Our Government Sponsors:
TRADE FAIR &CONFERENCE GUIDE
26-28 May 2015Barcelona, Spain
MINISTERIODE ECONOMÍAY COMPETITIVIDAD
Our Platinum Sponsors:
Jointly oraginzed by:
2 CARBON EXPO • Trade Fair and Congress Guide
Welcome to the 12th edition of the Carbon Expo.
The Carbon Expo has grown to become an annual event of great importance for carbon market participants. It was once a place to meet buyers, sellers and market practitioners. Today, it plays a key role in building capacity and sharing knowledge to find workable solutions to shift the trajectory of global greenhouse gas emis-sions while enabling countries to meet their economic ambitions.
This year, the Carbon Expo is focusing on carbon markets, climate finance and clean technology – three elements necessary to achieve zero net emissions before 2100 and stabilize warming at less than 2 degrees Celsius.
While the first generation of markets face structural issues, it is remarkable that new regional, national, and sub-national carbon initiatives are gaining momentum, in both developed and developing economies. Countries are also developing their national commitments to lower emissions and build resilience to climate change ahead of the Paris climate agreement in December. We look forward to discussing these initiatives in great detail during the Expo, because these are key drivers of low-carbon development today and can potentially put a robust price on carbon.
Shifting the world to a cleaner trajectory will require nothing short of econom-ic transformation. Importantly, there needs to be an orderly transition to low carbon growth. This transition cannot happen overnight but it needs both public and private efforts. A price on carbon (through carbon markets, carbon taxes, or performance measures) can drive investment toward a cleaner economy and help investors identify both the risks to their supply chains and assets, as well as opportunities for investment.
We look forward to frank and engaging discussions on challenges and opportuni-ties with you in plenaries, side events, and in informal conversations in the days here in Barcelona. We hope you will also take advantage of the workshops offered on specific topics. We know your actions have a big impact on shaping and making the climate finance space, and we welcome you to share your thoughts on a road to Paris and beyond.
Neeraj PrasadManager, Knowledge and PartnershipsWorld Bank Group Climate Change
Neeraj PrasadManager, Knowledge and Partnerships
World Bank Group Climate Change
WelcomeNotes
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IETA is proud to welcome you to Carbon Expo 2015 – the 12th year of this flagship event.
This year’s Carbon Expo comes at a crucial time for the international negotiations for a new global climate agreement. At the end of this year, the world’s leaders will gather in Paris to agree a climate change framework that will set the course for action for years, if not decades, to come. The stakes are high – and we cannot afford to get it wrong, both financially and environmentally.
Carbon markets can help greatly in the fight to turn the tide of rising emissions. Over the past year, more countries and sub-national regions have turned to market solutions, recognizing the benefits of emissions trading. South Korea’s long-await-ed emissions trading system began in January. April saw Ontario’s government announce its intention to create a cap-and-trade system to link to California and Québec. Plans for China’s national carbon market continue to evolve. Whatever form the deal in Paris takes, it needs to ensure that these efforts are recognized, counted and encouraged.
A strong carbon market will drive the innovations and technological breakthroughs for the radical transformation of our energy systems that a 2°C world demands. . Smart use of climate finance instruments – and, crucially, engagement with the private sector and the collective capital might it brings – can help bring these innovations to market in the places that need them the most.
Carbon markets, climate finance and technology: these three issues are essential for the transformation we need– which is why they are at the heart of Carbon Expo 2015. The next three days will see some of the world’s leading policymakers, business representatives, NGOs, think-tanks and many others come together to discuss why markets matter for Paris, how to access and deliver climate finance, and how we can drive the energy revolution of the future.
We at IETA, the World Bank and Fira de Barcelona are honoured to welcome you to Carbon Expo 2015 – it is your attendance, and our sponsors, that makes this an unmissable event year after year. We hope the next three days provide plenty of food for thought – and reinvigorate us all for the final months of a lengthy inter-national process. We look forward to meeting with you and hearing your thoughts about how to achieve the world we want.
Dirk ForristerPresident & CEOIETA
As president of Fira de Barcelona, I am pleased to warmly welcome you to Carbon Expo 2015, an event jointly organised with the International Emissions Trading Association (IETA) and the World Bank Group.
As you know, Carbon Expo is the leading conference and annual meeting point for all players in the low carbon economy. But the fact that it is being held just six months before the Paris Climate Summit gives this year’s event an added signif-icance. For three days, Carbon Expo will bring together political leaders, regulators, companies and scientific organisations, among others, who will have a unique opportunity to contribute to a new global agreement in the fight against climate change.
Carbon Expo offers a comprehensive congress programme and an exhibition area where companies, agencies and organisations from Spain and abroad will be dis-playing innovative solutions, experiences and initiatives with the goal of profitably mitigating greenhouse gas emissions. We have worked hard to make this edition a success. It is also tangible proof of the commitment of Fira de Barcelona, the city of Barcelona, Catalonia and Spain to one of the greatest challenges currently facing our planet: the transition to a low carbon emission economy.
As in previous years, Spain has a Pavilion – organised by the ICEX and the Spanish Climate Change Office, attached to the Ministry of Agriculture, Food and Environ-ment – at which a large number of companies will show the work they have done to fight against climate change, the new opportunities in low carbon industries, technologies and strategies, and the expertise offered by Spanish companies in this field. Also noteworthy is the participation of the Government of Catalonia and a number of firms, which will have their own stands, confirming once again the interest of our business fabric in this field and the importance of this year’s event.It only remains to me to wish you success in your work and encourage you to enjoy your free time discovering all that the city of Barcelona can offer you.
