additional reductions. A' small fraction of the CCX market consists of project-based reductions.

Clean Development Mechanism (CDM): An emissions trading mechanism under the Kyoto Protocol. It is intended to help Annex B Parties (industrialized countries) reduce the costs of meeting their emissions targets under the Protocol by achieving emissions reductions in other countries at lower costs than they could domestically. CDM emission reduction projects allow developing countries to advance sustainable development objectives by creating and selling CERs (see Certified Emissions Reductions).

Gold Standard: An offset standard based on the Kyoto Protocol's Clean Development
Mechanism and developed by several international nonprofit organizations. Gold Standard .~~~ certification is limited to small-scale renewable energy and energy efficiency projects that hav~ received approval through the CDM process (see http://www.cdmgoldstandard.org~ voluntary market version of the Gold Standard has recently been released that does not require
CDM project approval; it, too, limits certification to renewable energy and energy efficiency projects. The voluntary standard seeks to apply a standard of review similar to the CDM, but
notes that additionally testing procedures are relaxed.

Greenhouse Gas (GHG): The primary gases (both naturally existing and man-made) that contribute to global warming by trapping more energy in the earth's atmosphere than would occur in their absence. Greenhouse gases covered by the Kyoto Protocol are carbon dioxide (C02), methane (C~), nitrous oxide (N20), sulfur hexafluoride (SF6), hydro fluorocarbons (HFCs), and perfluorocarbons (PFCs). Chlorofluorocarbons are also powerful GHGs, but are regulated separately as a means of addressing stratospheric ozone depletion. Water vapor is a powerful GHG that responds automatically to changes in temperature and other conditions, but it cannot be directly influenced by human activities. It is therefore not generally considered a greenhouse gas for global warming mitigation purposes.

Greenhouse Gas (or Carbon Dioxide) Footprint:
See Carbon Footprint.

Kyoto Protocol: An internationally binding agreement that falls under the more general United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC). The Protocol sets GHG targets for countries that sign and ratify the agreement. The United States and Australia are among the few countries that ratified the UNFCCC but did not ratify the Protocol and thus are not subject to its GHG reduction targets. A corollary to this is that emissions reduction projects in the United States cannot be used for compliance with the Kyoto ProtocoL

Renewable Energy Certificate (REC): A certificate that represents the environmental attributes of I MWh of electricity from a renewable energy source. RECs can be used to satisfy regulatory mandates (e.g., renewable portfolio standards) or to supply voluntary green energy markets.

Voluntary Carbon Standard: A new standard proposed by The Climate Group and the International Emissions Trading Association for carbon offsets bought and sold in the voluntary market. As of December 2006, it is still under development and has been submitted to the public for comment.

White Tag: A certificate equivalent to I MWh of energy savings. White tags have the goal of commoditizing energy efficiency, much as renewable energy certificates have commoditized renewable energy generation.