'ncrer n : ,:: ',_* * ; . ~ . : X ' l e S L L ri z Ft h a n ^ j I~~~~W .1~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ .1 * THE WORLD BANK - The Incremental Cost of Climate Change Mitigation Projects' Dilip Ahuia Working Paper Number 9 UNEP THE WORLD BANK GEF Documentation The Global Environment Facility (GEF) assists developing countries to protect the glDbal environment in four areas: global warming, pollution of intemational waters, destruction of biodiversity, and depletion ofthe ozone layer.The GEFis jointly implemented bythe United Nations DevelopmentProgramme,the United Nations EnvironmentProgramme, and the World Bank. GEF Working Papers - identified by the burgundy-band on their covers - provide general information on the Facility's work and more specific information on methodological approaches; scientific and technical issues; and policy and strategic matters. GEF Project Documents - identified by a green band - provide extended project- specific informnation. The implementing agenty responsible for each project is identified by its logo on the tover of the document. Reports by the Chairman - identified by a blue band -are prepared by the Office of the GEF Administrator in collaboration with the three GEF implementing agencies for the biannual Participants' Meetings. The Incremental Cost of Climate Change Mitigation Projects Dilip Ahuia Working Paper Number 9 UNEP THE WORLD BANK o 1993 The Global Environment Facility 1818 H Street, NW Washington, DC 20433 USA AU rights reserved Manufactured in the United States of America Fir printing April 1994 The views expressed in this paper are not necessarily those of the Global Environment Facility or its associated agencies. ISBN 1-884122-094 ISSN 1020-0894 The Incremaental Cost of Climate Change Mitigation Projects This paperrepresents thefirststeps in the developmentof aframeworkformeasuring the incrementalcosts of climate change mitigation projects by the Global Environment Facility (GEF). The GEF is a financial mechanism that provides grants to developing countries for the incremental cost of projects aimed at protecting the global environment. The paper develops a taxonomy of potential options to reduce the risk of climate rhange, and clarifies certain misconceptions related to incremental cost by presenting a clear methodci 'y- for estimating the difference or "increment" between the costs of five projects that a country might uurfertake, and the costs of possible GEF interventions to incorporate global environmental benefits. The author demonstrates how incremental costs can be incurred even in an alternative chat is economic, and how baselineprojectcosts avoidedbyaninterventionconstitutealegitimatepartofthecalculation of costs. Thepaperstresses theneedforacase-by-caseapproach inthe evaluationofprojects because ofthedifferent ways in which system boundaries and baselines can be constructed, and the influence of local factors on cost estimates. This paper is the sixth in a series of GEF Working Papers to deal with the Program for Measuring Incremental Costs for the Environment (PRINCE). PRINCE was initiated in Febnuary 1993 at a workshop held at the Tata Energy Research Institute in New Delhi It covers methodological studies, field tests, and dissemination related to the technical issues of measuring incremental cosL This is a concept central to the GEE; the two conventions to which It is linked-the Framework Convention on Climate Change and the Convention on Biological Diversity; and the Montreal Protocol dealing with ozone depletion. Participating governments provided PRINCE with $2.6 million from the Core Fund for a three-vear program. It builds on existing work concerning the phase-out of ozone-depleting substances and concentrates on the incremental costs of reducing the emissions of greenliouse gases. Parallel work will extend the concept of incremental cost to the conservation of biodiversity and the protection of international waters This paper has benefirted greatly from discussions with Ken King of the GEF Secretariat and with the author's colleagues at the Center for Global Change-AlanMiller, Irving Mintzer, Frank Muller, Harvey Sachs and Pamela Wexler. Parul Subramanian and Marybeth Shea helped with the editing. DilipAhujais anAssociate ResearchScholarattheCenterforGlobalChangeattheUniversityofMaxyland and a Consultant to the Global Environment Fazility. The other Working Papers currently in the PRINCE series are numbers 4, 5, 6, 7 and 8. iii Contents Introduction 1 I A Taxonomy of Mitigation Actions 2 2 Incremental Cost Calculation: A Primer 6 3 Examples of Incremental Cost Calculation 8 Reduction of gas flaring 8 Capture of landfill gas I 1 Reforestation 14 Demand-side management for electricity 17 Rice cultivation 19 4 Summary 22 Tables in text 1.1 A A taxonomy of interventions in the energy sectr 3 1.1 B A taxonomy of interventions in non-energy sectors 4 2.1 Costs and benefits of a baseline project and an alterntive 7 3.1 Incremental costs of a project to avoid gas flaring 1 1 3.2 Captue and use of landfill gas 14 3.3 Net changes in carbon sequestrafion over project life 16 3.4 Incremental costs of a reforestation project with two different outcomes 17 3.5 Demand-side management for electricity 18 3.6 Costs and benefits of alternative rice cultivation 21 Figures in text 3.1 Decision-making framework for reduction of associated gas flaring 10 3.2 Decision-making framework for capture and use of landfill gas 12 33 Simplified land-use plan for reforestation project area 15 References 24 v Abbreviations CFL Compact fluorescent lamp CO, Carbon dioxide FCCC Framework Convention on Climate Change GHG Greenhouse gas ha Hectare IPCC Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change LPG Liquified petroleum gas MTC Million tons of carbon pH (measure of acidity or alkalinity) STAP Scientific Technical and Advisory Panel (of the Global Environment Facility) vi Introduction The three recent international environmental ty and a country. The incremental cost estimates treaties-the Montreal Protocol, the Framework presented in this paper focus on interventions to Convention on Climate Change (FCCC), and mitigate the risk of climate change by reducing the Convention on Biological Diversity-in- greenhouse g. s (GHG) emissions or by increasing clude provisions to make available to develop- their sequestration. They represent the first steps ing countries financial resources for global toward the establishment of a framework for the environmental benefits. They specify that these assessment of incremental costs. resources shall be for tfe "incremental costs" of activities aimed at protecting the environment- The paper presents a taxonomy of mitigation op- costs that are "agreed" upon by the financial tions based on the work of the Scientific and Tech- mechanism of the treaties and the country where nical Advisory Panel (STAP) ofthe GEF, introduces the project or intervention is to be undertaken. the definition of incremental costs, and applies it to The principles governing the Pilot Phase of the five potential projects. The examples and calcula- Global Environment Facility (GEF) contain sini- tions are intentionally kept simnple to illustrate the larlanguage.Theconventionsonclimatechange concepts involved; possible complications in esti- and biodiversity also specify that these costs mating costs and benefits are mentioned but not shall be "agreed full incremental" for certain elaborated upon. categories of interventions, such as mitigation projects; and "agreed full costs" for other cate- As the examples in this paper demonstrate, a case- gories, such as national inventories andresponse by-case approach in the calculation of incremental plans. costs seems inevitable. Factors unique to each situation greatly influence the calculation, under- King (1993) convincingly demonstrates that, irres- lining the need for "agreement" between the host pective of the allocation rule, incremental cost country and the financial mechanism for projects estimates are required whenever there is to be a involving both incremental costs and incremental distribution of costs between the global communi- global benefits. A Taxonomy of Mitigation Actions Several studies in the last three years describe Interventions are also possible at various stages of options to respond to the risk of climate change. the fuel cycle: Mostfocus on mitigation options alone (Lashofand Tirpak 1990; National Academy of Science 1991), * At the production and/or generation stage but a few have also considered adaptation options * During transmission and distribution (IPCC 1991). More recently, the International In- * At end-use. stitute for Applied Systems Analysis has developed an inventory and database of over 500 mitigation This provides us with the 4 x 3 matrix of options measures (Schafer, Schrattenholzer and Messner shown in table 1.1 A. 1992). Options for intervening in other sectors (forestry, In a meeting at Princeton in June 1991, STAP's Ad agriculture, waste