NASA Video: A Year In The Life Of Earth’s CO2


This ultra-high-resolution NASA computer model shows how carbon dioxide the atmosphere travels around the globe. The plumes of CO2 swirl and shift all over the globe. It makes clear why greenhouse gases are always a global challenge.

Read the full article here.

Die CDP-Trends für 2015


  • CDP Supply Chain Programm:
    2015 werden sehr wahrscheinlich – neben BMW und Deutscher Telekom – weitere Konzerne aus Deutschland ihre Lieferanten zur CDP-Teilnahme über das CDP Suppl Chain Programm  auffordern. Zugleich geht weltweit der Trend hin zu einer expliziten Aufnahme des CDP-Scores in die Lieferantenbewertung.
  • Science-based targets:
    CO2-Reduktionsziele von Unternehmen, die auch im CDP-Bericht genannt werden müssen, sind oft willkürlich gesetzt und schwer zu vergleichen: Ein neuer Methodenbaukasten soll Firmen die Zielsetzung erleichtern. Gerne berät Sie die DFGE zu diesem Thema.
  • Interne CO2-Preise:
    Eine Vielzahl vor allem größerer Unternehmen verwenden bereits einen internen CO2-Preis als Instrument zur Steuerung von emissionssenkenden Maßnahmen und zur strategischen Risikobewertung, wie dieser Report zeigt. 2015 soll dieser Punkt auch explizit im CDP-Fragebogen thematisiert werden.
  • CDP Water:
    Scoring beginnt. Nach Testphase 2014 werden 2015 erstmals Punkte für den CDP Water-Fragebogen vergeben. Die DFGE unterstützt Sie bei Ihrer Teilnahme und allen Fragen um das Thema Wasser-Management.

Die DFGE ist offizieller Silver Climate Change Consultancy Partner des CDP. Weitere Informationen unter www.dfge.de, telefonisch unter +49 8192 99733 20 oder via e-mail an info@dfge.de

Wasser – Risikofaktor auch für deutsche Unternehmen


Stahl aus Südafrika, Baumwolle aus Pakistan oder Chemikalien aus China –auch wenn Wasser in Deutschland nicht knapp ist, sind deutsche Unternehmen erheblichen Wasserrisiken ausgesetzt, wie eine neue Studie des WWF zeigt: Durch globale Lieferanten- und Produktionsstrukturen „importieren” Unternehmen mit den Warenströmen auch negative Auswirkungen aus Regionen mit hohem Wasserstress.

cdp-water-blog

Risiken für Unternehmen ergeben sich dabei nicht nur direkt aus der Wasserknappheit und damit steigenden Kosten, sondern auch durch verschärfte Auflagen und eine kritische öffentliche Wahrnehmung – denn Wasser besitzt neben ökologischen Aspekten immer auch eine starke soziale Komponente Obwohl sich die Risiken (und damit die Verantwortung für die Unternehmen) in Zukunft noch deutlich intensivieren werden, nähern sich viele Unternehmen diesem Thema nur zögerlich, unter anderem da dies viel Fachkenntnis erfordert.

Einen optimalen Einstieg bietet die Teilnahme am CDP Water-Programm mit Unterstützung der DFGE. In modularen Schritten führen wir Sie von einer grundlegenden Bestandsaufnahme bis zum aktiven „Water Stewardship“:

  • Komplettbetreuung im CDP Water-Programm
  • Mapping der Wasserrisiken Ihres Unternehmens
  • Berechnung Ihres Water Footprints
  • Strategisches, integriertes Wasser-Management

Kontaktieren Sie uns für weitere Informationen!

UN Climate Summit 2014 New York


UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon invited the world leaders to “to galvanize and catalyze climate action”. Several activities around the summit as the Climate Week NY with more than 300,000 people joining the Climate March show the importance. Everybody can participate with

  • Engagement in one of the eight Action Areas
  • Commit to Action on Climate Change
  • Demonstrate Leadership on Carbon Pricing
  • Join Caring for Climate: Be a Leading Business in Addressing Climate Change

Climate-Summit-Social-Media-Badge

France already commited to spend $ 1bn to the climate fund. Every company can commit on further action also by participating in Caring for Climate initiative. This initiative is also fully supported by the UN Global Compact.

