Failed Mechanism: How the CDM is subsidizing hydro developers and harming the Kyoto Protocol

Abstract The Kyoto Protocol’s Clean Development Mechanism (CDM) is set to provide massive subsidies to hydropower developers while increasing greenhouse gas emissions, according to an investigation by International Rivers. As of November 1, 2007, 654 hydro projects had received or applied to receive carbon credits from the CDM. If approved, these credits would provide hydro developers with a windfall of around a billion dollars each year. Hydro is now the most common technology in the CDM, representing a quarter of all projects in the project pipeline. International Rivers’ report, “Failed Mechanism: How the CDM is subsidizing hydro developers and harming the Kyoto Protocol,” was released on December 2, 2007, at the UN climate negotiations in Bali. “The CDM is blindly subsidizing the destruction of rivers, while the dams it supports are helping destroy the environmental integrity of the CDM,” says report author Barbara Haya, a consultant for International Rivers.
Author Barbara Haya, International Rivers Network, November 2007,
Publisher
Link http://www.internationalrivers.org/files/attached-files/failed_mechanism_3.pdf
Attachment
4 Hydropower, 4.2 International Rivers Reports, 4.2.2 China’s Role in Building Dams Globally