Title: NAMAs and the Building Sector
1NAMAs and the Building Sector
UNFCCC Workshop Buildings under UNFCCC
Flexible Mechanisms Chia-Chin Cheng UNEP-SBCI
Beihang University International Green Energy
Center Bonn, Germany March 24, 2011
2Outline
- NAMAs context
- CDM and NAMAs working together a two-track
developing country mitigation support mechanism - Benefits of the new NAMAs mechanism
- Three Papers/Reports from SBCI and Risoe
- The Kyoto Protocol, the CDM The Buildings
Construction Industry- 2008 - NAMAs for Dispersed Energy End-Use Sectors Using
the Building Sector as an Example- 2009
Perspective Series - CDM, NAMAs and the Building Sector a Two-Track
Financing Mechanism for Post-2012 2011 working
paper
3New Development under UNFCCC
- Developing Countries will share mitigation
responsibilities - Bali Action Plan
- Nationally appropriate mitigation actions by
developing country Parties in the context of
sustainable development, supported and enabled by
technology, financing and capacity-building, in a
measurable, reportable and verifiable manner.
- Copenhagen Accord started signing up for NAMA
- Cancun Agreement confirmed setting up NAMA
registry for support
4Underlying causes for low EEB uptake
- Long-tail characteristics of the sector- small
saving, big effort - Fragmentation of sector / uncoordinated
stakeholders - Insufficient RD and information for new EEB
technologies - Insufficient EEB tech and management expertise
and tools - High upfront and transaction costs for tech
adoption in DC - Lack financing mechanism and interests for EE
investments - Lack of awareness and general inertia restrict
uptake
Source Cheng, et al., 2008
5To Overcome Generic Barriers in Building Sector
- These barriers are essentially market failure
- CDM as an market-based mechanism cannot correct
market failure - key long-tail sectors market failures are
prominent - rural sectors and LCD no sufficient market
activities - Public policies are required to correct market
and overcome barriers - To fundamentally transform the building sector in
developing countries - Developing countries requires public sector
support to enforce public policies -- NAMAs - Developing countries requires private sector
support for compliance of public policies -- CDM
6 Possible Post-2012 Mechanisms -- Dual Track
Financing
- Policy based financing mechanism (NAMAs)
- create enabling conditions for a systematic
uptake for climate change mitigation activities
from the private sector in developing countries - provide necessary funding, technology and
capacity assistance for policy implementation,
particularly to difficult sectors and in least
developed countries - Project/program based carbon financing
- The boost of enabling conditions foster
large-scale private sector investment and make
use of CDM as an additional mechanism - provide necessary means and financial resources
to help regulated entities comply with government
policies - increase speed, quality and depth of policy
implementation
7 Important Issues to be Address before inserting
NAMAs
- All BAP elements need to be addressed in the new
mechanism - Technology transfer and development
- Capacity building
- Sustainable development
- Avoid double counting with CDM
- Use non-carbon based MRV
- - some effective policy measures do not
necessarily result in carbon emission reduction - - many quantitative indicators available to
measure success - Source of funding
- Initially public funding
- Later private sector funding
8Need Based NAMAs Registry for the Building Sector
- Mandatory building inventory and baseline
performance - Mandatory minimum performance based standards
- Mandatory/voluntary building rating and
certification program - Loan, subsidies, incentives and tax breaks
- Building auditing programs for compliance and
certification - Building survey and monitoring programs for MRV
purposes - Minimum performance standards for appliances and
equipment - Building professional certification and education
programs - Technology need assessment, demonstration and
model house programs - Public sector building improvement and high
performance building deployment programs - RD programs for new building materials,
technology, and practices - Awareness raising and informational campaign
programs
9MRV for NAMAs
- Carbon emission reduction is not a good
measurement of success for NAMA programs. - -- impacts of public policies are often
far-reaching and interwoven, it is almost
impossible to distinguish emission reduction
resulting from an enabling policy or from real
and additional voluntary private sector actions,
when the majority of emission reduction occurs in
the private sector. - Using carbon credits for NAMA MRV and the basis
for financing, double counting with the CDM will
become almost inevitable. - Lead to selective implementation on measures
which are easy to determine emission reductions.
Many policies and measures that have profound
long-term impact, and create extensive
co-benefits, may not be considered and
implemented in DC.
10Other Indicators are Available to Measure Program
Success
- Indicators for MRV should be able to demonstrate
the specific outcome or changes in various
enabling programs. - Improvement in average energy performance of
commercial buildings - Percentage of new buildings built according to
minimum energy performance standards. - Percentage of existing building retrofitted
according to minimum energy performance standards
for building retrofitting. - Percentage (number) of buildings audited,
certified or rated according to predetermined
benchmarks. - Number (percentage) of state-of-the-art buildings
constructed (e.g., zero emission buildings and
passive buildings). - Total amount of loans, subsidies, or tax breaks
issued. - Number of auditors on job, number of new auditors
trained. - Number of building professionals and percentage
trained and on job.
11NAMAs to Create Enabling Environment for Project
Based Mechanism
BAU BASELINES
Energy Performance KWh/m2 (by topology, climate
zones)
Time
12NAMAs to Create Enabling Environment for Project
Based Mechanism
BAU BASELINES
Energy Performance KWh/m2 (by topology, climate
zones)
Time
13NAMAs to Create Enabling Environment for Project
Based Mechanism
Energy Performance KWh/m2 (by topology, climate
zones)
Time
14NAMAs to Create Enabling Environment for Project
Based Mechanism
Energy Performance KWh/m2 (by topology, climate
zones)
Carbon Credits
CDM or Project Program Based Mechanism (carbon
credit based financing)
Voluntary technology upgrade Building rating
certification
Time
15 Benefits of the new NAMA mechanism
- Because carbon credits are not the measurement of
success , it avoids the double counting problem
with the existing mechanisms. - Utilize public policy and funding to foster and
mobilize private sector investment through the
CDM. - For developed countries, the NAMA framework goes
beyond offsetting mechanisms and focuses on
supporting enabling environment for mitigation
actions in developing countries. - Address all essential elements in the BAP 1b(ii)
and include mechanisms to support activities for
capacity building, technology, financing and MRV.
16 Benefits of the new NAMA mechanism
- Integrate funding from developed countries for
development aids for capacity building and
technology transfer in the climate change sector
and implement in a more systematic manner. - Correct market barriers for key end-use long-tail
sectors and boost CDM activities in these
underdeveloped sectors. - Change the regional distribution of the CDM by an
enabling policy framework based on country needs.