Wind Farm in India is 500th Kyoto
Project in a Developing Country
Feb 14, 2007 EERE Network News
The Secretariat of the United Nations Framework
Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) announced
Monday that an 8.75-megawatt wind facility in Gujurat,
India, is the 500th project to be registered under
the Kyoto Protocol's Clean Development Mechanism
(CDM). The Kyoto Protocol specifies greenhouse gas
reduction requirements for its participating countries,
but allows countries to earn credits toward those
requirements through emissions-reducing investments
in developing countries. Even though developing
countries don't have specific reduction goals, the
CDM helps reduce the growth of greenhouse gas emissions
in those countries. The United States is not participating
in the Kyoto Protocol.
According to the UNFCCC, CDM projects are being
conducted in more than 40 countries and have so
far generated more than 31 million certified emission
reduction units, each of which is equivalent to
one ton of carbon dioxide. The leading countries
for CDM projects are, in order, India, Brazil, Mexico,
and China. The UNFCCC expects the CDM to help avoid
more than 1.8 billion tons of carbon dioxide emissions
by 2012, which marks the end of the first commitment
period of the Kyoto Protocol. That amount of carbon
dioxide is equivalent to the combined annual emissions
of Canada, France, Spain, and Switzerland.