management and industries) are HocWorking Group on Global Warming and Ener- less well developed than in the energy sector. For gyrecommended the initial priorities formitigation example, we do not know whether changing rice options for GEF's Pilot Phase. STAP has periodi- cultivars, irrigation and fertilization practices would caily added other recommendations to this list reduce methane and nitrous oxide emissions from through the Ad Hoc Working Group on Global paddy cultivation, and if so, by how much. As Warmring, the mid-term review of the first three research on these topics continues, typologies akin tranches of the Pilot Phase, andthe Draft Analytical to that for the energy sector can be created. Frameworkon Global Warming (GEF 1992,1993). Table 1.1 B includes options for innovation in Table 1.1 presents a taxonomy of options based on institutional and policy reform with the potential to the work of STAP. The first part of the table (A) reduce GHG emissions in the energy and non- shows mitigation options in the energy sector, the energy sectors. Clearly, any such typology must be second part (B) provides a listing of options in non- dynamic and constantly updated by dropping ma- energy sectors. The choices in the energy sector ture interventions that can compete in the market represent four kinds of interventions: and including promising new ones. * Reduction of energy conswuupti6n in _xisting The taxonomy presented here excludes global processes through an increase in efficiency geoengineering interventions (such as introduc- * Reduction of emissions from existing processes ing dust, soot or bubbles in the stratosphere, * A switch to more energy-efficient processes placing mirrors in space, or fertilizing the ocean * A switch to lower emission processes. phytoplankton with iron filings (National Aca- 2 Table 1.1 A A taxonomy or interventions in the cnergy sector Stage Transmission Option Produ ction/generation & distribution End-use Reduce cncrgy . Rcfurbish old power plants . Reduce T & D o Reduce energy intensity of consumption of . Rcpower old power plants losses in basic materials production existing processes electrical grds o Efricient motors and drives by increasing o Irrigation pumpsets efficiency o Vehicular fuel efficiency . Process heating . Space heating and. cooling . Energy conservation Reduce emissions o Reduce associated gas flaring Reduce leaks in Install end-of-piru emissions from existing o Use coalbed methane natural gas controls in wood-stoves, cars processes . Collect CO2 from fossil-fuel pipelines (e.g., catalytic convertors) systems and store in depleted gas/oil fields or in deep ocean Switch to more o Biomass gasifiers-gas turbines . HVDC o Lighfting (CFLs) energy-efficient o Advanced efficient gas transmnission o Transport modal shifts processes turbine cycles . Promote inter- (road to rail, personal to mass) Clean coal technologies regional flows of . Innovative technologies for natural gas and appliances, vehicles hydro-electricity . improved cookstoves . Land-use planning . Infrastrctuce efficiency Switch to lower o Photovoltaics . Hydrogen as an o Solar water heating emnission processes o Biomnass energy carrier CNG tansport . Wind farms Electric vehicles . Solar thernal . Nantual gas-fired engine- . Small hydro driven cooling systems . Geothennal . Fuel cells . H2 from non-fossil electricity . Methanol from flared gao . Nuclear . MHD generators Notes: o = STAP high priority optionsfor GEF Pilot Phase . = other options 'shided = examples considered in this report T & D = transmission and distribution HVDC = high-volrage direct current CFL = compact fluorescent lamps CNG = compressed natural gas H2 = hydrogen MMD = magneto-hydro dynamics. 3 Table 1.1 B A taxonomy or interventions in non-energy sectors r. oresroy sector o Combatting deforestation -Biomass combustion -Provide incentives for mainicnance of foresis -Alternatives to shifting cultiviation o Greenhouse gas seqaesiration -Carbon sequestration in growing forests and on currently degraded lands -Management of tropical forests 11. Agricktitura! sector . Reduce emissions from -Cultivation of rice paddies -Livestock management -Application of nitrogenous fcrtilizers IIl. Waste management sector o Urban and rual waste treatment -Collect and use or flare landfill gas -Biogas systems IV. Industries sector . Reduce emissions from cement production * Halocarbons: CFCs, HFCs, HCFCs (reduce lifetimes and energy penalties of substitutes) V. Institutional andpolicy reform (applicable to energy and non-energy sectors) Improving performance through innovations -Price and tax reform -Least-cost planning -Conversion of utilities to energy service companies -Creation of new energy service companies -Independent power companies -Management of dispersed energy systems Technology transfer Manufacturing energy-efficient products in developing countries . Assessing technology import versus domestic manufacture . Training and institution building Database development -Energy consumption highly disaggregated by end-use -Renewable energy resource mapping . Market aggregation Notes: CFC = chlorofluorocarbon HFC = hydrofluorocarbon HCFC kydro-chlorofluorocarbon. 4 demy of Science 1991)), as it is unlikely that would be As a consensual global response. Re- individualcountrics would attempttliescoptions sponses rclated to population stabilizaLion are unilaterally. If they were atiempted at ull, it also excluded. Incremental Cost 2 Calculation: A Primer An incremental cost calculation involves a com- altemative project would be preferred on domestic parison between two projects or programs that grounds alone. Table 2.1 summarizes the situation. provide the same service. King (1993) provides a detailed description of the concepts involved in The following conclusions emerge from this dis- the calculation. This chapter provides a brief cussion: framework that will aid in understanding the examples that follow. * The baseline project must be economic, other- wise it would not be attempted, i.e.: Assume that in the absence of global environmental considerations, a country would choose to under- DBb > C> 0. take an economic project whose cost is Cb, and which provides a domestic benefit of DB b In gen- The maximum thatacountry wouldbewillingto eral, the project will also have global consequences pay for the alternative intervention, while re- (GB b, which could be positive if GHGs are seques- ceiving the same level of domestic benefits, is tered, or negative if gases are emitted). Until now C-the same that it would pay in the baseline these considerations have been omitted from na- case. tional decision-making and treated as externalities. * Incremental costs are defined as the difference Table 2.1 treats this situation as the baseline. The between the total costs of an alternative and the unit of domestic benefits is not necessarily mone- costs of a baseline project that yields the samne tary-it could also be in terms of services provided benefits, Le.: to the country. This simplifies the calculation: considerations such as price distortions and subsi- ICb = C, - Cb. dies do not need to be taken into account. Incremental global benefits are simply: Assume that there also exists an altemative inter- vention that costs C. and provides the same domes- IGBA, = GBE - GBb- tic benefit in type and level of service as the baseline project, so that DB. DB,b. This alternative will be e Whethera poject gets funded or notdepends upon preferred from a global perspective if the global the finds available and on the cost of the interven- benefits GB. are greater than those in the baseline, tion per unit global benefit obtained, iLe., upon the i.e., if GB. > GB b. This condition is necessary for compansonof`ICb/IGBb, witi somevalueofcost- the altemative to be preferred to the baseline. Sim- effectiveness detennined outside the systenL ilarly, positive incremental costs will be said to v The county will be indifferent between the exist if CP > C,. Again, if this did not hold, the alternative and the baseline project because it 6 Table 2.1 Costs and benefits of a baseline project and an alternative Total costs Domestic benefits Global benefits (million$) (services provided) (tons CO,-equivalenrJ Baseline (b) Cb DBb GBb Altemative intevention (a) C. D GB. Incremnental (ab) C -CO GB - GB b Conslraints C> Cb DB. DB, GB > GBb receives the same benefit and spends the same . When DB, * DBb, two possibilities arise. If amount in each case. DB > DB, the incremental cost is incurred When C, DB. that incremental costs are equal to costs instead of increnental domestic benefits. C, - DB,. These errors stem from mistkenly In either case, the allocation of the incremental defining incremental costs as the difference cost between domestic and international finan- between the costs and benefits of a project ciers is a matter for policy determination. without reference to a baseline situation. 