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Registry systems under the Kyoto Protocol
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Emission targets for industrialized country Parties to the Kyoto Protocol are expressed as levels of
allowed emissions, or “assigned amounts”, over the 2008-2012 commitment period. Such
assigned amounts are denominated in tonnes (of CO2 equivalent emissions) known informally as
“Kyoto units”.
The ability of Parties to add to their holdings of Kyoto units (e.g. through credits for CDM or
LULUCF activities) or move units from one country to another (e.g. through emissions trading or JI
projects) requires registry systems that can track the location of Kyoto units at all times.
Two types of registry have been implemented:
- Governments of the 38 Annex B Parties have implemented national registries,
containing accounts within which units are held in the name of the government or in the name of legal
entities authorized by the government to hold and trade units.
- The UNFCCC secretariat, under the authority of the CDM Executive Board, has implemented the
CDM registry for issuing CDM credits
and distributing them to national registries. Accounts in the CDM registry are held only by CDM
project participants, as the registry does not accept emissions trading between accounts.
In addition to recording the holdings of Kyoto units, these registries “settle” emissions
trades by delivering units from the accounts of sellers to those of buyers, thus forming the backbone
infrastructure for the carbon market.
Each registry operates through a link established with the International Transaction Log
(ITL) put in place and administered by the UNFCCC secretariat. The ITL verifies registry
transactions, in real time, to ensure they are consistent with rules agreed under the Kyoto Protocol.
The ITL requires registries to terminate transactions they propose that are found to infringe upon
the Kyoto rules.
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In verifying registry transactions, the ITL performs an independent check that unit holdings are
being recorded accurately in registries. After the Kyoto commitment period is finished, the end
status of the unit holdings for each Annex B Party will be compared with the Party’s emissions
over the commitment period in order to assess whether it has complied with its emission target under
the Kyoto Protocol.
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EU emissions trading
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Domestic or regional emissions trading schemes that use Kyoto units also undertake their settlement
through these registry systems. For example, under the second phase of the EU. The EU Emissions Trading System (EU ETS) allowances are
specific Kyoto units which have been designated as being valid for trading under the scheme.
Transactions in EU allowances are therefore recorded automatically as transactions under the Kyoto
Protocol.
As EU trading legislation sets in place rules over and above those agreed for the Kyoto Protocol, a
supplemental transaction log has been implemented by the European Commission. The European Union Transaction Log (EUTL), previously
Community Independent Transaction Log, has been in place since the start of the scheme in 2005 and EU
registries are now operating with it.
For the start of the Kyoto commitment period in 2008, EU registries are to switch their connections
from the EUTL to the ITL. The ITL will conduct “Kyoto checks” on transactions proposed by
both EU and non-EU registries. In the case of transactions involving EU registries, the ITL will
forward information to the EUTL so that it can conduct “supplementary checks” defined
under the EU scheme.
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