Josep Lluis BonetPresidentFira de Barcelona
Dirk ForristerPresident & CEO
IETA
Josep Lluis BonetPresident
Fira de Barcelona
4 CARBON EXPO • Trade Fair and Congress Guide
Services& information
TABLE OF CONTENTS DAILY OVERVIEW CARBON OFFSET PARTNER SPONSOR
Welcome Notes
Services
Plan of the Fair Ground
Floor Plan Congress Center
CARBON EXPO Conference Program Overview
DAY 1 – Tuesday, 26 May, 2015
DAY 2 – Wednesday 27 May, 2015
DAY 3 – Thursday 28 May, 2015
Business Lounge
CARBON EXPO Side Events Overview
DAY 1 – Tuesday, 26 May, 2015
DAY 2 – Wednesday 27 May, 2015
DAY 3 – Thursday 28 May, 2015
Our Government Partners
We would like to thank Our Sponsors:
CARBON EXPO Orientations Trade Fair
CARBON EXPO Exhibitors List
Government Partners
Platinum Exhibitors
Gold Exhibitors
Silver Extra Visibility Exhibitors
Exhibitors
Media Partners
Supporting Organization
“Meet the CARBON & Energy Market” Evening Reception
Your Notes
Registration
Coffee Break & Visit the Trade Fair
CARBON EXPO 2015 Opening Ceremony
Short Break
Buffet Lunch & Visit the Trade Fair
SD1 - Special Dialogue: CDM beyond Paris, by the UNFCCC
Coffee Break & Visit the Trade Fair
Short Break
Meet the Carbon & Energy Market Evening Reception
Registration & Visit the Trade Fair
Coffee Break & Visit the Trade Fair
Short Break
Buffet Lunch & Visit the Trade Fair
SD2 - Special Ministerial Dialogue
Coffee Break & Visit the Trade Fair
Short Break
Registration & Visit the Trade Fair
Coffee Break & Visit the Trade Fair
Short Break
Buffet Lunch & Visit the Trade Fair
SD3 - Special PMR/BPMR Dialogue
Coffee Break & Visit the Trade Fair
Short Break
Closing Addresses
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4
6
7
10
12
15
19
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26
27
28
32
34
35
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46
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65
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73
08:00
10:00
10:45
12:00
13:45 -14:30
13:45
15:45
17:30
20:00
08:00
10:15
11:45
13:00 -14:00
13:15
15:15
16:45
08:00
10:00
11:45
13:00 -14:00
13:15
15:15
15:00
16:30
We would like to thank ourCARBON EXPO 2015 Carbon Offset Partner Sponsors – UPM Umwelt-Projekt- Management GmbH and sustainable AG
This 12th edition of CARBON EXPO has offset the greenhouse gas emissions associated with this year’s Conference & Trade Fair in Barcelona, Spain, arising from the organization and holding of the event on site within the Fira Barcelona Montjuic grounds.
UPM Umwelt-Projekt-Management GmbH
Lamontstrasse 1181679 MünchenGermany
Martin Dilger, Managing Director
Phone: +49 89 41419691Email: [email protected]
sustainable AG
Corneliusstr. 1080469 MünchenGermany
Markus Götz, Senior Consultant
Phone: +49 89 2020 5640Email: [email protected]
DAY 3 - THURSDAY - 28 MAY
DAY 2 - WEDNESDAY - 27 MAY
DAY 1 - TUESDAY - 26 MAY
5
INFORMATION YOUR CONTACTS SERVICES
DURATION AND LOCATIONCARBON EXPO 2015Global Carbon Market Fair & Conference26-28 May, 2015Fira BarcelonaHall 5 OPENING HOURS FOR VISITORS:Tuesday 26th: 08:30 - 18:00hWednesday 27th: 08:30 - 18:00hThursday 28th: 08:30 - 17:00h OPENING HOURS FOR DELEGATES:Tuesday 26th: 08:00 - 19:30hWednesday 27th: 08:30 - 18:00hThursday 28th: 08:30 - 17:00h OPENING HOURS FOR EXHIBITORS:Tuesday 26th: 07:30 - 18:30hWednesday 27th: 08:00 - 18:30hThursday 28th: 08:00 - 17:30h FULL ADMISSION TICKETS PROVIDE ACCESS TO: Plenary SessionsWorkshopsTraining Sessions,CARBON EXPO Side Events, and the Trade FairEntitles you to Business Lunch and Coffee Breaks TRADE FAIR TICKETSProvide access to the Trade Fair and CARBON EXPO Side Events. Business Lunch and Coffee Breaks are included. BUSINESS LUNCHLocated on Hall 5 – Level 1(Registration Level)1st Service: 12:00-12:45 (Visitors & Exhibitors)2nd Service: 12:45-13:45 (Delegates & Speakers)3rd Service: 13:45-14:30 “MEET THE CARBON & ENERGY MARKET”Evening EventTuesday 26th - 20:00hMNAC (Museu Nacional d’Art de Catalunya)Palau Nacional, Parc de Montjuïc, s/n, 08038Barcelona
LISA SPAFFORDConference DirectorIETAPhone +41 22 [email protected]
ALEXANDRA STEFANESCUConference ManagerWorld Bank GroupPhone +1 202 [email protected]
DELPHINE ROMEUProject ManagerFira BarcelonaPhone +34 93 233 27 [email protected]
MARTA JUVELLPress OfficerFira BarcelonaPhone +34 93 233 20 [email protected]
MAIN INFORMATION POINTHall 5 level 1 (next to registration area)
MEET THE CARBON & ENERGY MARKET TICKET SALES & BRACELETS PICK UPHall 5 level 1 – Information Point(next to registration area)
CUSTOMER SERVICE DESKLOST AND FOUNDHall 5 level 2Phone: + 34 932 332 000Fax: + 34 932 333 820
EMERGENCY SERVICES INSIDE THE VENUEPhone: + 34 932 333 100
MEDICAL STATION (FIRST AID)Hall 3 Plaça Univers (access through level 0 in Hall 5 (Exhibition Area)Phone: + 34 932 332 11
CASH DISPENSERBanco Popular, Avda Mª Cristina (Hall 8 main entrance)
CLOACK ROOMHall 5 Level 1(registration area)
COFFEE STATIONFree Coffee breaks and water stations in Hall 5 level 0 (Exhibitiona Area)
POLICE (MOSSOS D´ESQUADRA)Plaça d´Espanya Nº 1Emergency Phone: 088Phone: + 34 935 542 700Fax: + 34 935 542 701
AIRPORTPhone: + 34 902 404 704
CUSTOMERS CLEARANCE OFFICEResa Expo Logistic, Plaça UniversModulo 4, P.O : 08004 BarcelonaPhone: + 34 932 332 474Fax: + 34 932 332 [email protected]
COURIERSResa LogisticsPhone: + 34 932 334 047Fax:+ 34 932 631 [email protected]
6 CARBON EXPO • Trade Fair and Congress Guide
Floorplan& Maps
FLOOR PLAN OF THE CARBON EXPO GROUNDS
7
FLOOR PLAN OF THE CARBON EXPO GROUNDS
• Plenary Room 7• Workshop Rooms 5-6• WB / IETA Offices• Private Meeting Rooms 8-31-32
• Exhibitors Service Center• Workshop Room 3• Side Event Room 4• Private Meeting Room 1• VIP Lounge• Press Center
• Main entrance / Registration• Info Point – Meet the Carbon & Energy Market Evening Event Tickets Sales• Cloakroom• Lunch Area
• Exhibition Area• Side Event Rooms 11-12• Business Rooms A,B,C• Business Lounge• Coffee Breaks Stations
8 CARBON EXPO • Trade Fair and Congress Guide
9
ConferenceProgram
10 CARBON EXPO • Trade Fair and Congress Guide
DAY 1 - TUESDAY - 26 MAY
Plenary Session / Opening Ceremony
LEGEND
Workshop - Emissions Markets & Carbon Pricing Stream
Special Dialogue
Workshop - Climate Technologies & Energy Stream
Training Session
T1 - Blending Donor Funds for Impact
SD1 - Special Dialogue: CDM beyond Paris, by the UNFCCC
T2 - Carbon Prices and Projections Who Says What?
