emission reduction value in financing clean energy projects by jan-willem martens ecosecurities

23
Emission reduction value in financing clean energy projects By Jan-Willem Martens EcoSecurities

Upload: grant-roberts

Post on 29-Dec-2015

215 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Emission reduction value in financing clean energy projects By Jan-Willem Martens EcoSecurities

Emission reduction value in

financing clean energy projects

By Jan-Willem Martens EcoSecurities

Page 2: Emission reduction value in financing clean energy projects By Jan-Willem Martens EcoSecurities

2 EcoSecurities

• EcoSecurities leading greenhouse gas advisor (Environmental Finance survey, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004)

• Five offices around the world, 27 people

• Currently working on over 70 CDM projects in more than 50 countries

• Active in sale of CERs

Page 3: Emission reduction value in financing clean energy projects By Jan-Willem Martens EcoSecurities

3

EcoSecurities Group

Oxford

Rio de Janeiro

Den Haag

Los Angeles

New York

Page 4: Emission reduction value in financing clean energy projects By Jan-Willem Martens EcoSecurities

4Overview

1. Introduction

2. Market Developments – Who is selling, who is buying ?

3. Project Transaction Issues

4. How can CDM help project finance?

5. How can CDM and ODA go together

6. Country competitiveness

7. Conclusions

Page 5: Emission reduction value in financing clean energy projects By Jan-Willem Martens EcoSecurities

5

Who are the players in the CDM market?

Page 6: Emission reduction value in financing clean energy projects By Jan-Willem Martens EcoSecurities

6What determines the CDM cash flow?

• CDM project revenues

• Price of the Certified Emission Reduction (CER)

• CER market price

• Availability of buyers

• Perceived contribution to sustainable development

• Credit sharing and taxing CERs in the host country

• Number of CERs

• Actual production the installations (MWh delivered)

• Carbon Emission Factor (CEF)

• CDM project cost

• PDD development

• New or existing methodology

• Host country approval

• Validation/verification

• Registration

Page 7: Emission reduction value in financing clean energy projects By Jan-Willem Martens EcoSecurities

7

How does the CEF influence the

number of CERs generated?

• As the CEF is the carbon emissions per actual production quantity (tCO2/MWh)

of a grid and renewable energy has an emission factor 0 so the quantity of CERs is determined by:

Production (MWh) * CEF (tCO2/MWh) = CERs (tCO2)

• CDM cash flows can provide a substantial contribution to the overall project in counties with a ‘high’ CEF.

Lower CEF Attractive CEFCountry CEF Country CEFMalaysia

Thailand

Philippines

Indonesia

0.610

0.611

0.623

0.710

Vietnam

Singapore

China

India

0.835

0.922

1.027

1.055

Page 8: Emission reduction value in financing clean energy projects By Jan-Willem Martens EcoSecurities

8

Division of CDM project types

Division is based on an analysis of 130 PDDs for CDM projects

22%

17%

17%11%

8%

6%

5%4%

2%

2%

2%

4%

Hydropower

Landfill gas

Biomass

Efficiency

wind

Fuel switch

Geothermal

Anaerobic digestion

biofuel

cement

HFC-23 destruction

other

Source: EcoSecurities December 2004

Page 9: Emission reduction value in financing clean energy projects By Jan-Willem Martens EcoSecurities

9

Division of CO2 emission reductions from CDM

projects

Total amount of Results based on a selection of 130 CDM project proposals

29%

16%15%

10%

6%

6%5%

4%

3%

2%

1%

3%

N2O reduction

HFC-23 destruction

Landfill gas

Hydropow er

Geothermal

Eff iciency

Biomass

Fuel sw itch

flare gas recovery

w ind

Anaerobic digestion

Other (< 3Mt)

Source: EcoSecurities December 2004

Page 10: Emission reduction value in financing clean energy projects By Jan-Willem Martens EcoSecurities

10Funnel Effect for CDM projects

100 JI/CDM project ideas

20 JI/CDM PDDs

10 validation

5 JI/CDM

Page 11: Emission reduction value in financing clean energy projects By Jan-Willem Martens EcoSecurities

11Carbon Market Volumes 2004

Page 12: Emission reduction value in financing clean energy projects By Jan-Willem Martens EcoSecurities

12CER prices 2004

Page 13: Emission reduction value in financing clean energy projects By Jan-Willem Martens EcoSecurities

13Types of Buyers

Equity Investment

Purchase of emission reductions

Individual buyers

1.