7 Examples of 3 Incremental Cost Calculation This chapter presents five examples of mitigation being realistic, are not precise and do not pertain to options representing four different sectors. These any particular projecL Each example follows an interventions, mentioned earlier in table 1.1, con- identical sequence: an introduction is followed by cern: a national decision-maldng fiamework in which different alternatives are evaluated. The baseline - Reduction in the emissions of associated gas at and the altemative are described, followed by cost oil-wells calculations. Each sub-section ends with a discus- * Reduction in the emissions of landfill gas sion ofthe possible complexities in estimating both - Carbon sequestration through reforestation costs and benefits. * Demand-sidemanagenentforelectricityinvolv- ing compact fluorescent lamps Reduction of gas flaring - Reduction of emissions in rice cultivation. The extraction of oil is accompanied by the emis- sion of large amounts of gas. The contribution of Several concepts are implicit in each example: this gas to global warming is greatest when it is allowed to seep out and be vented to the atmo- a System boundaries and baselines must be selec- sphere. However, most of this gas (approximately ted carefuEly 95 percent worldwide) is captured and used. The oil * The alternative project can be economic in its production facilities themselves use a small frac- entirety and still incur incremental costs tion. In several instances though, this captured gas * Costs incurred in the baseline but avoided in the is flared, leading to carbon dioxide (CO,) emis- altemative form a legitimate part of the calcula- sions. This usually happens when domestic mar- tion kets are not developed to use the gas, political * Uncertainty about achieving global benefits af- barriers exist tobuilding cross-nationalpipelines to fects cost-effectiveness and project selection markets, marginal economics preclude liquefac- a Incremental costs can sometimes be negative tion and export, or the geology of an area precludes a Additional domestic benefits (or costs) can oc- reinjection. The prevention of gas flaring offers a cur. very cost-effective means for reducing GHG emis- sions because the flared product has a market value, It is possible to depict all these concepts with each and because the sources of these emissions are intervention chosen, but we will emphasize only a concentrated. few to clearly illustrate the concepts involved in each calculation of incremental costs. The numer- This gas is a "wet" gas in that it is mixed with ical values chosen for costs and benefits, while "natural gas liquids," which also get burned dur- ing flaring. In order to prevent flaring, the gas preferred, then one of several options available for must begathered andpiped to separation facilities the use of the gas will also need to be chosen. that remove the liquids from the "dry gas," which Figure 3.1. summarizes this decision tree. is essentially methane. The liquids yield liquified petroleum gas (LPG), as well as condensates that Baseline situation are also known as natural gasoline. Several appli- Let us assume there exists an offshore well that is cations exist for these by-products, and different currently flaring the associated wet gas itproduces. technological routes may be followed for using Assume also that it is economic to build a plant for any one of them. The dried associated gas can be capturing the liquids, but that this plant will flare used as a fuel for the production of electricity or the dry gas. Since this project is economic by steam for industry, or as afeedstock in the produc- assumption, the incremental domestic benefits will tion of methanol, fertilizers, or other petrochem- exceed incremental domestic investrnent, and al- icals, including liquified natural gas. Similarly, though there are global benefits (the liquids will LPG can be bottled and used for cooking, refrig- displace an equivalent amount of oil and LPG), no erated and exported, or used in refineries as a fuel. incremental costs will be incurred in obtaining Natural gasoline is mixed withthe crude oil that is them. (ibis need not always be sb; it would depend extracted. on the liquids content of the gas stream. If this project were uneconomic, it would incur incremen- Tlhe multiple technological options change cost tal costs that could be financed by the financial (and therefore incremental cost) calculations. For mechanism of the FCCC if the expenses were example, the export of LPG would require the judged to be cost-effective.) The liquids plant with purchase or lease of a tanker, but its use in a local dry gas flaring then becomes the baseline situation refinerywouldobviatetheexpenseofthetankerbut rather than the previous oil-well that flared the wet create the need for a longer pipeline, and so on. In gas. discussing incremental costs in this context, we first focus on the simple case and then briefly It is not enough merely to focus on the baseline considersome of the complications thatcouldarise. situation asjustdefined. Sincethealternativeproject, as described below, uses the dry gas for power Decision-making framework generation, more fuels in current use will be dis- Since the calculation of incremental costs of a placed. In principle, therefore, the baseline also project designed to capture global benefits de- includes theelectricpowerplan Ifthe avoidedfuel pends on the baseline situation, it is useful to is non-associated gas from another field, then the consider certain possibilities. Assume that a coun- baseline will include that gas well. try has just discovered an oil field. The first deci- sion for the country will be whether to exploit the Alternative project intervention new resource or leave it intact and continue to To realize further global benefits, the dry gas must import oil, if that is the currently cheaper option. If not be flared. It can be compressed and piped to a the decision to exploit the resource is made, the facility that uses it, such as a power plant. (This is crude oil will need to be separated from the asso- but one option.) Let us calculate the incremental ciated "wet" gas, which consists of natural gas costs of this option. liquids and methane. The next decision will con- cem the recovery of the resources in this associat- The technology for the baseline project requires the ed gas versus the expedient option of flaring it. If construction of an offshore platform for dehydrat- the decision to recover this resource is made, the ing and compressing the associated gas, and piping liquids will need separation from the dry gas it via an underwater pipeline to a gas plant at the portion. Some of this gas will be used to fuel shore. The LPG recovered is to be pumped to an operations in the separation plant. The third level offshore LPG tanker, the condensate liquids to an of decision-making will be over whether to cap- oil storage facility, and the fuel gases to local tare the dry gas or flare it. If the capture option is installations for use. 9 Fig. 3.1 Decision-making framework for reduction of associated gas flaring 0_ Leave in place| -In the alternative. project, the dry gas is corn- The altemnatve project yields the same domestic pressed and piped to a power plant that currently benefits of power and natural gas liquids as the operates on non-associated gas from a natural baseline. Te alternative project costs now include gas weli. The liquids part of the project (the the cost of the separation plant CS, and the costs of baseline) has large domestic economic benefits, the compressor and pipeline for the natural gas, say but small global warming benefits; the dry gas $30 million. The fuel costs for the power plant wili part has large global benefits but small domestic now exclude the value of the non-associated gas, benefits (in this example, this portion is in fact say $10 million. The alterative project results in uneconomic). GHG emissions of say 155 milgtlionus of C027 equivalent. Cost calculation Lehepresent valueof the total cost of the baselin As table 3.1 shows, the incremental costs in dds project--the cost of the separation plant to extract example ainount to $20 milion. Whether the alter- the liquids from thegas strrg-be CS. Let the cost native project is also economic is irrelevant to the of the fuel (non-associated gas) to run the power calculation of incremental costs. From a national plant be CF. The benefit this baseline project yields perspective, there are no domestic benefits for an to the national economy is the value of the liquids additional investment of $20 milion. The country extracted and the power generated. Both the costs would be indifferent between the baseline and the and the benefits accrue to the country. The baseline alternative if its expenditures were limited to CS + project also has certain global implications in terms CF in each case. The global commnunity must deter- of emissions (200 million tons of CO.