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Module 4 Introduction to barriers to Mitigation

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Title: Module 4 Introduction to barriers to Mitigation


1
Module 4Introduction to barriers to Mitigation
  1. Concepts and scope
  2. (Some) Sectoral Barriers
  3. Overcoming Barriers

2
Module 4a
  • Concepts

3
Introduction
  • Numerous technologies and practices exist to
    reduce GHG emissions.
  • Significant technical progress has been made in
    many areas such as wind turbines, hybrid engine
    cars, underground CO2 storage, etc.
  • Opportunities to increase efficiency are overall.
  • But significant barriers exist.
  • Barriers add to the cost of implementation, and
    reduce the feasible potential
  • Barriers can be technical, economic, political,
    cultural, social, behavioral and institutional.

4
  • Mitigation Potential
  • Proposed conceptual framework

5
The Concept of Barriers
  • The transfer of technologies and practices that
    have the potential
  • to reduce greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions is often
    hampered by
  • barriers that slow their penetration
  • IPCC, 2001 Mitigation Working Group III to the
    Third Assessment Report
  • A barrier is any obstacle to reaching a potential
    reduction of GHG that can be overcome by a
    policy, programme or measure.
  • Opportunities for any given country might be
    found in the removal of any combination of
    barriers. An opportunity is a situation or
    circumstance to decrease the gap between the
    market potential of a technology or practice and
    the economic, socioeconomic, or technological
    potential.
  • Barriers and opportunities tend to be
    context-specific, can change over time and vary
    across countries.
  • Barriers identification is a key issue to select
    feasible mitigation options.

6
Sources of Barriers
  1. prices
  2. financing
  3. International trade
  4. market structure
  5. institutional and regulatory frameworks
  6. Information provision
  7. social, cultural and behavioral norms and
    aspirations

Barriers categories or areas
  • Within each of these areas, barriers and
    opportunities represent
  • failures or imperfections in markets, policies or
    other institutions that lie between the market
    potential and the possible achievement of the
    economic potential
  • Other barriers are aspects of institutions or
    social and cultural systems that separate the
    economic and socioeconomic potentials.

7
Some Key Issues
  • Definition
  • Categories (efficiency gap)
  • Barriers mean additional costs
  • They are context-specific, can change over time
    and vary across countries.
  • They could be a key element to select feasible
    mitigation options

8
Module 4b
  • Sectoral Barriers

9
Sectors Considered
  1. Buildings
  2. Transport
  3. Industry
  4. Energy Supply
  5. Forestry
  6. Solid Waste
  7. Agriculture

10
(Some) Barriers in the Buildings Sector
  • Traditional customs
  • Lack of skills
  • Behavior and style
  • Social barriers
  • Misplaced incentives
  • Lack of financing
  • Market structure
  • Absence of regulation
  • Administratively set prices
  • Imperfect information

11
(Some) Barriers in the Transport Sector
  • Infrastructure
  • Lifestyles and Culture
  • Economic Development
  • Patterns of industrial production
  • Consumer behavior (status or cost minimization)
  • Lock-in technology (mobility, freedom,
    flexibility, fun, status, safety, a personal
    territory, a means of self expression)
  • Subsidies - No full costs estimation
  • Inadequate alternative options

12
(Some) Barriers in the Industry Sector
  • Lack of information
  • Limited Capital Availability
  • Lack of skilled personnel
  • Decision making process
  • Distorted perception

13
(Some) Barriers in the Energy Supply Sector
  • Energy Prices
  • Inconsistency in evaluation of energy costs
  • Lack of adequate financial support
  • Institutional transformation and reforms
  • Legal and regulatory frameworks
  • Lack of information
  • Decision making process and behavior
  • Social and cultural constraints
  • Capital availability

14
(Some) Barriers in the Forestry Sector
  • Lack of technical capability
  • Lack of capacity for monitoring carbon stocks
  • Opportunity cost of the land use