CARBON EXPO 2015 Press Conference
Buffet Lunch & Visit the Trade Fair
CARBON EXPO 2015 Opening Ceremony(OPEN TO ALL CATEGORIES OF DELEGATES/VISITORS)
P1 - Carbon Pricing Leadership: From Vision to Action
P2 - Climate Finance: Innovative Pathways for Closing the Gap
P3 - CEO Roundtable on the Road to Paris
P4 - The Entrepreneurs - The First Ascent: An Oral History of Business Leadership
Meet the Carbon & Energy Market Evening Reception
Registration & Visit the Trade Fair
Coffee Break & Visit the Trade Fair
Short Break
Coffee Break & Visit the Trade Fair
Short Break
Workshop - Climate Finance & Investment Stream
Training Session
08:00
10:00
12:00
15:45
17:30
09:00
13:45
10:45
12:30
14:30
16:15
17:45
20:00
Room 12, Level 0
Room 3, Level 2
Room 3, Level 2Room 4, Level 2
Auditorium, Level 3
Auditorium, Level 3
Auditorium, Level 3
Auditorium, Level 3
Auditorium, Level 3
ConferenceProgram Overview
11
DAY 2 - WEDNESDAY - 27 MAY DAY 3 - THURSDAY - 28 MAY
W2 - Climate Finance Readiness: Ground-breaking Approaches to Enhance National Capacities
W17 - Green Investing, Guaranteed: The Grow-ing Use of Guarantees in Green Market Segments
W14 - Financial Implications of US Regulations
W8 - Green Finance 2.0
W5 - CIFs Experience in Leveraging Private sector Finance for Renewable Energy Projects
W6 - Fueling Decar-bonization of the Oil & Gas Sector: The Technologies, Costs and Outlooks
W11 - The Green Climate Fund & Private Sector: Where Do They Meet?
W20 - Climate Markets for Sustain-able Supply Chain Management
SD2 - Special Ministerial Dialogue SD3 - Special PMR/BPMR Dialogue
W3 - Energy:Landscape for the Future
W18 - Promoting Technological Innova-tion Through the Use of Carbon Markets
W15 - Climate Technology Centre & Network
W9 - Pioneering Energy Technologies and Climate Policy: What About the SIDS and Small Economies?
W12 - The EU’s 2030 Climate and Energy Package - What Changes will Affect the EU ETS?
W21 - From the Crowd to the Base: Crowdfunding-enabled Climate Business for SMEs
W1 - Carbon Pricing, Markets and the 2015 Agreement
W16 - Aviation: What Progress Towards Establishing a Global Market-Based Measure (MBM) Scheme?
W13 - Carbon Pricing Readiness: Perspectives from Companies
W7 - Domestic Carbon Pricing Action: Progress and Challenges in Key Emerging Economies
W4 - Piloting Innovative Climate Finance Solutions
W10 - The Climate of Federalism in North America: Subnational Actions Impacts on National Policy
W19 - China’s Carbon Markets
P5 - Landscapes as a Green Growth Component to Bridge the Global Emissions Gap
P6 - Transforming the Energy Sector - The Next Generation of Climate Technologies
P8 - Climate Transparency: Comparing and Tracking Progress Toward and Beyond Paris 2015
P7 - EU ETS Turns 10: A New Beginning?
Registration & Visit the Trade Fair Registration & Visit the Trade Fair
Coffee Break & Visit the Trade Fair Coffee Break & Visit the Trade Fair
Short Break Short Break
Short Break
Coffee Break & Visit the Trade Fair Short Break
Closing Addresses
Buffet Lunch & Visit the Trade FairBuffet Lunch & Visit the Trade Fair
08:00 08:00
10:15 10:00
11:45 11:30
15:15 15:00
16:30
16:45
13:00 13:00
16:45
10:45 10:30
12:00 11:45
13:15 13:15
09:00 09:00
14:00 14:00
15:45 15:15
17:00
18:00
Room 3, Level 2 Room 3, Level 2
Auditorium, Level 3
Auditorium, Level 3
Auditorium, Level 3
Auditorium, Level 3
Auditorium, Level 3
Room 5, Level 3
Room 5, Level 3
Room 5, Level 3
Room 5, Level 3 Room 5, Level 3
Room 5, Level 3
Room 5, Level 3 Room 6, Level 3
Room 6, Level 3Room 6, Level 3 Room 3, Level 2
Room 3, Level 2
Room 3, Level 2
Room 3, Level 2
Room 3, Level 2
Room 3, Level 2
Room 3, Level 2
Room 6, Level 3
Room 6, Level 3
Room 6, Level 3
Room 6, Level 3
12 CARBON EXPO • Trade Fair and Congress Guide
Full Conference Program
DAY 1 - TUESDAY - 26 MAY
08:00
10:00
12:00
09:00
10:45
Facilitator:Isabel HagbrinkSenior Communications OfficerWorld Bank Group
Rachel KyteVice President, Climate ChangeThe World Bank
Dirk ForristerPresident & Chief Executive OfficerIETA
Jonathan GrantDirector, Sustainability & Climate Change Pricewaterhouse Coopers
The World Bank Group presents the Carbon Pricing Watch, an early peek at the first chapter of the full State and Trends of Carbon Pricing 2015 report, to be launched in October. An update on carbon pricing initiatives around the world.
Assesing private sector views of these global developments, IETA presents the 10th edition of its Market Sentiment Survey, with PwC. This edition looks at emerging issues in context of how the market has changed over the past 10 years.
