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Mongolia,Bangladesh,Ethiopia,Kenya,Maldives,Vietnam,LaoPDR, Indonesia,
Costa Rica, Palau, Cambodia, Mexico, Chile, Saudi Arabia, Myanmar, and
Thailand.TheJCMpromotestheuseofadvancedtechnologiesandmeasure, report,
andverify emissions reducedby the technologies.
7.2 TheJCMOverview
The JCM was initially designed to complement the CDM. Some of its main
differenceswith theKyoto Protocolmechanism are its decentralized governance,
simple and practicalMRV system, and the credits its projects generate, up to the
timeofwriting, are internationally non-tradable.
The JCM is ‘decentralized’ as it is implemented under bilateral cooperation
between Japanese andpartner countries government.Themeasurement, reporting,
and verification (MRV) of the JCM are based on projects using the JCMMRV
methodologies as the tool, which is developed under ‘simplified’ and ‘practical’
principles using clear technology-based eligibility criteria, list of default values,
and ready-to-usemonitoring templates.Asdepicted inFig. 7.1, the JointCommit-
teebetweeneachpartnercountryandJapandevelopsandapproves the technology-
basedMRVmethodologies to be used by projects to procure the greenhouse gas
emission reductions/removals.Verified reductions/removalswill be issuedbyeach
government asJCMcredits. These credits arenotfinanciallyvaluedandcannot be
traded internationally.However, theJCMagreementsdonot ruleout thepossibility
of domestic trade in linewithpartner country policy.
Insteadofbuyingcredits frompartnercountries, theJapanesegovernmentoffers
project developers upfrontfinancial incentives for installing the advanced technol-
ogies. These incentives are expected to contribute to resolving the burden of high
capital investments that have been hindering the development and utilization of
advanced technologies in developing countries.1 Currently, incentives to support
projects implementation throughout their cycle are available from theMinistry of
theEnvironment Japan (MOEJ),Ministry ofEconomy,Trade, and Industry Japan
(METIJ), Asian Development Bank (ADB, through Japan Fund for JCM with
contributions fromMOEJ), and Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA,
in cooperationwithMOEJ).
Technology installation is supported by either full grant (under long-term
entrustment), partial subsidy (direct subsidy up to 50% of project investment
cost), loan, or loan interest subsidy.Development ofmethodology, project design
document (PDD), monitoring, reporting, and verification (only the first time) are
1Mitchell, C., et al., in IPCC, 2011. Special Report on Renewable Energy Sources andClimate
ChangeMitigation (SRREN). Cambridge: University Press, Cambridge, UnitedKingdom;Metz
et al., in IPCC, 2000.Methodological and Technological Issues in Technology Transfer. Cam-
bridge:CambridgeUniversityPress,UK.
112 A.Amellina
Evaluating Climate Change Action for Sustainable Development
- Titel
- Evaluating Climate Change Action for Sustainable Development
- Autoren
- Juha I. Uitto
- Jyotsna Puri
- Rob D. van den Berg
- Verlag
- Springer Open
- Datum
- 2017
- Sprache
- deutsch
- Lizenz
- CC BY-NC 3.0
- ISBN
- 978-3-319-43702-6
- Abmessungen
- 15.5 x 24.1 cm
- Seiten
- 365
- Schlagwörter
- Climate Change, Sustainable Development, Climate Change/ Climate Change Impacts, Environmental Management
- Kategorien
- Naturwissenschaften Umwelt und Klima