15
(Some) Barriers in the Solid Waste Sector
  • Lack of enabling policies initiatives,
    institutional mechanism, information and
    opportunities
  • Organizational problems in collection and
    transport
  • Lack of coordination among different groups
  • Scale

16
(Some) Barriers in the Agriculture Sector
  • Farm-level adoption constraints
  • Government subsidies
  • Lack of capacity and skills
  • Lack of information
  • Lack of intellectual property rights

17
Some remarks
  • Not necessary the best sectors and options (for
    GHG mitigation) are the most feasible ones.
  • Overcoming barriers is part of the decision on
    options
  • A ranking of options could consider barriers as
    an indicator

18
Module 4c
  • Overcoming Barriers

19
Overcoming Barriers
  • Diagnosis ? Barrier ? Problem ? Policy
    (Intervention) ? Prioritize problems ? Objectives
    ? Strategies ? Actions ? Measures ? Results
  • Depends on sector and technology pathway
  • Identification, analysis and prioritization of
    barriers are time and country specific
  • Barrier removal requires consideration of
    different interests and influences of
    stakeholders
  • Driven by needs increase the flow of technology
    to the needs
  • Improve the quality transfer only the right
    technology (ESTs)
  • Policy itself has barriers a key challenge is
    the identification of feasible policies and to
    translate in adequate strategies.

20
Overcoming Barriers
  • Removal of barriers during capital stock turnover
    and periods of rapid social change can minimize
    disruption and mitigation costs.
  • National responses to climate change can be more
    effective if deployed as a portfolio of policy
    instruments to limit or reduce greenhouse gas
    emissions. (Climate change as part of sector
    policies)
  • Effectiveness can be enhanced when climate
    policies are integrated with the non-climate
    objectives of national and sectoral policy
    development (e.g., sustainable development).
  • Coordinated actions among countries and sectors
    may help to reduce mitigation cost, address
    competitiveness concerns, potential conflicts
    with international trade rules, and carbon
    leakage. (JI/CDM)
  • Nevertheless, earlier actions, including a
    portfolio of emissions mitigation, technology
    development and reduction of scientific
    uncertainty, increase flexibility in moving
    towards stabilization of atmospheric
    concentrations of greenhouse gases.

21
Overcoming Barriers Sectoral Level
  • Market based instruments (taxes, tradable
    permits, subsidies, deposit/refund systems)
  • Standards, product bans, energy mix requirements
  • Voluntary agreements
  • Information, and labeling programs
  • Government investment/ RD spending
  • Regulation
  • Sectoral options only as effective as allowed by
    macro conditions

22
Overcoming Barriers Macro Levels
  • Macro policies Some examples
  • Reform of the legal system
  • Creation of adequate markets conditions
  • Enhancing physical and communications
    infrastructure
  • Improve land tenure
  • Improve macro-economic stability
  • International co-ordination can address
    competitiveness, international trade rules, and
    leakage
  • Setting appropriate macro-conditions can
    contribute more to mitigation than improving
    sectoral policies, measures, and instruments.
  • IPCC shows a major gap in research few studies
    identify barriers and ways to overcome them, or
    estimate the cost of their removal.

23
Opportunities For Overcoming Barriers
  • Seeking synergies between competitiveness and GHG
    mitigation (e.g., when GHG mitigation could
    reduce costs)
  • Communication among firms, between firms and
    users, or universities or government labs.
  • Good communication strategies (marketing) may
    encourage consumer acceptance of new
    technologies.
  • Economic, regulatory, and social incentives for
    reducing GHG emissions will also act as
    incentives for innovation to find new means of
    mitigation.
  • Introduce low-emission technology, when
    previously locked-in technology begins to change.
  • Changes in the market and regulatory context can
    also provide opportunities for innovation.

