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By Keith Bradsher
The New York Times
Wednesday 09 May 2007
Houxinqiu,
China - The wind turbines rising 180 feet above this dusty village at
the hilly edge of Inner Mongolia could be an environmentalist's dream:
their electricity is clean, sparing the horizon sooty clouds or global
warming gases.
But
the wind-power generators are also part of a growing dispute over a
United Nations program that is the centerpiece of international efforts
to help developing countries combat global warming.
That
program, the Clean Development Mechanism, has become a kind of Robin
Hood, raising billions of dollars from rich countries and transferring
them to poor countries to curb the emission of global warming gases.
The biggest beneficiary is no longer so poor: China, with $1.2 trillion
in foreign exchange reserves, received three-fifths of the money last
year.
Scientists
increasingly worry about the emissions from developing countries, which
may contribute to global environmental problems even sooner than
previously expected. China is expected to pass the United States this
year or next to become the world's largest emitter of global warming
gases. And as a result, some of the poorest countries are being left
out.
That
draws attention to the Clean Development Mechanism, which has grown at
an extraordinary pace, to $4.8 billion in transfer payments to
developing countries last year from less than $100 million in 2002.
The
Clean Development Mechanism raises its money through a complex market
in trading pollution credits: businesses and governments in affluent
regions like Europe and Japan help pay to reduce pollution in poorer
countries, offsetting their own emissions. This helps advanced
industrial nations stay within their Kyoto Protocol limits for emitting
climate-changing gases like carbon dioxide.
For
each ton of global warming gases that a developing country can prove it
has eliminated, the secretariat of the Clean Development Mechanism, in
Bonn, Germany, awards it a credit. Developing countries sold credits
last year to richer nations for an average price of $10.70 each.
Its
growth has come almost entirely by focusing on efficient projects in
China and other fast-growing countries that spread the administrative
costs over many large efforts, while poorer lands have received almost
nothing. And that is why the program is becoming a battleground,
pitting an unlikely coalition of bankers, traders, industrialists and
environmentalists, who defend it, against economic development
advocates, who warn of distortions.
According
to the World Bank, China captured $3 billion of the $4.8 billion in
subsidies last year for dozens of projects. Yet it accounted for less
than two-fifths of the developing world's fossil fuel consumption, the
main source of warming gases.
One
of the projects is the wind farm here, nestled on a pine-forested hill
beside a blue lake fringed by broad fields tilled into long furrows of
freshly planted wheat. It is profitable even without the subsidies, and
is owned by a group of Chinese companies traded on the Shanghai Stock
Exchange.
But
it is China's financial sophistication that has helped it soak up so
much in subsidies. A vigorous cottage industry of project designers and
brokers has sprung up in Shanghai - with workers translating forms into
Chinese, promoting the program and taking steps to make it easy and
inexpensive for Chinese companies to participate.
"There
are a lot of people who know how to do it," said Tao Fuchang, the
general manager and chief engineer of the Liaoning Zhangwu Jinshan Wind
Power Electricity Company, which built and operates the turbines here.
Next
in line are India, Brazil, Mexico and Argentina, which get most of the
rest of the subsidies, along with South Korea - incongruously
classified as a developing nation by the Kyoto Protocol, the 1997 pact
to limit emissions that also led to the creation of the Clean
Development Mechanism.
Trailing
far behind are African countries. Payments totaled less than $150
million last year for all of Africa, where government officials say
they have been largely left out of one of the biggest bonanzas for the
developing world in many years.
"We
see this problem everywhere in Africa," said Sateeaved Seebaluck, a
high-ranking environment official in Mauritius, an island nation east
of Africa.
Even
when very poor countries are able to organize development projects,
they may lack expertise and must sometimes pay out as much as half the
credits in the form of fees for international consultants and credit
brokers.
United
Nations executives respond, with considerable support from
environmentalists, bankers and corporations, that the program's primary
task is to reduce the tonnage of carbon dioxide and other warming gases
entering the atmosphere - regardless of where it comes from. By that
measure, they say, the program is a success.
