Transcript Slide 1

Emerging markets for ecosystem
services
Outline
• Ecosystem services & emerging markets
• State of carbon cap and trade markets
• What’s the deal with forest carbon?
• Ecotrust Forests: an example of a forest
carbon strategy
• Parting thoughts
Ecosystem service markets in forests
• Carbon sequestration/storage
• Habitat banking for forest-dependent
species and habitats (Pacific salmon,
spotted owl, oak woodland, floodplain
forest)
• Wetland banking (forested wetlands)
• Flood control/water storage
• Water quality: temperature reduction
• Scenic vistas
• Passive and active recreational
opportunities
• Moderate temperature and rainfall
• Wild mushroom and plant harvesting…
• while providing for timber, pulp, fuel, and
other commercial harvest opportunities,
and jobs, management and ownership
opportunities for millions
Integrated production of commodities and ecosystem
services, Australia
Source: David Brand, New Forests
The early markets
Transferable fishing quotas
SOx and NOx trading
Mitigation banking
Carbon market: cap & trade components
Enabling legislation
Kyoto Protocol & national counterparts
Cap or floor (baseline)
1990 Greenhouse Gas emissions +/-
Regulated entity (buyer)
Utilities & others
Supplying entity (seller)
Clean energy, efficiency, sequestration
Distribution of allowance
Free distribution to capped sectors, moving
towards auctions
Service area
Global
Unit of trade
One metric ton of carbon dioxide equivalent
(CO2e)
Trading platform
European Union Environmental Trading
System, for example
Enforcing agency
Designated national agencies, international
accord
Market shapers
Secondary markets, futures, options,
Size of global carbon market
Projected growth of carbon market
EU market projected to be dwarfed by U.S. market, estimated to reach
$1 trillion by 2020
Largest distribution of property rights since settlement of West!
Regional & state efforts proliferating
WCI at a glance
Timeline
Launch January 1, 2012
Goal
Reduce emissions 15% below 2005 levels by 2020
Size
1 billion tons when fully implemented ($20–40
billion)
Scope
electricity sector, large stationary sources, fossil
fuel producers, transportation (50–80% of
emissions)
Allocation
10–25% minimum auction
Registry
The Climate Registry
Compliance
3 years
Offsets
Maximum of 49% of reductions shall come from
offsets
Preference for offsets generated within WCI
Initial project types: forestry (affor/refor; forest
management, avoided defor;) livestock manure
management; methane; soil carbon
Role of forests in WCI
• Forests iconic, and carbon rich
• Limited opportunities for afforestation
and reforestation
• All desire carbon to help forestry stay in
forests, but must solve leakage issues
• Most relevant role is in forest
management projects: enhancing
carbon through changes such as longer
rotations.
• Sweet spot is finding carbon project
locations that maximize delivery of cobenefits and minimize opportunity
costs: steep slopes, for example.
• No guarantee of significant role for
forest carbon in regional and federal
trading system unless we find quality
solutions together.
What’s the deal with forest carbon?
Forest carbon is very attractive:
• Very important: deforestation/forest degradation responsible for
25% of global emissions (same as US, world’s largest polluter).
• Rich co-benefits
• Easy to understand the connection
But also very challenging:
• Baseline (sequestration/emissions that would have occurred without
carbon project may be hard to determine)
• Forests can burn or decline, leading to loss of carbon (permanence)
• Forest conservation/reduction in logging can just shift activities
elsewhere (leakage)
• For these reasons, forest carbon very controversial, but global
importance of forest carbon demands a resolution.
Policy Rationale for Offsets
• Quality reductions: IF DONE RIGHT, equally
effective in reducing atmospheric GHG levels as
on-site mitigation
• Lower cost: Offsets are only used if lower cost
– Lowers climate change mitigation cost to society
– More money for everything else:
• Food, shelter, health, security, recreation
• Technology bridge: Allows reductions now while
new low-carbon technology is developed
Rationale against offsets
• Need to create pressure for reductions from
primary emitters
• Need to fundamentally change our behavior, not
pay others to clean up our messes (especially
people with few economic options)
• Offsets have quality issues
• Moral objection to creating license to pollute
Case study: Ecotrust Forests LLC
Current status
•
Raise capital into open, perpetual
fund (currently $30 million under
management)
•
Acquire and manage forestland
•
Manage forests for longer
rotations, structural complexity &
diversity
•
Generate competitive returns for
investors through full range of
forest products and services:
timber, non-timber, ecosystem
services, recreation
•
Make strategic acquisitions in
high-conservation value
watersheds, and restore health
and productivity
•
Generate jobs and wealth for local
residents
Carbon Stock
by Forest Type and Stand Age
1200.0
Douglas-fir, Pacific NW W side
Hemlock-Sitka Spruce, Pacific NW W side
Douglas-fir, Northern Rockies
Lodgepole Pine, Northern Rockies
Maple-Beech-Birch, Lakes States
Maple-Beech-Birch, Northeast
Loblolly-Shortleaf Pine, Southeast
Oak-Hickory, Southcentral
Metric Tons CO2e per Acre
1000.0
800.0
600.0
400.0
200.0
0.0
0
5
15
25
35
45
55
65
75
85
95
105
115
125
Years After Clearcut
Data from 2006 accounting guidelines, 1605(b) program
Graph by EcoFor 2006
Long rotation forestry results in 2.5x
more standing volume
Additional carbon value per acre on
PNW westside forests
$3,000
$2,500
$2,000
$5/ton
$10/ton
$25/ton
$/acre $1,500
$1,000
$500
$0
60
70
Rotation Age in Years
80
Ecosystem services are key
Source: Binkley, Beebe, New & von Hagen, 2006
Ecotrust Forests carbon transaction
• Methodology under review by Voluntary Carbon
Standard
• Sources of additional carbon above baseline:
–
extended rotations
–
expanded riparian reserves
–
carbon reserves on steep and unstable slopes above salmon
streams
• Evaluating financial and tax implications of carbon credit
sales for different classes of investors (exempt and nonexempt)
Parting thoughts
•
New conversation: more than a zero sum
game
•
Market solutions demand more rigor in
delivering clear quantifiable benefits
•
Early ecosystem service markets messy
and full of drama, but that goes with the
territory
•
Not a panacea, but a powerful and
occasionally wonderful new tool
•
Creation of new class of entrepreneurs is a
powerful co-benefit