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www.ghgprotocol.org/city-accounting
Greenhouse Gas Protocol for Cities – Introduction and Global Perspective
April 16, 2015
Delhi, India
Holger Dalkmann
WRI
www.ghgprotocol.org/city-accounting
Cities’ Contribution To Global GHG Emissions
>70%of global energy-related CO2 emissions are
attributable to cities
Source: World Energy Outlook
www.ghgprotocol.org/city-accounting
Why GPC?
Different types of measurements
Account for only a portion of emissions
Unclear if targets will be
met
Incomplete data limits investment
Unable to relate to national
climate action
WITHOUT GPC
One measurement
Consistently account for all
emissions
Emissions trajectory will
understood
Good data drives
investment
Can measure city’s contribution to national action
WITH GPC
www.ghgprotocol.org/city-accounting
The GPC offers the first,
global standard to consistently
measure city-level emissions.
GPC
www.ghgprotocol.org/city-accounting
Lead Authors
Over 30 years
experience in promoting
sustainability worldwide
Represent >1200
local governments
across the globe
Represent over 80 mega
and innovative cities
across the globe
www.ghgprotocol.org/city-accounting
Global Launch
June 2012
Draft Version 1.0 for Pilot Test
Jun 2011
C40-ICLEI MOU
Mar 2012
Draft Version 0.9 for Public Comment
May-Dec 2013
Pilot Test by 35 cities
July 2014
Draft Version 2.0 for Public Comment
Dec 2014
GPC Development Process
www.ghgprotocol.org/city-accounting
Base year Emissions
Scenario analysis
Target SettingAction
Plan
Tracking Progress
Implemen-tation
LOW-CARBON PLANNING
CYCLE
Why Measure Emissions?
Establish base year emissions
Identify emission sources and reduction opportunities
Set target and develop action plans
Track progress
Benchmarking
www.ghgprotocol.org/city-accounting
Pilot City Experience: City of Rio de Janeiro
Target:
Avoid 20% of 2005 emission level by 2020
GPC Application:
Used the GPC to establish 2005 base year emissions and track its 2012 progress
www.ghgprotocol.org/city-accounting
Reporting Framework
Scope Framework
Comprehensively report all GHG emissions from:
• Emissions from in-boundary sources (scope 1, or “territorial”)
• Emissions from the use of grid-supplied energy (scope 2)
• Emissions from out-of-boundary sources as a result of activities in the city (scope 3)
City-induced Framework
Report only GHG emissions that attributable to activities in the city:
• BASIC level reporting:
Cover sources that occur in almost all cities and calculation methodologies/data are more readily available
• BASIC+ level reporting:
More comprehensive coverage of emissions sources
www.ghgprotocol.org/city-accounting
Scope Framework
Scope 1
Agriculture, Forest, & Other Land Use
Industrial Process & Product Use
In-boundary Transportation
Grid-Supplied Energy
Transmission & Distribution
Out-of-Boundary Waste
In-Boundary Waste
Out-of-Boundary Transportation
Stationary Fuel Combustion
Scope 3
Scope 2
Other Indirect Emissions
CO2 CH4 N2O HFCs PFCs SF6 NF3
www.ghgprotocol.org/city-accounting
City-Induced Framework
Scope 1
Agriculture, Forest, & Other Land Use
Industrial Process & Product Use
In-boundary Transportation
Grid-Supplied Energy
Transmission & Distribution
Out-of-Boundary Waste
In-Boundary Waste
Out-of-Boundary Transportation
Stationary Fuel Combustion
Scope 3
Scope 2
Waste generated outside the city
Waste generated in the city
Waste generated in the city
Energy generation supplied to the grid
CO2 CH4 N2O HFCs PFCs SF6 NF3
Other Indirect Emissions
www.ghgprotocol.org/city-accounting
BASIC+ Level Reporting
Scope 1
Agriculture, Forest, & Other Land Use
Industrial Process & Product Use
In-boundary Transportation
Grid-Supplied Energy
Transmission & Distribution
Out-of-Boundary Waste
In-Boundary Waste
Out-of-Boundary Transportation
Stationary Fuel Combustion
Scope 3
Scope 2
Waste generated in the city
Waste generated in the city
CO2 CH4 N2O HFCs PFCs SF6 NF3
www.ghgprotocol.org/city-accounting
BASIC Level Reporting
Scope 1
In-boundary Transportation
Grid-Supplied Energy
Transmission & Distribution
Out-of-Boundary Waste
In-Boundary Waste
Stationary Fuel Combustion
Scope 3
Scope 2
Waste generated in the city
Waste generated in the city
CO2 CH4 N2O HFCs PFCs SF6 NF3
www.ghgprotocol.org/city-accounting
1,000+Other potential cities (C40 & ICLEI members)
35Cities pilot testedthe GPC
70+Other cities used the GPC beta versions
Global Adoption of the GPC
Image: Jim Killock/Flickr
CITIES TAKING ACTION
228 Cities to Cut 13 GtHome to 436 million people
Compact of MayorsUsing Global Protocol for Cities
www.ghgprotocol.org/city-accounting
Thank You!
Holger DalkmannW Fong
Pankaj [email protected]
www.ghgprotocol.org/city-accounting