Buyer invests in individual CDM/JI projects

2. Buyer purchases

emission reductions from individual CDM/JI

projects Intermediaries

3. Buyer invests in an

external CDM/JI Equity Investment Fund

4. Buyer participates in an external CDM/JI

Purchase Facility

Page 14: Emission reduction value in financing clean energy projects By Jan-Willem Martens EcoSecurities

14List of governments buying JI and CDM

tCO2e Governments

Austria 14 Mt Canada 20 Mt Belgium 24 Mt Denmark 20-25 Mt Finland 2.5 Mt Italy 11 Mt Spain 100 Mt The Netherlands 100 Mt Japan 95 Mt

Total ~ 490 Mt

Page 15: Emission reduction value in financing clean energy projects By Jan-Willem Martens EcoSecurities

Project Transaction Issues

Page 16: Emission reduction value in financing clean energy projects By Jan-Willem Martens EcoSecurities

16Who is carrying the risks?

• Registration risk – this is the risk related to getting the project registered under the CDM.

• Performance risk – Risk related to project performance (including political risk)

• International CER Transfer risk - When will the CDM registry be finalised? When will the ITL be finalised?

Page 17: Emission reduction value in financing clean energy projects By Jan-Willem Martens EcoSecurities

17Different ways to structure carbon finance

1. Contract form “guaranteed delivery”

2. Contract form “No guaranteed delivery”

3. Contract form with “floor price”

4. Contract form X% of the EUA market price

5. Sales of CERs on the EU Spot market (is it possible: Yes, no unilateral CDM, but obligation to report Annex I counter-party to CDM EB?)

Page 18: Emission reduction value in financing clean energy projects By Jan-Willem Martens EcoSecurities

18

How does risk influence the price of a

CER?

Production price

Credit risk

Delivery risk

Political risk

Counterparty risk

Margin

EUA price

Liquidity risk

Page 19: Emission reduction value in financing clean energy projects By Jan-Willem Martens EcoSecurities

19

Country Competitiveness

Page 20: Emission reduction value in financing clean energy projects By Jan-Willem Martens EcoSecurities

20

Does Geography Matter in CDM transactions?

• For most commercial buyers, price and risk sensitivity outweighs geographic strategy

• For government buyers, there are geographic preferences

• Denmark is targeting Malaysia, Thailand, South Africa and Central America

• PCF funds looking for a global approach with sectoral distribution

• Forthcoming DBJ fund is expected to be “Asia weighted”

• Does this mean ASEAN or India/China

• For multinational “buyer/sellers” internal CDM opportunities are very attractive

• However, exposure to a country does not equate desire for exposure to 3 rd Party CDM CERs from that country

• Expectation should be for MNC’s presenting their own CDM projects to host nation DNAs – 3 rd party project finance will give way to balance sheet corporate finance as the dominant paradigm

Page 21: Emission reduction value in financing clean energy projects By Jan-Willem Martens EcoSecurities

21

How do buyers assess attractiveness of

projects?

• Likelihood of Project Approval at host country and EB level

• Credit sharing and taxing CERs in the host country

• Credibility of Counterparty

• Price, price, price and price

• Who covers upfront costs prior to ERPA?

• Divisions of risk between buyer and seller

• Underlying project risks (technology risk, political risk, market risk, etc)

• Will seller deliver even if it experiences underperformance?

• Willingness to give buyers options for residue at;

• Same price or discount to market price

Page 22: Emission reduction value in financing clean energy projects By Jan-Willem Martens EcoSecurities

22

What can countries do to improve their

position?

• Assuming the DNA office is competent and knowledgeable, keep individuals in position as long as possible

• Continuity is key

• Domestic capital for asset finance (either project or corporate) must understand that these cash flows are bankable

• CDM enhances project economics, still requires underlying capital and domestic is the most realistic source

• CDM alone cannot overcome other cross border investment biases but can create interest in new opportunities from unconventional sources

Page 23: Emission reduction value in financing clean energy projects By Jan-Willem Martens EcoSecurities

23

Thank you!