Katharina Plassmann Institute for Agricultural Climate Research Product carbon footprinting: implementation challenges? Brussels, 7 October 2011.

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Presentation transcript:

Katharina Plassmann Institute for Agricultural Climate Research Product carbon footprinting: implementation challenges? Brussels, 7 October 2011

INTRODUCTION

Carbon footprinting and labelling A product carbon footprint is the sum of all greenhouse gases (GHG) released during the life cycle of a good or service, expressed as CO 2 equivalents per unit of product. Figure: from draft WRI Product accounting and reporting standard

Aims: 1) reduce GHG emissions and prioritise reduction opportunities 2) provide a baseline 3) identify cost saving opportunities 4) incorporate GHG emissions into decision making 5) demonstrate corporate/environmental responsibility 6) meet consumer demands for information on greenhouse gas emissions => changed consumption behaviour Carbon footprinting and labelling

Product Carbon Footprinting: Public and private initiatives International Organisation for Standardisation (ISO) World Resources Institute and World Business Council for Sustainable Development Grenelle Laws, Agency for the Environment and Energy Management (ADEME) (France) PAS 2050 and Carbon Reduction Label (UK) Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry (Japan) Carbon Reduction Label (Thailand) Stop Climate Change (Germany) KRAV and Svenskt Sigill (Sweden) Casino (France) Leclerc (France) Migros (Switzerland) Industry Association initiatives, e.g. International dairy industry

PCFs OF AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTS: IMPLEMENTATION CHALLENGES

Methodological challenges  Scientific understanding of emissions from agricultural production systems around the world incomplete, esp. developing countries.  Lack of knowledge on emissions from developing countries means these systems might not be represented adequately  Agroforestry systems store carbon but cannot claim benefits under current methodologies  Soil carbon changes: usually not included

Practical challenges  numerous product carbon footprinting methodologies  companies might have to comply with multiple labelling initiatives for different markets  awareness and capacity  representativeness of samples  cost of calculation and verification can be high

Particular challenges for smallholder farmers/SMEs  costs of data collection (time, training, development of recording systems, …)  low economies of scale  limited access to information on standards and markets, training, extension services, technologies and certification bodies  potentially lower yields and older technology

Challenging results  schemes vary greatly in approach and methodology applied, e.g. system boundaries  data issues: uncertainties surrounding emission factors lack of emission factors, esp. for developing countries data quality  low comparability of studies (external communication)  supplier selection?  impact on export opportunities?

Carbon footprint of fresh pineapples: 0.2 kg CO 2 e/kg at the farm gate 11 kg CO 2 e/kg when air freighted to Europe Processed into jam and shipped to Europe: 1.2 kg CO 2 e/kg

CONCLUSIONS AND RECOMMENDATIONS

Calculating Product Carbon Footprints can  encourage a better use of resources  increase competitiveness and participation in world trade  help preserve the environment and promote sustainable development  encourage the uptake of best practice  be implemented by private and public actors and also encourage consumers to reduce their personal emissions  encourage the use of greener technology

Further development of methods, application & policy making  support for SMEs: capacity building, training, extension services, finance for transition to new technologies/practices  awareness raising amongst businesses, stakeholders and consumers  active participation in international standardisation processes  develop easily accessible and public regional databases  develop low cost approaches to calculation/certification  analyse and showcase economic benefits  research strategies that maximise synergies between adaptation to a changing climate, greenhouse gas emissions reductions and wider sustainability issues (e.g. biodiversity)

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS AND THANKS TO: The World Bank (Paul Brenton and Michael Friis Jensen) Gareth Edwards-Jones (Bangor University, UK) Andrew Norton (Renuables, Llanllechid, UK) THANK YOU! Contact: