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6.1 Module 6 Reporting of Mitigation Assessments in National Communications Ms. Emily Ojoo-Massawa CGE Chair

6.1 Module 6 Reporting of Mitigation Assessments in National Communications Ms. Emily Ojoo-Massawa CGE Chair

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Page 1: 6.1 Module 6 Reporting of Mitigation Assessments in National Communications Ms. Emily Ojoo-Massawa CGE Chair

6.1

Module 6

Reporting of Mitigation Assessments in National

Communications

Ms. Emily Ojoo-Massawa

CGE Chair

Page 2: 6.1 Module 6 Reporting of Mitigation Assessments in National Communications Ms. Emily Ojoo-Massawa CGE Chair

6.2

Module 6Reporting of Mitigation Assessments in

National Communications

• Reporting issues

• Overall goals

• Suggestions for reporting

• Other aspects of reporting

• Preparation of Project Proposals

Page 3: 6.1 Module 6 Reporting of Mitigation Assessments in National Communications Ms. Emily Ojoo-Massawa CGE Chair

6.3

Reporting issues

Article 4, paragraph 1, and Article 12, paragraph 1, of the convention provide for each Party to report to the COP:

– information on its emissions by sources and removals by sinks of all greenhouse gases not controlled by the Montreal Protocol (greenhouse gas inventories);

– national or, where appropriate, regional programmes containing measures to mitigate, and to facilitate adequate adaptation to climate change (general description of steps taken or envisaged by the Party to implement the Convention);

– any other information that the Party considers relevant to the achievement of the objective of the Convention.

Page 4: 6.1 Module 6 Reporting of Mitigation Assessments in National Communications Ms. Emily Ojoo-Massawa CGE Chair

6.4

Overall Goals

• Mitigation assessments form an important part of Parties’ national communications on climate change.

• They are read both by the international scientific community and by national and international policy makers.

• They therefore need both a high level of scientific rigor and a high level of clarity and comprehensibility.

• Raw modeling results need to be reinterpreted in a form more familiar to policy makers.

Page 5: 6.1 Module 6 Reporting of Mitigation Assessments in National Communications Ms. Emily Ojoo-Massawa CGE Chair

6.5

Suggestions for Reporting• Typically, energy and non-energy sectors can each be

reported upon separately.• Efforts to integrate energy and non-energy sector

assessments should also be described.• A summary should present main findings across energy

and non-energy sectors.• In addition to presenting results, reports should describe

assumptions made, methods adopted and sources of data used.

• Reporting should follow international scientific practices for documentation and referencing of data sources.

• Results can be shown in chart and table formats. Charts should be backed-up by numeric tables for clarity.

Page 6: 6.1 Module 6 Reporting of Mitigation Assessments in National Communications Ms. Emily Ojoo-Massawa CGE Chair

6.6

Suggestions for Reporting• All charts and numeric data should be clearly labeled

with units unambiguously specified. • Note where GHG results are expressed as Tons of

Carbon equivalent (Tons Ce) or as Tons of CO2 equivalent.

• Reports can use any unit, but a table of unit conversion factors should be included to enable proper interpretation of results.

• Fuel consumption and production should preferably be reported in standard energy units (e.g., GJ, GWhr, TOE). Where physical units are used (mass, volume) the fuel’s energy content and density should also be reported.

• If possible, discuss the uncertainties associated with findings.

Page 7: 6.1 Module 6 Reporting of Mitigation Assessments in National Communications Ms. Emily Ojoo-Massawa CGE Chair

6.7

Modeling Methodologies

• Reporting should describe:– what modeling methodology was adapted and

why,• NB: important to distinguish between the software

used and the model built within the software.

– how the structure of the national energy system was reflected in the model, and

– what disaggregation structure was used and why.