-equivalent mine whether the incremental global benefits (a from the liquids, the associated gas and the non- reduction of 45 milion tons of C02-equivalent) are associated gas), but these are incidental and of little worth the incremenml cost of $20 million. the concern to the country. Table 3.1 shows this base- same argument holds irrespective of the size of line situation. domestic benefits of the baseline projecdt 1rjc0 lohscrangoa mpiain ntrs C nec ae.Tegoa omnt utdtr Table 3.1 Incremental costs of a project to avoid gas flaring Total costs Domestic benefits Global benefits (million $) (arbitrary uits) (million tons C02-equivalent) Basdine (recover liquids) CS + CF Liquids + power - 200 Altemative (recover liquids & gas) CS + 30 + (CF - 10) Liquids + power - 155 Incrmental 20 0 +45 Complications in cost calculation displaced by dry gas. If renewable energy sources Many project-specific factors affect the calculation are being displaced, there is no benefit through of incremental costs, such as the associated gas-to- averted emissions. The emissions averted by liq- oil ratio and amounts, and the natural gas liquids- uids are ignored in this example because they form to-dry gas ratio. But the most significant factors part of the baseline. relate to the various uses to which the liquids and gas might be put The system boundary, therefore, The amount of gas flaring increases with time must be expanded to include utilization of these because the gas-to-oil ratio increases in oil produc- two resources and of the fuels they displace. tion. This increase must be predicted and discount- ed to the present while calculating the value of When the dry gas is used for power generation, it is avoided costs of non-associated gases. important to know if we need to re-engineer the power plant for multi-fuel capabilhty. The reliabil- Implementation of the alternative project could ity of demand for the gas also needs to be consid- affect capacity expansion plans in the natural gas ered. If the power plant experiences frequent sector. The investments required in the future, outages, periodic dry gas flaring will occur. Simi- when the current capacity no longer meets demand, larly,thereliabilityofoilproductionathewellwill could thus be delayed or reduced or both. This is affect the reliability of dry gas supply and, there- one quantifiable domestic benefit of the project; it fore, its economic value, since the value of inter- is usually incorporated by taking the value of the rupted gas supply is less than that of constant natural gas production avoided at its long-rn mar- supply. In general, all such projects being attempt- ginal cost, rather than the value reflectedby current ed for the first time will also require a training prices. component Capture of landfill gas Project costs will also be affected by the technolog- The increase in urbanization worldwide has made ical option chosen. For example, if a decision to the disposal of municipal solid wastes a serious extract the liquids is taken, will the flaring tower at concem. In developed countries, the typical or the well still need to be constructed for possible preferred method of disposal has been sanitary safety reasons? If the dry gas is to be used, must the landfills where the waste is spread, compacted, and flaring tower at the separation plant still be erected covered with soil each day. When a particular cell in the eventuality of closure of the power plant? is full, it is sealed. Because of anaerobic conditions, the organic component of the waste is broken down Complcations in benefits assessment by bactena into carbon dioxide and methane. The Since the utilization of flared gas will not itself carbon dioxide, having been fixed by plant matter reducecarbondioxideemissions,thesystembound- recently, is recycled back to the atmosphere. But ary must be broad enough to include the fuels the emissions of medthne present both a safety 11 hazard near the site and a net contribution to the figure 3.2). Composting plants have not worked greenhouse effect Lately it has become economic well in large cities because of high costs, waste to capture and use this methane as an energy source, separation problems, and the inadequate marketing especially in landfills receiving more than 200,000 of compost. The incineration of wastes in develop- tons of waste per year. ing countries is even less feasible because the moisture in the waste stream is too high for cost- In developing countries, many disposal sites near effective operations. urban areas are uncontrolled open dumps. While this could be considered preferable in terms of If a landfill is the preferred method of disposal, a methane emissions (because conditions are more choice will need to be made between sanitary likely to be aerobic), several local health problems landfills and open dumps. For reasons already are exacerbated by unsanitary conditions (by flies, mentioned, let us assume that open dumps are not scavenging, and spontaneous smoldering fires). As chosen. In sanitary landfills, a choice exists be- larger cities in developing countries move toward tween anaerobic landfills, where the tops are sealed more sanitary landfills, methane emissions will with an impermeable layer of soil and clay, and increase unless the landfills are accompanied by aerobic landfills. The aerobic option is less cost- recovery systems. effective because expenses are higher and global benefits lower, with smaller amounts of methane Decision-making framework being producedand less fossil fuels displaced.In an The three main options for the disposal of urban anaerobic landfill, the cheapest option would be to municipal solid waste are, in order of increasing vent the landfill gas (a mixture of carbon dioxide cost: landfills, composting and incineration (see and methane) to the atmosphere. If this gas were Fig. 3.2 Decision-making framework for capture and use of landfill gas 12Municipal solid waste | Lgndffll |omosL ? =nineai I Sanitary landfill _Open dump | Anaerobic | Aerobicl | Capture V entl | Electricityr |- 12 captured it could be fi3red, or its energy value used gathered at a central processing unit. The gas treat- to displace other fuels. With miniimal cleaning, the ment system removes moisture and, if required, gas could be used directly to produce electricity impurities like hydrogen sulfide. The gas is then using gas turbines, internal combustion engines or compressed to the desired pressure. Since this re- fuel cells. The landfill gas could also be enriched covered gas will be used for generating el"rtricity, (by removing carbon dioxide), purified (by rernov- generators and the equipment for delivering the ing sulfuric gases), compressed and then fed into a electricity to an existing grid will also be required. pipeline for industrial use. Cost calculation Baseline situation Let us assume that the cost of the land required for The baseline case could be an open dump or a the sanitary landfill is $4 million, and the present sanitary landfill. Since open dumps have signifi- value of lifetime operating costs for the landfill cantlylowermethaneemissionsthan sanitaryland- another $1 million. The baseline costs include the fills, the benefits of replacing open dumps with cost of fuel (CE) for generating electricity-fuel sanitary landfills incorporating gas recovery and that would not be required under the alternative use are largely the avoided emissions from dis- scenario.The benefits of this project are the power placed fuels. The avoided methane emissions also produced and the local benefits which are valued at prosvide a greater global benefit Let us assume that say SL, which could be any number greater tan $5 the baseline proposal is to build a new sealed million. The sanitary landfill in the baseline case sanitary landfill capable of receiving 700,000 tons also results in methane emissions, the C02-equiva- of waste per year, and that incremental financing lent of which, along with emissions from the power would prevent the diffusion of methane into the plant, is say 25 million tons. atmosphere. In the altemative case, the landfill design. eeds to The baseline plan does not include the cost of the incorporate equipment to capture the landfill gas gas recovery systemn But as described below, the and generate electricity frm it. Assume that this alternative project includes recovery and uses a gas equipment costs $25 million. To generate electric- turbine for the production of electricity that is fed ity, less fuel is required now than in the baseline into anelectuicity grid. The baseline situation, there- case. Let us assume that the value of the displaced fore, must also include a provision for the genera- fuel is determined from long-run marginal costing tion of the same amount of electricity as will be principlestobe$5million.Thebenefitsherearethe produced by the landfill gas. This can be done in at same as in the baseline: SL + the value ofthe power least two ways: the most obvious way is to assume generated. Net GHG emissions will be reduced to that the electricity is produced by internal combus- say 10 million tons