Co-Organisers Welcome Address
Jose Luis BonetPresident Fira Barcelona
Dirk ForristerPresident & Chief Executive OfficerIETA
Rachel KyteVice President, Climate ChangeThe World Bank
Key Speaker Address
Christiana FigueresExecutive SecretaryUNFCCC
Host Generalitat Welcome Address
Hble. Sr. Santi Vila i VicenteConseller, Departament de Territori i SostenibilitatGeneralitat de Catalunya
Host City Welcome Address Excm. Sr. Xavier TriasMayorCity of Barcelona
Key Speaker Address
Laurence TubianaSpecial Representative for the 2015 Paris Climate Conference & French Ambassador for Climate Negotiations
Key Speaker Address
Miguel Arias CañeteCommissioner for Climate Action & EnergyEuropean Commission
Host Country Ministerial Welcome Address Isabel Garcia TejerinaMinister of Agriculture, Food and Environment Government of Spain
Declaracion Inaugural a cargo de SM el Rey
His Majesty King Felipe VI of Spain
Opening Ceremony(OPEN TO ALL CATEGORIES OF DELEGATES/VISITORS)
Training Session 2Training Session1CARBON EXPO 2015Press Conference
Blending Donor Funds for Impact
DIscussant: Kruskaia Sierra-EscalanteHead of Blended Finance International Finance Corporation
This interactive training session will aim to cover the definitional aspects of what is “blended climate finance”, get into a practical conversa-tion on how concessional donor funds can be used in different investment structures in order to rebalance the risk / reward of private sector projects, depending on the barriers that the donor funds “support” seek to address, and share lessons of experience where blended climate finance has improved the project/sector viability (perceived / real risk, or costs) to boost activities that help address climate change.
Carbon Prices and Projections: Who Says What?
Moderator: Tom YoungEmissions EditorArgus European Emissions Markets
Trevor SikorskiHead of Natural Gas, Coal and Carbon Energy Aspects
James CooperCarbon and PowerBloomberg New Energy Finance (BNEF)
Ash SharmaSpecial Adviser for Climate ChangeNordic Environment Finance Corporation (NEFCO)
Back by demand, EXPO’s opening training session will bring together some of the best regional and international carbon market analysts in the busi-ness. Experts will showcase highlights from recent market analyses, as well as share insights on where carbon volumes and prices have been, where they are today, and where they might be to 2020 and beyond. Moderated discussion will delve into key market drivers, trends, and how supplementary low-carbon measures have affected recent market growth and prices.
Registration & Visit the Trade Fair
Coffee Break & Visit the Trade Fair
Short Break
Auditorium, Level 3
Room 3, Level 2Room 4, Level 2Room 12, Level 0
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DAY 1 - TUESDAY - 26 MAY
15:45
13:45
12:30
14:30
Moderator: Dirk ForristerPresident & Chief Executive OfficerIETA
Rachel KyteVice President Climate ChangeThe World Bank Group
Jose Manuel EntrecanalesChairman & Chief Executive Officer Acciona
Moderator: Barbara BuchnerSenior DirectorClimate Policy Initiative
Federico RamosState Secretary for EnvironmentGovernment of Spain
James Close Director, Climate ChangeThe World Bank Group
Moderator: David AbbassPublic Information OfficerUNFCCC
Christiana FigueresExecutive SecretaryUNFCCC
Senior staff from the UNFCCC secretariat will make the case for CDM’s continuing role in the international response to climatechange, as a:• results-based financing tool, allowing donors to target investment and verify results• generator of trusted, comparable units – CERs – to link emerging emissions trading systems• climate finance tool, to deliver on nationally appropriate mitigation actions• tool in support of domestic climate policies• sustainable development and adaptation tool, and• scaled-up market mechanism under the 2015 agreement.
John KilaniDirector, Sustainable Development Mechanisms programmeUNFCCC
Niclas SvenningsenManager, Office of the Director, SDM ProgrammeUNFCCC
This plenary session will feature a high-level discussion on how to drive action on the design and implementation of carbon pricing policies. It will address opportunities to advance political support for carbon pricing through private/public engagement and build the business case for supporting a price on carbon.
Transition to a low-carbon economy requires trillions of dollars of investment. Quantifying the magnitude of the required resources is a challenge in itself. But, the practical question is how to mobilize and leverage capital against available public funds? This plenary discusses expectations of private and public sector leaders that bring together short and long term solutions for the climate finance challenge.
Philippe DesfossesChief Executive Officer Retraite Additionnelle de la fonction publique (ERAFP)
Jochen FlasbarthState SecretaryGerman Federal Ministry for the Environment, Nature Conservation, Building and Nuclear Safety (BMUB)
Samy Ben-JaafarPrivate Sector Facility DirectorGreen Climate Fund (GCF)
Lucille L. SeringSecretary of the Climate Change Commission Philippines
Enrique NietoSustainable Projects, DirectorNacional Financiera, SNC (Nafin) Mexico
B.M.S. BatagodaState SecretaryMinistry of Power, Energy, Sri Lanka
Teresa RiberaDirectorIDDRI
Abyd KarmaliManaging DirectorBank of America Merrill Lynch
Rene Jean-JumeauDirectorHaiti Energy Institute (IHE)
Plenary 1: Carbon Pricing Leadership: From Vision to Action
Plenary 2: Climate Finance: Innovative Pathways for Closing the Gap
Coffee Break & Visit the Trade Fair
Buffet Lunch&Visit the Trade Fair
Special Dialogue1: CDM beyond Paris, by the UNFCCC
Auditorium, Level 3
Auditorium, Level 3
Room 3, Level 2
Full Conference Program
14 CARBON EXPO • Trade Fair and Congress Guide
DAY 1 - TUESDAY - 26 MAY
20:00
19:15
17:30
16:15
17:45
Moderator: Philippe JoubertSenior Advisor & Special Envoy for Energy and Climate for the WBCSDChair of the Prince of Wales’s EU Corporate Leaders Group on Climate Change
Laurence TubianaSpecial Representative for the 2015 Paris Climate Conference & French Ambassador for Climate Negotiations
Co-moderators: Dirk ForristerPresident & Chief Executive Officer IETA&Teresa RiberaDirectorIDDRI
Christine FediganDirector of Corporate Climate PolicyGDF SUEZ
Ken NewcombeChief Executive OfficerC-Quest Compay
Andy ErtelPresident & Chief Executive Officer Evolution Markets
A new climate change regime will bring new opportunities and challenges to the private sector. Climate finance, carbon pricing, incentives and regulations will scale up investment and innovation in areas not seen before. On the other hand, some assets may become unusable when laws to curb emissions of car-bon dioxide become really tight. Institutional investors are balancing both risks and opportunities when managing their portfolios. This plenary brings together business leaders in an interactive debate on these topics from distinct angles.
Kyoto sparked a wave of entrepreneurial action around the world – and Paris is poised to prompt an even stronger need for business investment. A dozen entrepreneurs will give a quick fire review of “The First Ascent” of carbon markets and finance, exploring the insights and visions of the future that only experience can offer.