24
Overcoming Sectoral BarriersBuildings
  • Voluntary programs
  • Building efficiency standards
  • Equipment efficiency standards
  • Demand-side management (DSM) programs
  • Financing programs
  • Government procurement
  • Tax credits
  • Accelerated RD
  • Carbon cap and trade schemes

25
Overcoming Sectoral Barriers Transport
  • Fuel taxes
  • Charges on road users, including parking fees,
    road taxes, license fees, and insurance premiums
  • Shifting local government spending towards public
    transport and away from private transport.
  • Fiscal and regulatory measures and public
    purchasing aimed at developing larger markets for
    low- GHG-emission vehicles plus international
    co-operation
  • Implementing planning measures that encourage
    more sustainable transport patterns, avoiding the
    pollution, congestion, higher accident rates, and
    GHG emissions associated with cars. Introduce
    toll rings around big or medium sized cities,
  • Moving away from zoning and car-based transport,
    and towards multi-function, high-density
    pedestrian zones
  • Effective mitigation strategies would entail
    combinations of measures for overcoming the many
    forms of inertia and lock-in.

26
Overcoming Sectoral Barriers Industry
  • Technology diffusion policies there is no single
    instrument to reduce barriers instead, an
    integrated policy accounting for the
    characteristics of technologies, stakeholders,
    and countries addressed would be helpful.
  • Information programmes designed to assist
    industry in understanding that employing
    technologies and practices will improve their
    competitiveness and reduce costs at the same time
    that use energy more efficiently.
  • Best Practice programmes aimed to improve
    information on energy efficient technologies,
    demonstration projects and information
    dissemination, Energy audit programmes, among
    others.
  • Environmental legislation can be a driving force
    in the adoption of new technologies.
  • Direct subsidies and tax credits or other
    favorable tax treatments.
  • Financial incentive programmes leading to large
    impacts on energy efficiency

27
Overcoming Sectoral Barriers Energy Supply
  • Multilateral cooperation is especially important
    for the development of hydropower programmes,
    regional interconnections, and developing small
    renewable technologies (e.g., mini hydro, solar,
    and wind).
  • A reduction in nuclear or hydro unit size and/or
    improved safety might could help to overcome the
    capital availability barrier.
  • Greater regional co-operation among developing
    countries in both research and development, and
    the development of an international commercial
    contracting network, to improve technology
    transfer.
  • Accounting for the needs of potential users, and
    harmonizing diffusion strategies with local
    physical, human, and institutional resources,
    while building local technical and institutional
    capabilities.
  • Expansion of electricity supply systems, while
    improving the efficiency of new capacity.
  • Promoting commercialization of excess electricity
    production (e.g. from Industrial CHP) through
    better regulated access to existing grid systems.

28
Overcoming Sectoral Barriers Forestry
  • Forestry sector options are relatively low cost
    compared to those in the energy sector, which
    helps to reduce barriers.
  • Promotion of mitigation projects also
    automatically promotes the flow of technology
  • Independent verification of C abatement would
    help to increase the credibility and funding of
    forestry-sector mitigation projects.

29
As a conclusion
  • Need of policies (Intervention)
  • Instruments and measures depend on national
    circumstances
  • Policy itself has barriers a key challenge is
    the identification of feasible policies and to
    translate in adequate strategies

30
Module 4c
  • Examining Barriers During a Mitigation Assessment

31
Examining Barriers During a Mitigation Assessment
  • Mitigation assessment should include information
    on the barriers and opportunities for
    implementation.
  • Useful to identify main implementation
    requirements including
  • Financial support
  • Assessment of technology options for the
    different mitigation options in various sectors
  • Institutional capacity-building to sustain
    mitigation work
  • Regulation policies
  • Further improvements of the national decision
    framework
  • Costs associated to the implementation of
    mitigation options

32
Possible Topics for Discussion
  • How can the concepts of mitigation potential
    (market, economic, social, technological) and
    barriers best be incorporated into a mitigation
    assessment?
  • What approaches could be used for barrier
    identification and assessment?
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