The End of CDM Coal Power? (Newsletter #20)

The CDM Executive Board members get a big thumbs up for rejecting a Chinese coal project due to its questionable additionality calculations. Whether the Board can keep up this spirit at its upcoming meeting remains to be seen when they are due to discuss a new version of crediting rules for CDM coal power projects for the second time.

CDM Watch at work (Newsletter #20)

CDM Watch Publications Press Release: New rules for coal offsetting projects still severely flawed (07.05.2012) Press Release: Phantom emissions reductions keep being issued as UN Board refuses to act Spanish: Comunicado de Prensa (18.05.2012) Final report of CDM Watch UNFCCC side event to Policy Dialogue Meeting (30.05.2012) CDM Watch submission to CDM Policy Dialogue: Response …

Western Sahara: CDM project stirs conflict over host country approval on illegally occupied land (Newsletter #20)

Guest article by Sara Eyckmans – Coordinator, Western Sahara Resource Watch (WSRW) A wind farm project of a company owned by the Moroccan King is requesting approval under the UN’s Clean Development Mechanism. The wind farm is situated in a territory illegally occupied by Morocco: Western Sahara. Yet, the Moroccan Government is qualified as the …

The CDM Watch Network – The Voice of Civil Society in the CDM (Newsletter #20)

The CDM Watch Network has helped empower civil society throughout the world to hold the CDM to account. This is important due to the increasing impact that CDM projects have in host countries. Effective public participation in the CDM is essential to strengthen its environmental integrity and to make sure that harmful projects do not …

CDM Policy Dialogue’s final report – Countdown is on! (Newsletter #20)

The high-level panel on the CDM Policy Dialogue is preparing its final report which is expected to be published in September 2012. CDM Watch has closely followed the consultation process and is worried that the final report will be heavily influenced by business lobbyists. CDM Watch calls on the Policy Dialogue members to give an …

A Review of UNFCCC Carbon Market Developments (Newsletter #20)

The last intercessional UN climate negotiations took place in May in Bonn, Germany. The main theme of the two-week conference seemed to be “diverging views” on about every agenda item. There were diverging views about the length of the second commitment period of the Kyoto Protocol; about the work programme of the new Durban Platform …