Inigo Meiras AmuscoChief Executive Officer Ferrovial
Keith TuffleyChief Executive Officer & Founder Neuw Ventures SA
Charlotte Wolff-ByeVice President Corporate Sustainability Statoil
Pedro Moura CostaChief Executive OfficerBV Rio
Jack CogenChairmanHudson Ridge Asset Management
Rutger de Witt WijnenGeneral CounselGreen Climate Fund (GCF)
Marco MonroyPresident & Chief Executive Officer MGM Innova
Frank JoshuaExecutive DirectorTransocean Compass Clean Energy
Vinod KesavaChief Executive Officer & Co-founder Climate Resources Exchange, Singapore
Christian GrossmannDirector, Climate BusinessInternational Finance Corporation (IFC)
A. Didar SinghSecretary GeneralFederation of Indian Chambers of Commerce & Industry (FICCI)
Seb WalhainDirector da school
Mark MeyrickHead of Carbon DeskENECO
Martijn WilderHead of the Firm’s Global Environmental Markets PracticeBaker & McKenzie
Isaac Martin BarberoDirector General for International Corporate DevelopmentICEX España Exportación e Inversiones
Plenary 3: CEO Roundtable on the Road to Paris
Plenary 4: The Entrepreneurs - The First Ascent: An Oral History of Business Leadership
Meet the Carbon Market Cocktail & Dinner Reception at the MNAC
Short Break
Auditorium, Level 3
Auditorium, Level 3
15
DAY 2 - WEDNESDAY - 27 MAY
08:00
09:00
Moderator: Justin AdamsManaging Director for Global LandsThe Nature Conservancy
Neeraj PrasadManagerThe World Bank
Kyung-Ah ParkHead of Environmental MarketsGoldman Sachs
Green growth strategies driven both by the public and private sector will help economies achieve sustainable low carbon economic development. Many private firms with heavy footprints on land use are paying increasing attention to issues of sustainability and increasingly valuing sustainable supply chains. Moreover, financiers also play an important role in spurring innovation and mobilizing the capital necessary to accelerate the greening of supply chains in both developed and developing economies. This plenary session will foster discussions between public and private sector representatives on green growth strategies to help countries achieve sustainable low carbon development, featuring some companies’ recent sustainability and zero-deforestation commitments.
Honourable Ralava BeboarimisaMinister of Environment, Ecology, Sea and ForestsRepublic of Madagascar
Juan Francisco Martinez GarciaDeputy Director for Multilateral Financial InstitutionsGovernment of Spain
Joost OorthuizenExecutive DirectorThe Sustainable Trade Initiative (IDH)
Jeffrey FortCo-Director, Climate Change PracticeDentons
Plenary 5: Landscapes as a Green Growth Component to Bridge the Global Emissions Gap
Registration & Visit the Trade Fair
10:15
11:45
10:45
Carbon Pricing, Markets and the 2015 Agreement
Moderator: Jeff SwartzDirector, International PolicyIETA
David HoneChief Climate Change AdvisorShell International
Martin HessionAdviser, Climate Policy and International NegotiationsDG CLIMA, European Commission
Takashi HongoSenior FellowMitsui
Kesava ShotamDeputy ChairmanClimate Resources Exchange
Nathaniel KeohaneVice President, International Climate Environmental Defense Fund (EDF)
This session will explore the role(s) carbon pricing and markets will feature in the 2015 climate agreement at COP21 in Paris. With carbon pricing increasingly becoming a ‘hot topic’ amongst investors, governments, and the broader business community ahead of COP21 in Paris, this session will highlight the roles and efforts the 2015 Agreement can provide in expanding the map, effectiveness, and international fungibility of various carbon pricing systems around the world.
Workshop 3Climate Technologies & Energy Stream
Workshop 2Climate Finance & Investment Stream
Workshop 1Emissions Markets & Carbon Pricing Stream
Climate Finance Readiness: Groundbreaking Approaches to Enhance National Capacities
Moderator: Pablo BenitezSenior EconomistThe World Bank Group
Smita NakhoodaClimate and Environment Research Fellow Overseas Development Institute
Mark RedwoodProgram Leader, Climate Change and WaterInternational Development Research Center (IDRC)
Hernán CarlinoResearch CoodinatorFundacion Torcuato Di Tella
Karine SiegwartVice DirectorFederal Office for the Environment (Switzerland)
Marius KaiserAdvisor, Climate Finance Readiness Deutsche Gesellschaft für Internationale Zusammenarbeit (GIZ)
This session discusses the types of national systems and capacities that are needed to plan, access, and deliver climate finance at the desired scale in order to confront current climate chal-lenges. Recent experiences of the GCF Readiness program and other initiatives are discussed.
Energy: Landscape for the Future
Moderator: Philipp HauserVice President Carbon MarketsGDF SUEZ Energy Latin America, Brazil
Ricardo KlatovskyVice President Global Sale for Energy&UtilitiesInternational Business Machine (IBM)
Ming Li Chairman & Chief Executive Officer Europe & Middle East RegionalHANERGY
Malek DrifChief Executive OfficerCrowd2Win
Kushal GurungChief Executive OfficerWindPower Nepal
The electricity sector enables almost every aspect of our economy. However, it also accounts for a huge portion of the world GHG emissions. In re-sponding to climate change, many smart solutions have been tested in different part of the world. This session brings together industrial leaders to share experiences of smart ways to reduce GHG emissions and mitigate climate risks in this sector.
Coffee Break & Visit the Trade Fair
Short Break
Auditorium, Level 3
Room 3, Level 2Room 5, Level 3 Room 6, Level 3
16 CARBON EXPO • Trade Fair and Congress Guide
DAY 2 - WEDNESDAY - 27 MAY
12:00
Piloting Innovative Climate Finance Solutions: How to Maximize Impact of Public Funds and Leverage Private Sector Financing?
Moderator: Melanie ShankerManaging AssociateLinklaters
Jay MariyappanManaging DirectorSindicatum Sustainable Resources
Bengt BostromSenior AdvisorSwedish Energy Agency
Pongvipa LohsomboonDirector of Carbon Business OfficeThailand Greenhouse Gas Management Organi-zation
Brice QuesnelSenior Carbon Finance SpecialistThe World Bank Group
Adrian RimmerPresidentClimate Markets & Investment Association (CMIA)
Climate finance’s leverage of private capital will be critical to meet global mitigation goals. One such approach, which builds on the tools and experience of the carbon and capital markets, is being tested by the Pilot Auction Facility for Methane and Climate Change Mitigation (PAF). The PAF will give private investors a floor price for carbon credits by using a tradable put option and allocate the price guarantee to the most cost efficient sources of mitigation, with an initial focus on the solid, water and agricultural waste sectors.