Read more
http://www.un.org/climatechange/summit/
http://caringforclimate.org/http://www.climateweeknyc.org/

Science-based emission reduction targets


An initiative of CDP, UN Global Compact, WRI and WWF, has released with the Mind the Science and Mind the Gap initiative a draft methodology for public comment how to set science-based emission reduction targets. This should ensure that reduction targets are staying under the the global 2° C temperature increase.

Such metholdologies might also be part of the next CDP methodologies.

For information and public comments please visit http://sciencebasedtargets.org/

the guardian on 5 trends that show corporate responsibility is here to stay


Sustainability is not a trend but a global movement. Georg Kell recently published the “five trends that show corporate responsibility is here to stay” in the guardian.

Irregardless if you call it CSR, social and corporate governance (ESG) or sustainability. Several big trends indicate that this topic will stay and evolve:

  1. Transparency
  2. Trust
  3. Community Participation
  4. Accessing new markets responsibly
  5. Initiatives to engage companies

Georg Kell, executive director of the UN Global Compact, clearly emphasizes a valid and transparent communication in line with official standards and initiatives.

Find the full article here.

WRI – Choose your emission pathway


The World Resources Institute took the recent IPCC Fifth Assessment Report (AR5) to illustrate possible emissions pathways in an infografic

Learn more about the WRI

Find the Fifth IPCC Assemsment Report here.

Scope 2 Accounting – treatment of green power


An increasing number of companies tend to purchase or even generate green power. Today the focus is mainly on green electricity out of renewable sources or considered as low-carbon or “carbon free” electricity. Despite some clear physical basic conditions it is fact that there are market instruments and technologies out there. These instruments should make a clear difference – it should not only be a calculation trick but should generate a real shift towards a greener power supply infrastructure. This can also be understood as additionality: (according to the IPCC/CDM §43) “an activity is additional if anthropogenic emissions of greenhouse gases by sources are reduced below those that would have occurred in the absence of the activity” compared to a business-as-usual scenario.

GHG protocol

The GHG protocol adressed this in the new Scope 2 Accounting Guidelines (Clarifying the treatment of green power instruments) which is also available as PDF draft for public comments. (issued March 2014)

What issues are adressed in the new guide?

  • Attributes and Intended Uses
    • Identifying the emissions attributes contained in renewable energy instruments and purchasing mechanisms
    • Identify intended uses of instrument, including as: means of impacting emissions calculation in end-user scope 2 inventories; mechanism for energy supplier disclosure; tracking instrument for supplier quotas, etc.
  • Quality Assurance of Renewable Energy Instruments
    • Identifying requirements for renewable energy purchasing mechanisms such as clear statement of attributes, prevention of double counting (see below), approval for use by reporting or governmental program, appropriately matching vintage of instrument with annual scope 2 calculation, etc.
  • Double Counting
    • Preventing explicit double counting of emission attributes through use of certificate registries and tracking systems
    • Preventing implicit double counting of emission attributes through adjustment of other calculation sources and mechanisms used in scope 2 accounting
    • Identifying best practices for treatment of “null power” where certificates have been sold from generation
  • Overlapping Power Sector Policies
    • Surveying regional approaches to accounting for renewable energy purchasing within an emissions- capped power sector
  • Additionality and Eligibility
    • Identifying the range of reporting program and consumers expectations about the full environmental and market impacts of renewable energy purchasing mechanisms and their ability to drive new renewable development
    • Distinguishing these expectations from the core criteria necessary
  • Calculation and Reporting
    • Identifying appropriate calculation and reporting procedures for reflecting renewable energy attribute ownership in scope 2 of a GHG inventory

(Source: http://www.ghgprotocol.org/feature/ghg-protocol-power-accounting-guidelines)

The final publication is scheduled for fall 2014. DFGE is also part of the WRI/GHG stakeholder group.