Page 8: 6.1 Module 6 Reporting of Mitigation Assessments in National Communications Ms. Emily Ojoo-Massawa CGE Chair

6.8

Scenario Definitions

Reporting should describe:

– the scenarios that were examined.– any sensitivity analyses that were conducted– how the baseline scenario was defined (what changes

take place affecting GHG emissions even in the absence of GHG mitigation policies)

Page 9: 6.1 Module 6 Reporting of Mitigation Assessments in National Communications Ms. Emily Ojoo-Massawa CGE Chair

6.9

Scenario Assumptions and Data

• Reporting should describe:– Macroeconomic and demographic variables

(population, GDP, urbanization, etc.)– Fuel price assumptions.– Discount rates: If different rates used in each sector

(e.g. to reflect market barriers), describe how these values were established.

– Activity levels and Energy Intensities • Describe base year and future development of activity levels

in the model. • Include major assumptions in each sector.

Page 10: 6.1 Module 6 Reporting of Mitigation Assessments in National Communications Ms. Emily Ojoo-Massawa CGE Chair

6.10

Screening• Discuss and illustrate the process used

for screening technology options.

• Show any screening matrix used.Examples of Criteria Mitigation Option 1 Option 2 Option 3Mitigation Potential Tonnes CO2,

score or ranking (low, medium)Direct Costs $/Tonne, C/B ratio, score or rankingIndirect Costs - Increase in domestic employment Score or ranking - Decrease in import payments Score or rankingConsistency with Development Goals - Potential for wealth generation Score or ranking - Consistency with MDGs Score or rankingConsistency with Environmental Goals -Potential for reducing air, water and other pollution Score or rankingLong term sustainability of option Score or rankingData

-Availability Score or ranking

-Quality Score or rankingFeasibility (political, social, technical) Score or ranking

Page 11: 6.1 Module 6 Reporting of Mitigation Assessments in National Communications Ms. Emily Ojoo-Massawa CGE Chair

6.11

Other Environmental Impacts

• If included in the study, show results for emissions of other non-GHG pollutants (e.g. SOx, NOx particulates, etc.).

• Co-benefits exist if the mitigation scenario leads to reductions in these pollutants.

• If using externality values for these pollutants, include the externality costs in your cost reports.

• Discuss other hard to quantify impacts such as effects on water, soil and land-use.

Sample chart from LEAP

Page 12: 6.1 Module 6 Reporting of Mitigation Assessments in National Communications Ms. Emily Ojoo-Massawa CGE Chair

6.12

Other Aspects of Reporting

• Discuss the results of any macroeconomic assessment, which examines the impact of the mitigation scenarios on the wider economy.

• Discuss how the mitigation scenarios are consistent with national development goals.

• Discuss any barriers to implementing the envisaged mitigation options and the types of policies (national and international) that could help implement the identified mitigation options.

• Identify capacity-building needs for the identification, evaluation and implementation of mitigation policies and measures.

• Identify long-term needs for education and building public awareness on climate change issues.

Page 13: 6.1 Module 6 Reporting of Mitigation Assessments in National Communications Ms. Emily Ojoo-Massawa CGE Chair

6.13

Preparation of National Communications

• National Communications should build upon the efforts and experiences

• A comprehensive stocktaking exercise should identify gaps and areas for further study.

• For example, stocktaking can help with:– Gaps: what studies/assessments are needed to improve

information or fill gaps in knowledge? – Uncertainties: how can the reliability of information be

increased? – New areas of work: what areas were not included in the INC? – Priorities: helps to focus on priority areas for next NC.

Page 14: 6.1 Module 6 Reporting of Mitigation Assessments in National Communications Ms. Emily Ojoo-Massawa CGE Chair

6.14

Preparation of Project Proposals

Article 12.4 of the UNFCCC states that:• Developing country Parties may, on a voluntary basis,

propose projects for financing, including specific technologies, materials, equipment, techniques or practices that would be needed to implement such projects, along with, if possible, an estimate of all incremental costs, of the reductions of emissions and increments of removals of greenhouse gases, as well as an estimate of the consequent benefits.

• Project proposals can be presented as part of national communications.