Workshop 6Climate Technologies & Energy Stream
Workshop 5Climate Finance & Investment Stream
Workshop 4Emissions Markets & Carbon Pricing Stream
Climate Investment Funds (CIF) Experience in Leveraging Private sector Finance for Renewable Energy Projects
Moderator: Barbara BuchnerSenior DirectorClimate Policy Initiative
Mafalda DuarteProgram ManagerClimate Investment Funds
Paddy PadmanathanChairman & Chief Executive OfficerACWA Power
Wandee KhunchornyakongChairman & Chief Executive OfficerSolar Power Company Group (Thailand)
Simten ÖztürkProject & Acquisition Finance ManagerGaranti Bank
The CIF is the largest source of international finance for renewable energy with commitments of over $5.4 billion or two-thirds of the CIF portfolio dedicated to clean and renewable energy/energy efficiency. This session will hear from private and public sector sponsors on how they have leveraged CIF financing to scale up projects in Concentrated Solar Power, Wind Energy, Geothermal Energy and Energy Efficiency investments. The session will also provide an opportunity for the CIF to share its financing models and how these are facilitating greater leverage and addressing private sector risk concerns.
Fueling Decarbonization of the Oil & Gas Sector: The Technologies, Costs and Outlooks
Moderator: Greg McNabPartnerBaker McKenzie
Antonio Lopez RodriguezEnergy Analysis ManagerRepsol
John ScowcroftExecutive Advisor, European Middle East and AfricaGlobal Carbon and Capture Storage Institute (GCCSI)
Renato De Filippo Climate Change ManagerEni
Lee SolsberyTechnical DirectorEnvironmental Resources Management (ERM)
Carsten Rolle Managing Director Energy and Climate Policy Federation of German Industries (BDI)
The decarbonization of the oil & gas sector is a vital step to tackling climate change. However, across many regions, the required market signals and policy frameworks have been insufficient in driving the necessary scaled deployment of abatement technologies, including carbon capture and storage (CCS), in this sector. This session will review the latest technology status, costs and outlooks for achieving reductions in the oil & gas sector. Corporate and government leaders who are leading the charge in decarbonizing oil & gas activities will also share their stories and discuss how innovative policy and financing solutions might be scaled or replicated in other regions or parts of the economy.
13:00
13:15
Moderator: H.E. Hakima El HaiteMinister Delegate in Charge of Environment - Minister of Energy, Mining, Water and Environment of Morocco
Honourable Ralava BeboarimisaMinister of Environment, Ecology, Sea and ForestsRepublic of Madagascar
H.E. Lorena TapiaMinister of EnvironmentRepublic of Ecuador
Transitioning to a low-carbon and climate-resilient economy requires well-structured regulatory, economic and financial instruments to catalyze investment. Particularly now, with a Paris agreement looming, governments around the world are being called on to use all levers of economic and fiscal policy to drive efficiency, improve land use and to create the conditions to attract and boost long term investment in clean development. This special dialogue brings together key actors from various Ministries to discuss the economic risks of climate change and the opportunities for action.
Ato Adugna Nemera GedefaCRGE Facility, Ministry of Finance and Economic Development Federal Democratic Republic of Ethiopia
Juan Francisco Martinez GarciaDeputy Director for IFIs - Ministry of Economy and CompetitivenessGovernment of Spain
Buffet Lunch & Vsit the Trade Fair
Special Dialogue 2: Ministerial Dialogue
Room 3, Level 2
Room 3, Level 2
Room 5, Level 3 Room 6, Level 3
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DAY 2 - WEDNESDAY - 27 MAY
14:00
Moderator: Michael WilshireGlobal Head of AnalysisBloomberg New Energy Finance
Takashi HattoriHead of the Environment and Climate Change UnitInternational Energy Agency (IEA)
Bruce BraineVice President, Strategic Policy AnalysisAmerican Electric Power (AEP)
As COP21 nears, calls for climate action and deep reductions by mid-century are mounting. Various stakeholders - governments, business, and civil society - are making louder and bolder calls, including a growing chorus to reach net-zero greenhouse gas emissions by 2050, and embed this target into the Paris Agreement. An impressive - but perhaps necessary - goal and desired outcome, based on the science. What’s the practicality of reaching net-zero emissions, especially across the world’s growing energy sector? This high-level plenary will explore the politics, economics, science and future decarbonization scenarios behind transformative GHG reduction and stabilization goals. Panelists will largely focus discussion on the “nice haves” and “must haves” towards achieving dramatic dents in the energy sector’s global carbon footprint - and potentially making the net-zero 2050 goal a reality.
Alfonso FaubelSenior Vice President Sales & MarketingAlstom Power
Pramod DeoFormer ChairmanCentral Electricity Regulatory Commission (CERC) India
Brian WolffExecutive Vice PresidentPublic Policy and External AffairsEdison Electric Institute (EEI)
Peter StoreyManaging Director, Global CoordinatorCTI Private Financing Advisory Network (CTI PFAN)
Plenary 6: Transforming the Energy Sector - The Next Generation of Climate Technologies
15:15
15:45
Domestic Carbon Pricing Action: Progress and Challenges in Key Emerging Economies
Moderator: Xueman WangTeam LeadPartnership for Market Readiness (PMR) Secretariat
Wang ShuDeputy Director for Climate ChangeNational Development and Reform Commission (NDRC), China
Cecil MordenChief Director, Economic Tax AnalysisNational Treasury, South Africa
Francisco Javier Pinto PardoEconomistMinistry of Environment, Chile
Rajinder SahotaChief, Cap-and-Trade ProgramCalifornia Air Resources Board
A growing number of countries are implementing or preparing for the introduction of carbon pricing instruments – such as a carbon tax or an emissions trading system – to reduce emissions cost-effectively and shift toward a low-carbon pathway. The World Bank’s PMR brings together major economies, key market players and supports them to prepare, implement carbon pricing and other innovative instruments to scale up domestic GHG mitigation. This session provides an opportunity to learn about innovative, progressive domestic climate action, including progress and challenges faced while preparing, piloting or implementing carbon pricing instruments.
Workshop 9Climate Technologies & Energy Stream
Workshop 8Climate Finance & Investment Stream
Workshop 7Emissions Markets & Carbon Pricing Stream
Green Finance 2.0
Moderator: Jonathan GrantDirector, Sustainability & Climate Change Pricewaterhouse Coopers
Julian RichardsonChief Executive OfficerParhelion Capital
Martin BergInvestment Officer, Climate and Environment European Investment Bank (EIB)
Katharine TapleyDirector, Sustainable Finance SolutionsANZ, Australia
James BracheSenior Vice President, Political Risk Insurance and Trade Credi tZurich Insurance Company
Tames RietdijkChief Technology OfficerClimate Resources Exchange
This session will hear from public and privatesector experts about a new breed of green financial products cropping-up worldwide. Join us to learn more about green insurance products, public-private partnerships, green bonds, and other existing or potential tools in today’s evolving low-carbon toolbox.
