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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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