Clean Development Mechanism

One of three mechanisms under the Kyoto Protocol, the Clean Development Mechanism (CDM) allows developing countries who have signed onto the UNFCCC Kyoto Protocol to pursue projects to reduce GHG emissions and earn certified emission reduction credits, which can then be sold to developed countries with obligations under the Kyoto Protocol.1 The other two mechanisms are Joint Implementation, which allows developed countries to carry out greenhouse gas reducing projects in developing countries, and Emissions Trading, which allows countries with carbon credits to spare to sell them to countries needing to meet a target.2

Vietnam leads the pack in the LMC with 301 CDM projects – OR As of February 2017, the Institute for Global Environmental Strategies (IGES) indicates that there are 618 CDM projects in various states of completion in the LMC countries. Cambodia hosted 11; Laos hosted 29, co-hosted 5 with Thailand, and co-hosted 1 with Vietnam; Myanmar hosted 1, Thailand hosted 270; and Vietnam 301.)

The CDM is meant to help developing countries to meet their targets under the Kyoto Protocol, but not all observers agree that the projects are in fact sustainable or environmentally friendly. One strong critique is that large hydropower projects can qualify for credits, which are projects that typically emit a significant amount of GHGs, cause irreversible damage, and displace many communities3 Hydropower projects now count for over a quarter of all applied-for projects, making them the second most common project (wind being first).4 All LMC have hydropower projects in the CDM pipelines, with major projects planned or operational on the mainstream of the Mekong River in Lao, Thailand, Vietnam and Cambodia. Other potential projects include low-carbon transport with a policy study underway in Thailand5; urban, such as methane recovery in Vietnam; 6 and agriculture and natural resources such as biogas projects in Thailand.7

References

Contact us

Contact us

Do you have questions on the content published by Open Development Mekong? We will gladly help you.

Have you found a technical problem or issue on the Open Development Mekong website?

Tell us how we're doing.

Do you have resources that could help expand the Open Development Mekong website? We will review any map data, laws, articles, and documents that we do not yet have and see if we can implement them into our site. Please make sure the resources are in the public domain or fall under a Creative Commons license.

File was deleted
ERROR!

Disclaimer: Open Development Mekong will thoroughly review all submitted resources for integrity and relevancy before the resources are hosted. All hosted resources will be in the public domain, or licensed under Creative Commons. We thank you for your support.

jFRYZ
* The idea box couldn't be blank! Something's gone wrong, Please Resubmit the form! Please add the code correctly​ first.

Thank you for taking the time to get in contact!