of C02-equivalent. As table 3.2 tion engines powered with diesel. But if aproject of shows, the incremental costs of the project are $15 this size would not typically appear in a country's milion, and the global benefits are 15 million tons capacity expansion plans, then one must consider of CO2equivalent. Incremental costs are therefore the electricity thatnow wouldnot need to be gener- significant, beiqg about three times the cost of the ated at anearby power station. The baseline costs of baseline project each of these two options will be different. For the sake of simplicity, we consider the first option. Complications in cost calculation The costs of using landfill gas are highly dependent Alternative project intervention on the technologies used, especially the technolo- To achieve optimal gas capture in an anaerobic gies for end-use of the captured gas. For example, sanitary landfill, the wastc must be spread in thin carbon dioxide removal from the gas would be layers, compacted, covered daily with soil, and requiredfortheproductionof electricity,butnotfor finally sealed with a thick layer of soil and clay. use as an industrial fuel. Flaring may be the most Wells are drilled into the landfill after it is capped. expedient option (for small landfills), but it does The gas is withdrawn under negative pressure and not capture the energy value of the methane. Anoth- 13 Table 3.2 Capture and use of landfill gas Total costs Domestic benefits Global benefits (million (arbitrary units) (million tons C02-equivalent) Baseline (sanitary landfill) 5+ CF SL + power - 25 Alternative (capture + use) 25 + (CF - 5) SL + power - 10 Incremental 15 0 +15 er factor is the degree of leachate recycling in the estimate the value of this fertilizer or its future soil. This recycling reduces local water pollution (a price and demand. domestic benefit) and increases methane genera- tion by increasing moisture content and creating Reforestation more favorable pH conditions. Where methane is The restoration of tropical lands degradedbv inap- captured and used, additional methane provides a propriate anthropogenic practices in logging, graz- lar,er global benefit by the further displacement of ing, and agriculture has the potential to sequester fuels. Again, these incremental costs must be com- significant amounts of carbon at moderate costs. pared with incremental benefits. Akccording to one estimate (Grainger 1988), there are more than 500 million hectares of tropical lands Complications in benefits assessment potentially suitable for afforestation projects, and The rate of methane generation varies (by a factor another 200 million hectares of previously forested of 35) in landfills, and depends upon many factors land suitable for reforestation projects. Because inciuding waste composition, moisture content, these lands are degraded, the productivity of plan- acidity, temperature and landfill design. Systems tatiors is often low. This drawback can be over- generally perform best when waste streams have a come through the application of natural mulch or high organic contentandincludepaper. Theamount commercial Fertilizer to seedlings, and by choosing of methane produced is even more uncertain than in native species that are well adapted to local pest and the previous example of the oil-well. environmental conditions. Let us consider an ex- ample of a reforestation project that is likely to Choosing the industrial use option instead of the incur incremental costs. electrcity option could cause an intermittent de- mand for the gas, requiring occasional flaring and Decision-making frarnework reducing global benefits. It is possible to conceive of at least five broad categories of land use with different carbon den- Sanitary landfills with gas capturing systems have sities: undisturbed primary forests, logged for- several local environmental benefits that have not ests, agricultural lands, grazing lands and been considered in the above estimation. These degraded lands. Historically, progressive utili- include the reduction of other malodorous and zation changes primary forests to degraded lands hazardous gases such as volatile organic com- and sometimes, if conditions are right for natural pounds (VOCs), and a lowered risk of explosion. regeneration, back to primary forests (see figure 3.3). Since soil quality in forested regions often It has been suggested that after the life of a varies significantly over short distances, refores- landfill, the degraded wastes may have some tation requires the preparation of land-use and economic value as compost, but it is difficult to forest management plans. 14 Fig. 3.3 Simpliried land-use plan ror reforestation project area PrimaryLoggAgricultural Gry Degraded forest _ forest land land land Plantation forest A land-use plan consists of mapping areas accord- tion activities are carried out anywhere in the ing to the suitability of soils for potential uses such project region. as agriculture, forestry, and pasture, and comparing this with present land-use paens. Areas can then Alternative project interventions be selected for reforestation and sustainable man- The project calls for the purchase of 10,000 hec- agement, or for preservation as reserves. Invento- tares of land that are either degraded or under ries and biomass densities have to be conducted on agriculture or pasture from smallholders seeldng to samples of each land classification so tat changes sell their land. Project authorities wish to plant can be monitored and forest resources utilized native tropical hardwood species which will be rationally. sustainably logged at maturity. It is expected that the net sequestration of caubon on former agricul- Baseline situation tural lands will be 20 MTC, on former pasture lands Let us assume the following for the baseline case: 10 MTC, and on degraded lands 5 MTC. * Over the twenty-yearprojectperiod, there exists For the calculation of incremrental costs, one does a total national demand for hardwood (for inter- not nexd to consider global benefits, and it might nal consumption and exports) equivalent to 5 suffice to draw the system boundary narrowly million tons of carbon (MTC) around the project But in order to judge whether a * All this hardwood comes from forests that are projectresults inthe cost-effective sequestration of unsustainably logged carbon, larger system boundaries need to be taken * The efficiency of logging operations is 50 per- into account. It is therefore necessary to estimrate cent, resulting in a reduction of 10 MTC stored the "carbon consumption)' of the population that in logged forests sells the land and moves. * The net present value of the cost of these logging operations is $1 million (old growth timber is Let us consider two alternative outcomes, A and B. undervalued in many countries) In case A, the displaced population moves to an * There is no change in carbon sequestration in urban area and uses only hydro-electricity for its any of the other land categories, and no planta- energy needs. We can assume that the pressure on 15 logged forests is less than before (because the to make a stream of payments to the project, these plantations will begin to yield some timber), and risks need not be quantified in advance. that there is nio change in the primary climax for- ests. In alternative B, let us assume that the popula- Complications in benefits assessment tion is either encouraged by governmental A necessary starting point is to establish an appro- regulationsorforcedbyalackofchoicetocolonize priate baseline against which changes can be mea- primary forests that are consequently significantly sured. Carbon inventories will need to be carried degraded. Because primary forests now become the out early in the project cycle. A significant oortion source of timber, the pressure on logged forests is of the carbon stored in forests is to be found in the reduced and they recover somewhat. Table 3.3 soil or in roots, and must be accounted for. The summarizes these carbon emission and sequestra- project's long-term storage depends upon how tion streams. many trees are harvested, how much of the tree is harvested, and how efficiently the wood is pro- Cost calculation cessed. If trees or parts of trees that cannot be Letusassumethattheaveragepricepaid(reflecting marketed are left to decay in the forest, they will the opportunity cost of land to the sellers) is $1000 release carbon dioxide back into the atmosphere as per hectare. The total cost of the land is then $10 they decompose. million. The price of establishing plantations on degraded grasslands in Indonesia has been around Other non-monetary local benefits like the preven- $400 per hectare. Let us assume that this figure tion of soil erosion, increased precipitation, eco- includes the cost of seedlings/saplings, water, fer- tourism,andnon-timberforestproductsareincluded tilizer, fencing, sustainable harvesting and admnin- in the alternative case but not in the baseline. These istrative needs. Using this