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Activities Implemented Jointly (AIJ)
AIJ amounts to a learning-by-doing
pilot program of Joint Implementation (JI).
AIJ and JI share at least three similarities:
- Purpose. Both AIJ and JI intend to mobilize pools of largely
private capital that invest in international projects where it is most
cost-effective to do so.
- Structure. Like JI, AIJ is a project-based mechanism.
- Components. AIJ and JI have the following common elements:
- Additionality refers to whether the GHG emission reduction
achieved by a JI/AIJ project (or sequestrations) constitute new
or additional reductions, which would not have otherwise occurred
without the investment.
- A baseline refers to an estimation of what a facility's
GHG emissions would have been without the AIJ or JI project.
AIJ and JI have at least three major differences:
- Starting dates. AIJ started in 1995 and continues to operate.
Unless the Parties agree to push the date forward, JI will start in
2007.
- Eligibility requirements. AIJ can occur between firms of any
two countries that are Parties to the 1992 UN Framework Convention on
Climate Change (UNFCCC). JI is more restrictive, because it will involve
entities located only in industrialized countries -- namely, those the
UNFCCC grouped under Annex I.
- Crediting policies. AIJ does not allow countries to use project
credits of emission reductions to offset their legal obligations undertaken
at Kyoto. In contrast, the JI projects will generate "emission reduction
units" (ERUs) that investors can use to satisfy their emissions limits.
It is conceivable that upcoming negotiations might allow countries to
submit AIJ projects through formal JI procedures and thereby generate
ERUs.
The
Regional Environmental Center for Central and Eastern Europe (REC)
Ady Endre út 9-11, 2000 Szentendre, Hungary
Tel: +36 26 504-000; Fax: +36 26 311-294; E-mail: climate@rec.org
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