Maine hopes to sell carbon credits to finance energy
projects
Jul 8 - McClatchy-Tribune Regional News - Kevin Miller Bangor Daily
News, Maine
Energy experts long have touted home weatherization as the best way to
save money while reducing Maine's reliance on fossil fuels.
Now, state officials have developed a plan to potentially make money
from Maine's aggressive weatherization efforts, using the growing
international "carbon market" to help fund additional energy efficiency
projects.
MaineHousing officials said this week that they have taken a step toward
being able to sell "carbon credits" from greenhouse gas emissions
reductions achieved through weatherization projects.
If completed, Maine's plan to sell credits from weatherization projects
on the carbon market could set an international precedent. Revenues from
the sale of carbon credits then would be reinvested in the state's
energy efficiency and weatherization programs.
"We're the first in the world. We're not just the first state,"
said Dale McCormick, director of MaineHousing, the state's affordable
housing agency.
Carbon dioxide has emerged as a type of commodity in recent years as
governments and the private sector seek to reduce emissions of
greenhouse gases linked to global warming.
Typically, one carbon credit equals 1 ton of carbon dioxide, and those
credits are bought and sold as part of an emissions market intended to
provide companies with a financial incentive to reduce emissions. Maine,
for instance, is part of the 10-state Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative
that placed a cap-and-trade system on fossil fuel-burning power plants.
Before selling carbon credits, Maine's system for quantifying the amount
of carbon dioxide reduced as a result of weatherization projects must be
validated by two, independent accreditors.
In particular, validators are looking to make sure that Maine's CO2
reductions are real, verifiable, permanent and eligible for sale on the
carbon market, which is where companies and traders buy and sell
credits.
First Environment, one of the third-party accreditors, already has
signed off on Maine's methodology. The state is in the process of
seeking a second validation.
McCormick estimated that between MaineHousing and Efficiency Maine Trust
programs, the state could sell 8,000 carbon credits a year. Exactly how
much revenue that would produce is impossible to say, however, because
the price of carbon credits fluctuates so much.
Peter Shattuck, a carbon markets policy analyst at the Maine-based
nonprofit organization Environment Northeast, said he was interested in
learning more about Maine's plan.
One key for the state, Shattuck said, will be to meet the stringent
requirements for showing that the emissions reductions are, among other
criteria, verifiable and stemmed from new projects that would not have
been undertaken otherwise.
As an analogy, Shattuck said a power plant cannot earn carbon credits
for shutting down an inefficient, coal-fired power plant that already
was slated to be taken off line.
"In general, I think it's an intriguing financing mechanism for
weatherization projects," Shattuck said.
McCormick said the idea behind attempting to sell carbon credits for
weatherization projects began simply enough.
"We're saving energy when we weatherize homes, so we must be saving
carbon as well, so why don't we sell it?" McCormick said. "We always
need more money for weatherization."
When those discussions began about two years ago, she and others assumed
that someone already had developed a model that Maine could follow.
"But, in fact, nobody had because they have been concentrating on the
low-hanging fruit, which in the carbon world is big power plants ... or
methane recovery from [cattle] feed lots," McCormick said.
Compared to those industrial projects, carbon emission reductions from
weatherization projects in Maine are relatively tiny. But when combined
with credits from similar weatherization efforts in other states, they
could become a sizable figure.
It was unclear Thursday on which carbon markets Maine would seek to sell
the weatherization credits.
Upon their return to Washington, D.C., Congress is expected to resume
debate about a potential federal climate bill that could feature a
cap-and-trade system for carbon emissions. Some supporters of federal
climate legislation have suggested that the 2-year-old Regional
Greenhouse Gas Initiative could serve as a model.
Under RGGI, the 10 participating states agreed to cap emissions levels
from fossil fuel-burning power plants and then reduce those levels by 10
percent by 2018. Sales of the allowances or credits have generated more
than $660 million for the 10 states, including more than $20 million for
Maine.
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