figure, the net present are bonuses to the national economy anti are not value of the total cost of the project is $14 million, valued in the detennination of incremental costs. Since the domestic benefit in all cases is the same (5 million tons of hardwood), the incremental costs Even when a project is narrowly defined as a are the difference between project costs and what reforestation proiect, the system boundary cannot would have been spent in the baseline, i.e., $13 be limited to the plantation area alone. While that million (see table 3.4). In this case too, the incre- might suffice for the calculation of incremental mental costs are not insignificant cost, it does not help in determiining whether the project should be undertaken. If a project has sig- Complications in cost calculation nificant social and environmental consequences, Any standing stock of trees is subject to many they become relevant factors for consideration. In natural risks such as drought, fire, pests, disease, alternative outcome B, though the net carbon bal- and anthropogenic risks such as air pollution. If the anceis positive, 30MTC are lost in primary forests. financingmechanismwillmake onlyone-timepay- From a greenhouse perspective, the project is desir- ments, it could be argued that payments ought to able because the baseline situation results in a net coverthese types ofrisks. Ofcourse, if it is possible loss of carbon, but those 30 MTC may represent Table 3.3 Net changes in carbon sequestration over project life Land use Total carbon Primary Logged Agricultural Grazing Degraded sequestered forest forest land land land (million tons) Baseline 0 -10 0 0 0 - 10 Outcome A 0 - 5 +20 + 10 + 5 +30 Outcome B -30 +5 +20 + 10 + 5 + 10 16 Table 3.4 Incremental costs of a reforestation project with two different outcomes Domestic benefits: Global benefits Total costs hardwood (million (million tons carhon) (million $) tons carbon) Outcome A Outcome B Baseline (business-as-usual) 1 5 - 10 Altemative (reforest 10,000 ha) 14 5 + 30 + 10 Incrementalcchanges 13 0 +40 +20 invaluablebiodiversitylossorimpingeonthedwin- vision for more efficient lighting services fmds a dling rights of indigenous peoples, in which case place in the least-cost plan. Then the utility must the project ought not to be implemented. choose amongst the alternatives available, for ex- ample, between CFLs and lineal fluorescent lamps. Demand-side management for electricity The utility must also determine whether it wants to Let us assume that a utility has been asked by its offeraone-timeinitialsubsidytoconsumersforthe government to extend the provision oflighting servic- purchase of more efficient lamps, or institute a esbyproviding700lumensperhouseholdtoamillion leasing program in which the monthly payments newruralcustomers.Letusalsoassumezhttheutility charged to consumers are less than the savings in is facedwith afinancial constraint in implementing its the consumers' electricity bills. capacity expansion plans. In view of studies that show thatinvestnentsincompactfluorescetlamps(CFLs) The average cost of supplying an additional kilo- are cheaper by more than an order of magnitude than watt-hour (kWh) of electricity is the long-run mar- power plants to energize incandescent lamnps, and ginal costof supplying electricity in any given area, compelled to consider least-cost planning, the utility and will vary for base-load and peak-load power, decides to explore demand-side management (DSM) perhaps between $0.05 to $0.07 per kWh. options in supply. Although CFLs are twenty times more expensivethan incandescent lamps, they lastten Baseline situation times longer and consume only 20 to 25 percent as In this example, it does not matter whether the much electricity to produce comparable lighting lev- electricity in the baseline case is provided by an els. The utility would like to explore the possibiliyof extension of the grid ora stand-alone facility. Let us applying for incremental financing to purchase a assume that the electricity is generated by oil-based nillion CFLs, since a substantial reduction in OHGs generators. In a business-as-usual scenario, the is likely to result from their use. utility would install sockets for 60 Watt (W) incan- descent bulbs in each of the million households and Decision-makirg framework increase the generating capacity by the new load Whenever the cost of conservation is less than the (60 megawatt (MW), assuming for simplicity that cost of the displaced electricity supplies, society is lighting is the only load). better off by investing in conservation than in supplyingtheequivalentamountofelectricity (Josk- Alternative project intervention ow and Marron 1993). Typically, many promising Assume that the alternative project aims to intro- DSM interventions will be available to a utility duce, instead ofincandescent, million CFLs in the along with several supply options. The framework area. The CFLs will be leased to customers at for evaluating them is provided by the least-cost monthly charges that are less than their savings due planning methodology. Let us assume that the pro- to reduced consumption. Since the CFLs consume 17 16 W of electricity instead of 60 W, an installed in this example), itcdoes not incurany incremental capacity of 16 MW will now be required instead of costs. These costs are in fact negative because of 60 MW. the avoided costs of installing new capacity, and the necd for less fuel for what is now a smaller Cost calculation capacity. Even if program costs are here underes- As in the otherexamples, thefigures used beloware timated and in realityproved to be higher, the total approximations and have been selected nerely to expenses of the alternative would need to exceed illustrate the different situations that could arise in $95 million before incremental costs could be the caLculation of incremental costs. positive. In the baseline case, the utility will arrange for an Complications in cost calculation oil-firedgeneratingcapacityof6OMWandprovide Most cnergy-efficiency and DSM options in cur- connections to an additional I million rural custom- rent energy literature are either negative cost or ers. We assume that the net present value of total low-cost options; few expensive options have capital and operating costs for this option is $95 been considered. Because there are so many million. This wouldresult in ,heemissions of say 80 DSM options with unrealized technical potential million tons of C02-equivMAent over seven years, that are cheaper than the cost of providing new which is the average lifetime of CFLs being used at supply, analysts have not focused on more ex- an average of four hours per day. The relatively pensive options that could involve positive in- inexpensive incandescent bulbs are purchased by cremental costs. It is easy to think of examples the customers. Since the technologies are well where incremental costs could be positive, such known, the utility does not incur any additional as the installation of triple-glazed windows filled program costs (see table 3.5). with rare gases for houses that do not require much space conditioning. But this runs counter In the alternative situation, the utility must provide to the very essence of the philosophy of least- for a generating capacity of 16 MW instead of 60 cost planning. It would therefore be difficult to MW. It must also purchase a million CFLs at justify funding DSM projects under a policy of approximately$10perlamp.Withprogramcostsof strict adherence to existing incremental cost $5 million, let us assume that the net present value principle. of this option is $30 million. This cost includes the capital costs and the cost of fuel for the .16 MW Demand-side management program costs should generating capacity. This option results in emis- include costs for overheads, program monitoring, sions of say 20 million tons of C02-equivalenL evaluation, marketing, administration, and so on. These costs are significant, averaging 30 percent of Although this project leads to a substantial reduc- direct equipment and installation costs in the Unit- tion of carbon dioxide emissions (60 million tons ed States (Joskow and Marron 1993). However, Table 3.5 Demand-side management for electricity Costs (million$) National benefits Global benefits (Lampss+program+power supply) (million lumens) (million tons C2O-eqivalent) Baseline (incandescent) 0 +O + 95 700 - 80 Altemative (CFRs) 10 +5 +20 900 - 20 Incremental -65 + 200 + 60 I8 these costs arc often underestimated by proponents Rice cultivation of DSM projects. Some so-called negative cost Asignificantfmrtionofglobalanthropogenicemis. projects may in fact be positive cost projects when sions of methaine is caused by the cultivation of ricc rcalistic assumptions ol program costs are made. in flooded ficlds. The most likely estimate for this fraclion is on-csixth, alihough it could be IS small Similarly, arguments can be marshalled in support as one-tenth or as 'argc as one-third (1loughton, of including