| FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE |
CONTACT: Media Contacts |
| Monday, October 29, 2007 |
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Nations, States, Provinces Announce Carbon Markets Partnership
to Reduce Global Warming
LISBON, PORTUGAL - A coalition of
European countries, U.S. states, Canadian provinces, New Zealand
and Norway today announced the formation of the International
Carbon Action Partnership (www.ICAPCarbonAction.com) to fight
global warming.
ICAP will provide an international forum in
which governments and public authorities adopting mandatory
greenhouse gas emissions cap and trade systems will share experiences
and best practices on the design of emissions trading schemes.
This cooperation will ensure that the programs are more compatible
and are able to work together as the foundation of a global
carbon market. Such a market will boost demand for low-carbon
products and services, promote innovation, and allow cost effective
reductions so as to allow swift and ambitious global reductions
in global warming emissions.
The ground-breaking international
and interregional agreement was signed today by U.S. and Canadian
members of the Western Climate Initiative, northeastern U.S.
members of the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative, as well
as European Union member states, and the European Commission.
New Zealand and Norway joined on behalf of their emissions
trading programs.
Leaders attending the summit included: President
José Sócrates, Council of the European Union
and Prime Minister of Portugal; European Commission President
José Manuel Barroso; Governor Jon Corzine, New Jersey;
Governor Eliot Spitzer, New York and Premier Gordon Campbell,
British Columbia. Gordon Brown, Prime Minister of the United
Kingdom, and Arnold Schwarzenegger, Governor of California,
participated with video messages.
ICAP will open lines of communication
for sharing valuable information, such as research, effective
policy initiatives, lessons learned and new developments. By
working together to establish similar design principles, ICAP
partners are ensuring that future market systems, in conjunction
with regulation in the form of enforceable caps, will boost
worldwide demand for low-carbon products and services, provide
a larger market for innovators, and achieve global emissions
reductions at the swiftest pace and lowest cost possible. The
new partnership supports the current ongoing efforts undertaken
under the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change,
which all ICAP members agree has a central role in fighting
global warming.
Global warming is a problem that requires a
global solution. ICAP will facilitate such a global solution
by:
- Rigorously and accurately monitoring, reporting
and verifying emissions and working to determine reliable sources
appropriate for inclusion in a globally linked program.
- Encouraging
common approaches and furthering partners' together to
expand the global carbon market, helping to prevent leakage.
- Creating
a clear price incentive to innovate, develop and use clean
technologies.
- Encouraging private investors to chose
low-carbon projects and technologies, generating the flow of
money needed to support a shift to a low-carbon future.
- Providing
flexible compliance mechanisms that ensure reliable reductions
at the fastest pace and lowest cost.
The following signatories
and/or participants of the event said:
Prime Minister Gordon
Brown, United Kingdom: “The launch of the International
Carbon Market Partnership is a truly significant step forward
in the global effort to combat climate change. Building a global
carbon market is fundamental to reducing greenhouse gas emissions
while allowing economies to grow and prosper. Trading emissions
between between nations allows us all to reach our greenhouse
gas targets more cost-effectively. And it therefore allows
us to reduce emissions more than we could by acting alone.”
Governor
Jon Corzine, New Jersey: “My background as the
former head of Goldman Sachs has given me a unique perspective
on many market-based solutions to important public problems,
such as environmental degradation. But it is my life in public
service that has helped me understand that it will take the
courage and commitment of a core set of leaders, like those
of us gathered today, to drive implementation of smart, feasible,
and measurable policies needed to address an issue as urgent
as global warming.”
Governor
Eliot Spitzer, New York: “Global warming is the
most significant environmental problem of our generation, and
by establishing an international partnership, we are taking
the vital steps to address this growing concern. In the absence
of federal leadership, New York is implementing a greenhouse
gas emissions trading program that will achieve a 16 percent
reduction in power plant emissions by 2019. Today, we continue
that work by joining the International Carbon Action Partnership,
or ICAP, where we can begin working with our global partners,
share experiences and address issues of program design and
compatibility, thereby strengthening our markets.”
Premier
Gordon Campbell, British Columbia: “Tackling
global warming requires international cooperation and collaboration
unlike anything we have seen before. It is vitally important
that as we design our own market systems we coordinate with
other provinces, states, nations and continents. The partnership
we have signed today opens the door, for the first time ever,
to jurisdictions around the globe to share ideas and new technologies,
and ultimately will lay the foundation for a compatible market-based
system to trade carbon offsets and credits worldwide.”
John
Hutton, secretary of state for Business, Enterprise, and Regulatory
Reform, United Kingdom: “This initiative is an extremely
important contribution to the global effort to solve the urgent
problem of climate change. Business tells us they want clarity
on what they will be asked to do, and that they prefer a market-based
approach. That is why the global carbon market will be fundamental
in the move to a low carbon economy, and why ICAP is such a
valuable forum, with its practical emphasis on collaborating
and sharing experience and expertise.”
For more information,
please visit www.ICAPCarbonAction.com.
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