CDP

The CDP reporting is also adressing this topic with the recent 2014 CDP climate change reporting guidelines. Companies are able to report on “Purchased and consumed low carbon electricity, heat, steam or cooling” based on the following assumptions:

“Purchased and consumed low carbon electricity, heat, steam or cooling (MWh)” should be used to disclose the amounts of electricity (and heat, steam or cooling) that was accounted at a zero emission factor (0 tCO2e/MWh) or that can be considered “low carbon” and that are supported by appropriate tracking instruments. This means that any portion of electricity (and heat, steam or cooling) that comes from renewable/low carbon sources and is incorporated into a distribution grid average/residual mix, and that is not backed by some kind of instrument retired by the company, or by someone on their behalf should not be counted.

Source: CDP climate change reporting guidance 2014, page 128

What is considered as “low carbon” for CDP?

“Unfortunately there is no precise, generally accepted definition of what “low carbon energy” is. No definition is found also in the GHG Protocol standards or ISO. Nevertheless, it can be reasonably established that “low carbon energy” will be any type of energy that will have no direct emissions and which the indirect emissions can usually be considered as negligible considering the life cycle of the given technology. It is generally accepted as such power technologies like wind, solar, tidal, geothermal and most hydro power. Nuclear power is also usually considered low carbon, although other considerations make it a more contentious technology. Natural gas, combined cycle gas turbine and Combined Heat and Power (cogeneration), despite being less carbon intensive than other means of electricity production like coal, are not considered here in the definition of low carbon.”

Source: CDP climate change reporting guidance 2014, page 129

What is considered as Appropriate tracking instrument?

“Tracking instruments can have different names depending on the specific system they originate from. They can be designated as a “certificate”, “tags”, an “instrument”, “credits”, a “guarantee of origin”, etc. For the purpose of this guidance we will use “instruments” as the overarching concept for all these different designations. When accounting for renewable energy based on tracking instruments, companies should be made aware of what constitutes a good system for tracking electricity. From a CDP perspective, there are 4 simple criteria that need to be fulfilled:  There is an entity responsible for the instruments generation (issuing body) that issues the instrument in a publicly available registry(ies) against renewable energy delivered by a generator. Only one instrument is issued per unit of energy (e.g. MWh) and this link is properly audited. A set of attributes are present in the instrument (or can be legitimately inferred from it) namely: name of producer; technology type; year of installation; year of production; state support/aid; emission rate; other environmental characteristics. Properties should not be disaggregated e.g. it is not allowed for one party to count for the GHG emission factor and another party to count for the fact that it is renewable in origin.  There is an auditable chain of custody, that is, all information can be verified/audited by users in the system and the whole system is audited by external parties, guaranteeing that the link between generation, distribution and final consumption is effectively established and that there is no double counting.  The information in the system can be used to avoid the double counting of attributes. CDP will generally consider the following systems (and instruments) as appropriate for the purpose of tracking renewable electricity: Systems based on European Guarantees of Origin (GOs) such as the EECS (European Energy Certificate System).  Systems based on USA Renewable Energy Certificates such as the Green-e Energy program in the USA. In addition to the issuance, tracking of properties and guarantee of the chain of custody, there can be certification schemes that will testify for the appropriate use of an instrument for a given purpose. Further discussion of these issues as well as specific terminology can be found in the technical note “Accounting of Scope 2 emissions”, available at https://www.cdp.net/en-US/Pages/guidance.aspx.”

Source: CDP climate change reporting guidance 2014, page 97

To consider these tracking instruments is also crucial for any activities within “carbon neutral” or “carbon zero” certifications.

UK Defra

Especially in the UK there is a clear methodology which is also favored by the DFGE. Be clear on your physical emissions but consider what has been achieved to make a real difference. To ensure a transparent and valid calculation of the carbon footprint/emissions a gross/net approach can be uses.

The gross figure for emissions show the real physical emissions based on average factors. The net emissions take into account that you have a low-carbon emission factor, consider a renewable energy source (generating own electricity) or even feed-in to the grid through various technologies.

More details on the gross/net or the gross/gross approach of the UK DEFRA can be found here.

Read more about the UK government “Environmental Reporting Guidelines: including mandatory greenhouse gas emissions reporting guidance“.

Video – The EU’s 2030 goals for climate and energy (EU Climate Action)


Find out more: http://ec.europa.eu/clima/news/index_en.htm

Video – The EU Emissions Trading System explained (EU Climate Action)


Find out more: http://ec.europa.eu/clima/news/index_en.htm