costs for stabilizing the line voltagc Callander anid Varney 1992). The flooding creates that would make a CFL project more likely to anaerobic conditions in soils that in turn enable succeed. As explained abovc, it does not suffice to methanogenic bacteria to decompose organic mat- show that costs are positive for a project to becomc ter and produce mehuane. Aerobic inethanotrophic eligibleforincremcntalcost financing-total project bactcria oxidize a large part of this methane before costs must be more than those of the baseline it rcachcs the soil-water surface. Some of tile meth- project. ane produced is leached away, being dissolved in the percolating water. The remaining metlhane is Since many DSM andenergy-efficiency projects cmitted to the atmosphere either through the plant are extremely desirable from a global perspec- or through diffusion and ebullition. tive and do require initial financing, the finan- cial mechanism of the FCCC should be given Scientists have identified some of the factors that the authority to make concessionary loans avail- affect methane emissions from rice cultivation: ableincertaincaseswhere incremental costs are tillage practices, rice species, seeding and trans- negative. planting practices, soil type and temperature, the irrigation water regime, the type and method of Complications in benefits assessment application of fertilizer, and the pattern and .,umber A 16 W CFL provides about 900 lumens of light of croppings in a year. Current information is compared to 700 lumens from the 60 W incan- insufficient to determine the relative importance of descent bulb it replaces. This extra benefit is these factors in influencing emissions. All other entirely local but would usually be considered a things being equal, the emissions of methane are bonus rather than an additional benefit that the higher in fields with warmer soil temperatures than country should finance from its own resources. ir. those with lower temperatures, in continuously We assume that the lighting service (amount and flooded fields than in intermittently flooded fields, quality of illumination) provided by the two and with certain types of organic fertilizers than lamps is equivalent. with chemical fertilizers (Khalil 1993). Years of careful and painstaking research will be required Fluctuations in line voltage are common in devel- before we can be certain that our interventions in oping countries and can reduce the expected life- rice agriculture will be beneficial for the global times of both the CFL and the incandescent. Both environment. lamps have to incorporate technological fixes to operate in different project environments, and as- Decision-making framework sumptions about operating efficiencies and life- For any set of interventions in rice agriculture to times are not strictly transferable from developed become widely acceptable, it must satisfy the fol- country settings. This can affect the calculation of lowing four conditions (Khalil 1993): both costs and benefits. - The productivity or yield must not decrease If the electricity were to be generated at a central- * The fanner should derive some additional bene- ized plant and supplied to the project area by grid fit, such as the improved utilization of water or extension, global benefits largerthan those estimat- labor ed for a decentralized plant would be obtained * The rice variety should have attributes consid- because of substantial losses in transmission and ered desirable by consumers distribution. * Net GHG emissions must not increase. 19 Among the factors affecting methane emissions There is some concern that the increased use of listed above, the ones that offer the earliest and nitrogen-based fertilizers may increase nitrous ox- most obvious opportunities for mitigation are the ide emissions. Any recommendation to replace the choices of a cultivar, water regime and fertilizer. use of organic matter with mineral or chemical fertilizers must be based on careful research, given Cultivar selection that traditional systems have shown sustained pro- About 120,000 varietiesof rice exist (Khalil 1993). ductivity for thousands of years. It should therefore be possible to choose those that have lower emissions and satisfy the constraints Baseline situation listed above. Drawing the project boundaries in this example is simpler than in the cases of enurgy- or forestry- Water reg related projects. We assume that there is a flat, low- Methane emissions are influenced by the inunda- lying area in a developing country that grows a tion periods and drainage schedules used during high-yielding modern variety of rice. Assume that cultivation (USEPA 1993). Experiments have the areacropped annually is I millionhectares (thus shown that intenmittent flooding can reduce meth- a 1-hectare field cropped thrice a year counts as 3 ane emissions over the growing season (Khalil hectares) and the avenge productivity is 3 metric 1993). Thus flatland and lowland irrigated areas tons per year. The annual rice production is there- with secure and controllable water supplies might fore 3 million metric tons. profit from shifting to a regime that more closely resembles natural conditions in rain-fed areas. But Let us also assume that in the baseline (which could to avoid a decline in productivity, the soil moisture describe either the current situation or the situation must be maintained at fairly high levels during the at the time that we are ready with cost-effective critical stages when the plant is most susceptible to interventions), 1 million hectares of rice fields emit drought (USEPA 1993), for example, during tiller- 20 million tons of C02-equivalent emissions per ing, flowering, or during the second half of the year of methane and nitrous oxide. Since modem vegetative state. Another concern is that intermit- agriculture comes as a package deal, the choice of tent flooding can increase nitrous oxide emissions a cultivar has predetermined requirements for wa- while reducing methane emissions (Tirpak and ter and fertilizer application rates. Ahuja 1992). Only careful research over time will demonstrate whether such flooding leads to an Alternative project intervention increase or decrease in net emissions on a C02- Thefarmers will be askedto grow acultivar thathas equivalentbasis. Similarly, changes in soil chemis- the potential to reduce net GHG emissions instead tryduringdifferentwaterregimesmustbeevaluated of their usual varieties of rice. The regimes for the before changes are recommended. application of water and fertilizers will be speci- fied. It can reasonably be expected tat larger Fertilizer application amounts of waterandfertilizerwilUbe required. We The manipulation of the timing, mode, and location assume initially that the productivity remains con- of application of ferilizer offers the third avenue stant at 3 metric tons perhectare. (Cases where this for reducing methane emissions in rice cultivation. assumption does not hold are discussed briefly Fields using nitro-Pnous fertilizers or composted later.) Assume that net emissions are reduced by 20 or digested/fermented fertilizers have lower emis- percentto 16 million tons ofCO2-equivalentperyear. sions than fields that are either unfertlized or fertilized with raw organic matter, such as rice Cost calculation straw. The reduction in emissions with nitrogenous Costs are incurred for severl inputs during rice ferilizers is more pronounced when fertilizers are production. The first category is the use of human incorporated more deeply in the soil. Addition of andanimallaborforvariousactivitiesrangingfrom nitrification inhibitors, such as encapsulated calci- land preparation, raising, pulling, transplanting, urn carbide, seems to reduce emissions further. fertilizing, irrigating, weeding and spraying, to 20. Table 3.6 Costs and benerits of alternative rice cultivation Total costs (million $) Seeds + water +fertilizer + Domestic benefits Global benefits extension + other (million tons of rice) (million ions CO,-equivalenr) Baseline 100 + other 3 -20 Alternative 130 + other 3 -16 Incremental +30 0 + 4 finally harvesting, threshing, winnowing and haul- large program will also form a legitimate part of ing (Barker, Herdt and Rose 1985). There are also incremental costs. The large number of units in- the costs of seeds, fertilizer, insecticides, herbi- volved will increase the potential for error. Where- cides, water and the energy required to pump it. as the costs between the alternative and the baseline are chosen to be significantly different, in actuality In this example, the only costs that we assume to be the increment may only be a small difference be- different between the baseline and the altemative tween two large numbers. Finally, if the new culti- are the costs for seeds, water, fertilizer and exten- vars are developed and tested within the country sion activities. For each of these, the costs can be itself, some costs of research and development of expected to be higher in the alternative