Abstract

Carbon credit trading regimes put a cost-efficient price on carbon emissions and foster investments in clean and low carbon technologies. As there are new carbon credit mechanisms evolving and old ones struggling we concentrate on the question what determinants make a carbon credit project successful. We focus on the Clean Development Mechanism (CDM) and the Verified Carbon Standard (VCS) as the leading carbon markets. We define success as the fulfilling of the ex-ante emission abatement estimation and apply regression analyses to explain its variation on project level by technology, location, scale, duration and participation. The results are discussed in detail on technology-level for wind power, energy efficiency, hydro power and biomass projects and are compared with regard to CDM and VCS. Our main results indicate that large scale projects often compensate their under-performance due to economies of time. Further, the duration of projects, the projects' location and structure of participants have significant influence on the projects' success.

Highlights

  • Carbon credit trading regimes put a cost-efficient price on carbon emissions and foster investments in clean and low carbon technologies

  • We investigate 200 Clean Development Mechanism (CDM) projects with German participation and 303 Verified Carbon Standard (VCS) projects hosted in India, which have been issuing Certified Emission Reduction (CER) and Verified Carbon Units (VCU), respectively, up to the end of 2014

  • Location-wise, the host region Africa is disadvantageous compared to Asia in the case of CDM energy efficiency projects, whereas, it is beneficial for CDM hydro power projects, there are off-setting effects

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Summary

Introduction

Carbon credit trading regimes put a cost-efficient price on carbon emissions and foster investments in clean and low carbon technologies. Carbon credit projects generate carbon credits by abating greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions. Carbon credits can be traded on the carbon market or be immobilized in order to compensate for caused emissions. This can take place in a mandatory or voluntary framework. There are diverse regimes of mandatory emission trading schemes, such as the Oregon Carbon Dioxide Standard and Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative in the USA or the European Union Emission Trading Scheme (EU ETS), which is accountable for “over three quarters of international carbon trading” According to ([4], p. 23), this would “become the largest carbon pricing initiative in the world, passing the EU

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