Pioneering Energy Technologies and Climate Policy: What About the SIDS and Small Economies?
Moderator: Hugh SealyProfessor & Director, Environmental and Occupational Health TrackSt. George’s University, St. George’s, Grenada
Federico GrullonTechnical DirectorConsejo Nacional para el Cambio Climatico
Kosi LatuDeputy Director GeneralSecretariat of the Pacific Regional Ennvironment Programme
Rene Jean JumeauDirectorHaitian institute for Energy, Université Quisqueya
Gerald LindoSenior Technical Officer (Mitigation)Jamaica Ministry of Water, Land, Environment & Climate Change
Neeraj PrasadManagerThe World Bank
SIDS are heavily reliant on imported fossil fuels and highly vulnerable to the effects of climate change. A transformation of their national energy sectors has the potential of being a catalyst for sustainable economic development and generating climate finance resources. However, SIDS have not been able to utilize a full range of policy and financing instruments to develop at scale their renewable energy infrastructure. This market failure remains a concern for SIDS in the context of the post 2020 negotiations and calls for innovative solutions from the global community.
Coffee Break & Visit the Trade Fair
Auditorium, Level 3
Room 3, Level 2Room 5, Level 3 Room 6, Level 3
18 CARBON EXPO • Trade Fair and Congress Guide
DAY 2 - WEDNESDAY - 27 MAY
16:45
17:00
18:00
The Climate of Federalism in North America: Subnational Actions Impacts on National Policy
Moderator: Katie SullivanDirector, North America & Climate FinanceIETA
Kate RichExecutive DirectorAlberta Government
Justin JohnsonAdvisorVermont/RGGI
Katie Hsia-KiungCarbon Market AnalystEnvironmental Defense Fund
Rajinder SahotaChief, Cap-and-Trade ProgramCalifornia Air Resources Board
Join policy-makers, leading analysts, and private sector experts to learn about the latest policy and market developments across North America’s active - yet tangled and fragmented - low-car-bon landscape. Session explores: California and Quebec’s linked carbon market; RGGI’s successes and “teenage years”; and growing movement towards regional climate coordination and harmonization.
Workshop 12Climate Technologies & Energy Stream
Workshop 11Climate Finance & Investment Stream
Workshop 10Emissions Markets & Carbon Pricing Stream
The Green Climate Fund (GCF) & Private Sector: Where Do They Meet?
Moderator: Cameron PrellPartnerCrowell & Moring LLP
Samy Ben-JaafarPrivate Sector Facility DirectorGreen Climate Fund (GCF)
Jan Willem van de VenHead, Carbon Market DevelopmentEuropean Bank for Reconstruction and Develop-ment (EBRD)
Kruskaia Sierra-EscalanteHead, Blended Finance for Climate, Climate Busi-ness DepartmentInternational Finance Corporation (IFC)
Gediz Kaya Chief Executive OfficerGaia Carbon Finance, Turkey
John WarburtonSenior Coordination Officer for OperationsEuropean Investment Bank (EIB)
The new UN GCF aims to play a central role in reaching ambitious climate finance commitments. Part of what differentiates the GCF from existing institutions is its Private Sector Facility (PSF). This session will hear from government, MDB, and private sector experts about mechanisms, instru-ments and institutional arrangements that will help engage private sector in the Fund’s future projects and programmes. How can the GCF make climate projects commercially attractive by shaving risks and reducing incremental costs? How can private sector entities become accredited partners to the Fund? What outstanding issues or barriers still have to be addressed, in order to drive future business involvement with the Fund and its Private Sector Facility?
The EU’s 2030 Climate and Energy Package - What Changes will Affect the EU ETS?
Moderator: Benedikt Von ButlerCarbon and Biomass Trading and StructuringMercuria
James CooperCarbon and PowerBloomberg New Energy Finance (BNEF)
Ingo RammingCo-Head of Commodity SolutionsCommerzbank
Kavita AhluwaliaAdviserE.ON
Dirk WeinreichHead of the ETS DepartmentFederal Ministry for the Environment, Nature Conservation, Building and Nuclear Safety (BMUB), Germany
Jose Ignacio BotelloEnergy ManagerRepsol
A legislative proposal to amend the EU ETS is expected to be published before the Summer by the European Commission: stakeholders from different sectors will exchange views about what options should be considered by policy makers to strengthen the role of the EU ETS as part of the EU’s climate and energy package.
Short Break
Room 3, Level 2Room 5, Level 3 Room 6, Level 3
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DAY 3 - THURSDAY - 28 MAY
08:00 Registration & Visit the Trade Fair
10:00
09:00
Carbon Pricing Readiness: Perspectives from Companies
Moderator: Jeff SwartzDirector, International PolicyIETA
Alastair HandleyChief Executive OfficerCarbon Credit Solutions
Jean-Yves CaneillHead of Climate PolicyEDF - Direction Développement Durable
Nick CampbellSenior Environment Manager - DFL Arkema
Pierre GuigonCarbon Finance SpecialistPMR Secretariat
An increasing number of companies are subject to new climate change regulations in their countries or subnational jurisdictions. To prepare for this, and ensure their ability to operate effectively, businesses are taking steps to monitor their GHG emissions, determine their carbon footprints, re-think their corporate strategies, and engage with policy makers and stakeholders in the carbon policy design process. Come and hear first-hand insights from companies on their corporate response to address the risks and opportunities arising from new climate change regimes.
Workshop 15Climate Technologies & Energy Stream
Workshop 14Climate Finance & Investment Stream
Workshop 13Emissions Markets & Carbon Pricing Stream
Financial Implications of US Regulations
Moderator: Tom LawlerFounderLawler Strategies
Rick SainesPrincipalBaker & McKenzie
Lenny HochschildManaging DirectorEvolution Markets
Brad NeffSenior Manager of Long-Term Energy Policy PG&E
Tom PlantSenior Policy Advisor,Center for the New Energy Economy Colorado State University
US EPA’s Clean Power Plan will have significant impactson where and how electricity will be generated and distributed in the US. This session will discuss how near and long term investment decisions are being impacted and whether these regulations willusher in a new era of generation technology and clean energy finance.
