TerraPass blog

Clinton foundation unveils urban energy efficiency plan

Adam Stein | May 21, 2007

 

clintonefficiency.jpgThe William J. Clinton foundation has arranged billions in financing to help a coalition of sixteen cities cut urban emissions by applying a range of energy efficiency measures to aging buildings.

Efficiency measures tend to get lumped in under the heading of conservation, but they really deserve to be their own full-fledged category of solutions to global warming. If conservation is simply doing less of a polluting activity, efficiency is doing the same activity with less energy. Turning off the lights is conservation. Screwing in a compact fluorescent light bulb is efficiency.

Efficiency measures deserve their own category because they are among the most important strategies for reducing emissions. Emissions reductions from efficiency projects are immediate (which is good), they are often cheap or even free (which is great), and they don’t require individuals to make significant changes to behavior (which is important to quick adoption, no matter how much we might wish otherwise).

Details of the Clinton plan are unclear, but it appears the financing will take the form of a series of interest-bearing loans to be paid back through savings from energy reductions:

The financial instruments for paying for the upgrades are being designed by the Clinton Climate Initiative, set up by the foundation …

The upgrades would be done by four international energy-services companies that are already seeing a booming business in such conversions. They would guarantee a particular level of energy and monetary savings for particular projects under the plan.

The financial instruments are still being designed, but they already have a name: carbon offsets. An exotic flavor of offset, to be sure, but offsets still the same.

To succeed, the plan will need to put in place all the normal machinery for offsets: a means for establishing emissions baselines, a set of approved protocols for reducing emissions, a measurement and verification procedure for tracking reductions, and a central registry to ensure emissions aren’t double-counted.

These are problems that have been solved in other contexts, and it is exciting to see new flavors of offsets being developed. The Kyoto Clean Development Mechanism has identified over 200 categories of emissions reductions. Of these, 65 relate to energy efficiency.

This sounds like a lot, until you realize how narrowly defined most of these measures are. For example, Method 31 pertains to the capture of waste heat from iron kilns.

Improving the efficiency of city buildings is obviously much more important than improving the efficiency of the world’s iron kilns. The immediate benefit of the Clinton program is the billions of dollars steered toward energy efficiency. But the long-term importance will more likely be the development of new techniques for plugging efficiency projects into global carbon markets.

Update: Video interview with Clinton here. Clinton is much better off the cuff than he is in his official speech.

Reprinted from Grist. I know there’s no real way to gauge this with a simple poll, but out of curiosity: what’s the overlap between Grist readers and TerraBlog readers? Am I just annoying people with these redundant posts?

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Comments

15 comment(s) on this post. Leave your own!


  • 1.

    yes, for your stats, i'm a regular grist and terrapass reader.


    Reply
  • 2.

    I have no idea what Grist is, but read terrapass blog religously


    Reply
  • 3.

    Am not familiar with Grist, but do read TerraPass.


    Reply
  • 4.

    Never heard of Grist; love Terrapass.


    Reply
  • 5.

    Read Terrapass avidly; unfamiliar with Grist. PLEASE keep doing what you do.


    Reply
  • 6.

    Loyal reader of Grist for longer than my two-year enjoyment of TerraBlog.


    Reply
  • 7.

    Nope, don't read Grist but love TerraPass for its practical tips to reduce carbon footprints and what's going on in the environmental/conservation/efficiency/offsets/other stuff world. Keep up the great work!


    Reply
  • 8.

    This is a great idea. Specifically, I like the idea of arranging loans, as opposed to grants. Grants are fine and good, but there will always be somebody claiming that you're tinkering with supply and demand for your own ends.

    As for the Grist/TerraBlog thing, I read Grist occasionally, but TerraBlog almost daily. The biggest reason for this is probably because I can read TerraBlog posts directly from my feed reader, whereas Grist usually just offers a teaser or a ten-word summary.


    Reply
  • 9.

    Not a grist reader. I did recently attend a fundraiser for the Clinton Fdn and am very glad to read about this- haven't heard it from them directly!
    I don't understand the "financial instruments" part. If they get carbon offset credit for becoming more efficient, does that equate to dollars? I don't understand how this relates to $ from the Clinton Foundation.


    Reply
  • 10.

    terrablog yes (from weekly newsletter emailed), grist no.


    Reply
  • 11.

    Hey Ilana,

    Good question. I don't know much about the details of the Clinton plan, and I suspect that a lot of the details haven't even been worked out yet, so don't take my comment to indicate anything specific about how the whole thing will work.

    I'm making a more general point about how when you mix finance and carbon, you will inevitably end up using a lot of offset-like mechanisms. On the one hand, you have the loans (a financial instrument). On the other hand, you have a goal of reducing carbon emissions through energy efficiency measures.

    To bring these two things together, you need lots of very familiar tools such as baseline measurement, protocols, etc. And once these things are in place, it ought to be possible to link the Clinton program into the larger global market for carbon.

    But just because such linkages may be possible, that doesn't mean they necessarily will ever take place. Take my post as food for thought, rather than a description of the actual program.

    - Adam


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  • 12.

    Oh, and thanks for people who answered my poll question! The results are totally unscientific, but I'll take them as an indication that the two audiences are distinct enough that the reprints are worthwhile.


    Reply
  • 13.

    No idea what Grist is? Love TerraPass's blog and love their products!


    Reply
  • 14.

    I read Terrapass regularly; I have never read Grist. So keep their relevant comments flowing.


    Reply
  • 15.

    I am a "religious" Grist reader. But I don't think it is too redundant - both pubs have their own spin and flavor. Thanks!


    Reply

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