than in the the new cultivar will also be associated with the baseline. All othercosts identified above, and other alternative intervention and thus become a part of post-harvest costs such as milling and transporta- the incremental costs. tion, are assumed tobe the same for the baseline and the altemative. In the latter, the cost of pumping is Complications in benefits assessment included in the cost of water, and the extra cost of We have assumed in this example that the yield in deeper application of fertilizer is included in the the alternative is the same as that in the baseline cost of fertilizer. case. It isjust as likely that the yield might increase. Thus the same area might yield 4 million tons of Among the inputs required for modern rice agricul- rice per year instead of 3 million tons. Asking 25 ture, fertilizer costs are highest, and can easily percent of the farmers in the project area to shift to exceed 50 percent of total costs. Water costs are another crop to maintain the same yield is clearly usually significantly smaller, followed by seed infeasible. The market value of the additional nil- costs which are approximately 2 percent, followed lion tons of rice could swamp the value of the by extension costs. We assume that the costs for incremental costs. As mentioned in chapter 2, it is four categories of inputs-seeds. water, fertilizer then a matter of policy to determine how the incre- and extension services-incurred by the farmers mental costs shouldbe divided between the country (and the goverrnment, which incurs the costs for and the financial mechanism. extension) are $100 million in the baseline and $130 million in the altemative. (che numbers are On the other hand, it is also possible that productiv- chosen for illustrative purpose" - Mly.) The incre- ity might decrease. In principle, it is conceivable mental costs in this example then amount to $30 that if the global benefits are cost-effective, the million. The calculation is summarized in table 3.6. farmers could be compensated for both the incre- mental costs and the loss of yield. In practice, it Complications in cost calculation would be very difficult to "sell" to a developing As in the other cases, several complications can country analternativeprojectthatwouldprotectthe arise. If the farms are small, wiih an average size on global environment but reduce its food security. So the order of ahectare, a million farmers will need to the first condition mentioned on page 19 is likely to be compensated. The costs of administering such a prove a binding constraint. 21 4 Summary This paper demonstrates an initial application of The examples chosen in this paper highlight the incremental cost principles to five diverse projects following aspects of the application of incremental designed to reduce the risk of climate change. A costprinciplestoclimatechangemitigationprojects: taxonomy of climate change mitigation projects is also presented, but the non-energy sectors are in- * National priorities are not subverted by an alter- sufficiently developed and require further study. native project and there is no inherent conflict between the baseline project and the interven- The incremental cost of any alternative action is tion. The intervention merely adopts an alterna- measured against a baseline representing the situa- tive, possibly more expensive, route to achieving ton that would otherwise exisL It is therefore a the same domestic benefits in order to reduce reference value which indicates the additional bur- potential damage to the global environment. den that a country would bear if it were to obtain the . Costs incurred in the baseline but avoided in the services provided by the original activity (the base- alternative form a legitimate part of the calcula- line) in another way, for examplie, by taking into tion and cannot be classified as "incidental" account global environmental concems. This refer- domestic benefits. ence value is usually equal to the grant provided to Incremental costs need not be small, as sugges- the country, but the Conferences of the Parties to ted by the terTm. Their magnitude depends on the the conventions on climate change and biodiversity alternative proposal, and can sometimes be sev- could, in some cases, be guided by policy consider- eral times the cost of the baseline projecL ations other than strict incremental cost financing * Incremental costs may be incurred even when to determine the financial incentive required to the proposed altemative is economic as a whole. make acountry implement the alternative in prefer- Even though the costs of an alternative are less ence to the baseline. than the domestic benefits that it provides, incre- mental costs will result whenever these costs In addition to estimating incremental costs, an exceed those in the baseline. application of the framework presented in this Incremental costs are specific to each applica- paper can help to define areas where technical tion and cannotbe assignedgenericallyto project studies or negotiations may be needed to inprove types. The need for a case-by-case approach is estimates or resolve uncertainties, and to sharpen inevitable because of the many ways in which the debate about existing trends (baseline situa- baselines and system boundaries can be drawn, tions) and potential shifts in strategy as represented and because many local factors influence cost by alternative interventions. estimation. 22 This paper confines itself to the application of the work's application at the program, sectoral and incremental cost framework to projects. A clear country levels. need remains, however, to demonstrate the frame- 23 References Barker, R., R. Herdt and B. Rose. 1985. The Rice Economy of Asia. Washington, D.C.: Resources for the Future. Global Environment Facility. 1992. "Criteria for Eligibility and Priorities for Selection of GEF Projects." Report by the Scientific and Technical Advisory Panel of the GEF, Washington, D.C. 1993. "Draft Analytical Framework for Global Wamiing." Report by the Scientific and Technical Advisory Panel of the GEF, Washington, D.C. Grainger, A. 1988. "Estimating Areas of Degraded Tropical Lands Requiring Replenishment of Forest Cover." International Tree Crops Journal 5: 1-2. Houghton, J.T., BA. CaIlander and S.K. Vamey, eds. 1992. Climate Change 1992: The Supplementary Report to theIPCC ScientiflcAssessmenr. Intergovenmnental Panel on Climate Change, Cambridge, U.K.: Press Syndicate of the University of Cambridge. IPCC (Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change). 1991. Climate Change: The IPCC Response Strategies. Washington, D.C.: Island Press. Joskow, P1. and D.B. Matron. 1993. Science 260: 281, 370. Khalil, NLA.K. 1993. "Methane Emissions from Rice Fields: Methodology for Country-by-Country En-missions Estimates and Possibilities for Reducing Emissions." Report of the Expert Working Group. In A.R. van Amstel, ed. Proceedings of the Conference on Methane and Nitrous Oxide Emissions. Amersfoort, the Netherlands: RIVM (National Institute of Public Health and Environmental Protection). King, K. 1993. The Incremental Costs of Global Environmental Benefits. Working Paper 5. Washington, D.C: Global Environment Facility. L.ashof, D. and D. Tiipal 1990. Policy Options for Stabilizing Global Climate: Report to Congress. Washington, D.C.: United States Environmental Protection Agency. National Academy of Sciences. 1991. Policy Implications of Greenhouse Warming: Report of the Mitigation PaneL Washington, D.C.: National Academy Press. Schafer, A., L. Schrattenholzer and S. Messner. 1992. "Inventory of Greenhouse-Gas Mitigation Measures: Examples from the ILASA Technology Data Bank." Working Paper WP-92-85. Laxenburg, Austria EIASA (International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis). TirDak, D.A. and D.R. Ahuja. 1992. "hnplications for Greenhouse Emissions of Strategies Designed to Ameliorate Other Social and Enviromnental Problems." In G. Peannan, edL Limiting the Greenhouse Effect: Options for Controlling Atmospheric CO2 Accwmulation. London: John Wiley & Sons, pp. 535- 559. - USEPA (United States Environmental Protection Agency). 1993. Options for Reducing Methane Emis- sions Internationally. Report to Congress, Volumes 1 & 2. Washington, D.C. 24 UAtDP Field Off ices* P.O. Coti Ca!W. off Grsan Ca4 P.O. 3t Xabul Athsiaa La Pea, BoUth do cause tados liig 10310. Nw YD*, N.Y. Inicasa CIDCwzuLNI O. Sn Apeado Fests 1O1-l1!0 S5hkagtL5bu Cba aca, 4540 P.O. Iox Vil No. 35 DoiwA Ban low, Coun P.O. Du MG - . 71-4557 IliUM, AiRiih Pies flcWO'TalUu Twbiz. bkiS Cabut Pett 0255 bowls Repubcta of Lm Ba. peal. in # 7tS1Ml70 Bts, Ol Rol jab!s Alger l:l ZI 1S47 V.0.R.BcS3 P.O. ao 4 24 Algiers 16d0gG LSI Abidjan 01. AŁ41. Ababa, (wlyh* Aluix RpubEIque Ui Cow Etol 31hd1d, lag P.O. 3011 C'irn CaulPaaoutQ 1114 scaL? Pd?aU*al dle P.0. O.2IO L-Nd. PscwpiV aid. WIPCub mm, nepublif Azgda I Unitd Nd Bot. paue 190 ua Rot. pate no P.O. 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