Kai-Uwe
Schmidt, the Clean Development Mechanism's executive board secretary,
said the organization was acutely aware of regional imbalances in
global warming projects and hoped to address them. But setting up an
emissions reduction project usually requires considerable investment.
"We do not see many investments flowing into Africa in the first place," he said.
Subsidies
are readily available for a wide range of projects - straw-fired power
plants, wind turbines, even the capture and burning of methane leaking
from landfills. Though detailed procedures have been developed for
projects in China and other fast-growing countries, they can easily be
copied for use in other places.
But
before manufacturers can obtain the subsidies, their national
governments need to set up a legal framework for handling the money,
which some of the poorest countries have not yet been able to do.
The
projects that have produced the greatest number of credits so far
involve attaching waste-gas incinerators to chemical factories that
manufacture an ozone-destroying air-conditioner refrigerant, HCFC-22;
these factories are found almost exclusively in the more prosperous
developing countries.
Kristalina
Georgieva, director of sustainable development strategy and operations
at the World Bank, said the Clean Development Mechanism's secretariat
could simplify its rules to help poorer nations.
Ms.
Georgieva said the secretariat should also pay more attention to
fostering renewable energy in very poor lands, because 1.6 billion
people lack any electricity and it is crucial to choose
power-generating technologies for them that will contribute as little
as possible to global warming.
"How the developing countries choose to electrify will determine the fate of the earth," she said in a recent speech.
Some
say the verification process is too burdensome for the poorest
countries. But too much streamlining of the process could undermine the
confidence of investors in rich countries that the pollution credits
are genuine, Ms. Georgieva acknowledged in an interview. "What you may
get is eroding trust in the system," she said.
David
Doniger, an environmental official in the Clinton administration who
took part in many Kyoto Protocol drafting meetings in 1997 that led to
the creation of the Clean Development Mechanism, said questions had
been raised then about whether very poor countries would be able to
obtain credits.
But
the negotiators decided against any system for guaranteeing a division
of credits by region, preferring one focused on reducing emissions
wherever they occurred.
"Those
were rejected on the grounds that you wanted to get more bang for the
buck and they didn't want this to turn into another U.N. institution
with a lot of emphasis on regional balance," said Mr. Doniger, who is
now climate policy director at the Natural Resources Defense Council.
The
wind turbine project here in Houxinqiu, an impoverished area of China,
shows the pluses and minuses of the current system. It generates nearly
24 megawatts of electricity that would otherwise come from coal. China
is already building enough coal-fired power plants each year to light
all of Britain.
Farmers
here still use mules to pull their steel-tip wooden plows and draw
their aging wooden carts, the rough-hewn slats bleached white by years
of sun and rain. The setting sun vanishes into a dark murk over the
plains to the west, where China has been rapidly building coal-fired
power plants.
Li
Guohai, a local peasant riding his mule cart home with his wife on a
recent evening, explained how he had received free electricity since
the wind turbines were erected four years ago. He has saved enough
money that he bought an all-steel plow for his mules to pull; the new
plow now frees his son to finish junior high school and perhaps go to
high school, Mr. Li said.
The
project is narrowly profitable even without Clean Development Mechanism
payments, Mr. Tao, the general manager, said. But the payments made the
project more attractive and made it easier to raise money for it.
While
Mr. Tao was reluctant to discuss the company's finances, Clean
Development Mechanism records show that the wind farm saves the
equivalent of 35,119 tons of carbon dioxide emissions a year. At $8 a
credit, that is worth $281,000. Mr. Tao does not rely on that money to
make the project viable, as the C.D.M. subsidies aim to do, but it
helps him pay for more turbines.
"Without
the Clean Development Mechanism, we'd still be profitable," Mr. Tao
said. But "you need the C.D.M. for further expansion."
(In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, this material is distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes. h o t g l o b e has no affiliation whatsoever with the originator of this article nor is h o t g l o b e endorsed or sponsored by the originator.)
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