Climate Technology Centre & Network
Moderator: Edwin AaldersPrinciple Researcher & Project Manager, DNV GL CTCN Strategic Partnership
Patrick NussbaumerIndustrial Development OfficerUnited Nations Industrial Development Organiza-tion (UNIDO)
Tanya MorrisonGovernment Relations Manager, ShellPrivate Sector ObserverClimate Technology Centre Advisory Board
Chris Webb Deputy CEO - Strategy, Operations & Climate NegotiationsClimate and Development Knowledge Network (CDKN)
Paul VickersDirectorCoop Carbone
This session will feature innovative country-led investments in clean technology, renewable energy, sustainable management of forests and climate-resilient development, serving to com-plement the work of the newly founded Green Climate Fund by giving developing countries more options for funding and impactful climate change investments It also discusses the future role of the UNFCCC’s Climate Technology Centre and Network (CTCN): what can be realistically achieved in five years, will it make a global difference to national emissions signatures and mitigation technology transfer, or is it just another diplomatic administrative approach to signalling action?
Coffee Break & Visit the Trade Fair
Room 3, Level 2Room 5, Level 3 Room 6, Level 3
20 CARBON EXPO • Trade Fair and Congress Guide
DAY 3 - THURSDAY - 28 MAY
11:30
10:30
Aviation: What Progress TowardsEstablishing a Global Market-BasedMeasure (MBM) Scheme? Moderator: Sophy GreenhalghDirectorInternational Carbon Reduction and Offest Alliance
Megan FlynnGroup Manager - Environment and Carbon StrategyQantas Airways
Michael SchneiderAssistant Director, Carbon Offset Buisness DevelopmentInternational Air Transport Association (IATA)
Niclas SvenningsenManager, Office of the Director, SDM ProgrammeUNFCCC
Andreas HardemanAssistant Director, Aviation and EnvironmentInternational Air Transport Association (IATA)
David AntonioliChief Executive OfficerVerified Carbon Standard
The session will provide an update on the latest discussions in the ICAO concerning the negoti-ations to put in place a global offsetting system. Panelists will discuss what types of offsets are being considered, how the efforts to advance them are progressing, while taking stock of progress at the international level.
Workshop 18Climate Technologies & Energy Stream
Workshop 17Climate Finance & Investment Stream
Workshop 16Emissions Markets & Carbon Pricing Stream
Green Investing, Guaranteed: The Growing Use of Guarantees in Green MarketSegments Moderator: Jose Juan GomesFinancial Markets Senior Specialist Inter-American Development Bank
Enrique NietoSustainable Projects, DirectorNacional Financiera, SNC (Nafin) Mexico
Hernán CarlinoResearch CoodinatorFundacion Torcuato Di Tella
Flavia RosembujSenior CounselInternational Finance Corporation (IFC)
Mary Gómez TorresSenior Executive, Climate Change & Environment Development Bank of Latin America (CAF)
Guarantees are among the suite of growing financial instruments available to address challenges specific to clean technology investments, such as uncertain rates of return or financial modeling issues. This session will cover how credit guarantees for clean technology green market segments can remove such investment barriers by covering risks related to the lack of collateral and the credit risk perception on the part of lenders. Speakers will also discuss how guarantees are often used to channel public intervention as well as crowd in private investment with their ability to generate effective leverage.
Promoting Technological Innovation Through the Use of Carbon Markets Moderator: Sarah DeblockDirector, EU PolicyIETA
Giles DicksonVice President, Global Public Affairs Alstom
Jelena SimjanovicNetwork Project ManagerGCCSI
Susan WoodSenior AdvisorDentons LLP
Marcus FerdinandHead EU Carbon AnalysisThomsonReuters Point Carbon
Chloe MunroChief Executive Officer & Chair, Clean Energy RegulatorGovernment of Australia
How could an innovation fund in the EU ETS be designed? European policy makers are discussing ideas about setting up a new innovation fund in the EU ETS (possibly the “NER400”) and proposals to use some of the surplus allowances in the system, to stimulate breakthrough industrial innovative technologies. This event will look at possible ways for carbon markets to be used to promote innovation in technologies that will need to be developed to reach the EU’s long-term GHG emission reductions. The panelists will exchange views about how such a fund could be designed and how it could operate in a context of oversupply which is trying to be tackled.
Short Break
11:45
Moderator: Daniele AgostiniCo-Chair, IETA EU Working Group & Board MemberENEL
Peter ZapfelHead of Unit - Implementation of ETS European Commission
Holger LöschBoard MemberFederation of German Industries (BDI)
2015 marks the 10 year anniversary of the EU ETS, and after important challenges these last few years, is the worst now behind us? The introduction of a MSR should address many of the inflexibilities that the EU ETS suffered from, and setting a target towards 2030 will help create an environment of confidence in the future of the EU’s climate and energy policies. But will it be enough? Will the EU ETS be successful in driving Europe’s emission reductions cost-effectively or do we risk seeing its role undermined by other policies? The panelists will look at how national or regional emissions trading systems may adapt to an increasing uptake of carbon pricing policies globally.
Stefan DohlerExecutive Group Management Member Vattenfall
Gerald MaradanCo Founder & Chief Executive Officer EcoAct
Jill DugganSenior Associate, Cambridge Institute for Sustain-ability Leadership (CISL) & The Prince of Wales’s Corporate Leaders Group (CLG)
Stig SchjølsetHead of Carbon AnalysisThomson Reuters
Plenary 7: EU ETS Turns 10: A New Beginning? Auditorium, Level 3
Room 3, Level 2Room 5, Level 3 Room 6, Level 3
21
DAY 3 - THURSDAY - 28 MAY
14:00
China’s Carbon Markets
Moderator: Dan BarryHead of EmissionsBP
James LiuManager ChinaStatkraft
Jan FousekManaging Director & PartnerVirtuse
Patrick Bürgi Director, AdvisorySouth Pole
Wang ShuProject Officer of the Department of Climate ChangeNational Development and Reform Committee
With 7 emissions trading programmes now operational across China, there are now lessons and experiences from China’s domestic emissions market that of interest to anyone interested in climate change. China’s approches to emissions trading also differ from that of other countries, and these approaches are now being observed and explored by other countries in Asia interested in putting a price on carbon. On top of all of this existing activity, the Chinese government aims to launch a national ETS at some point in 2016. This session will explore existing experiences and opportunities to come in China’s carbon market.
Workshop 21Climate Technologies & Energy Stream
Workshop 20Climate Finance & Investment Stream
Workshop 19Emissions Markets & Carbon Pricing Stream
Climate Markets for Sustainable Supply Chain Management Moderator: Jonathan Shopley Chief Executive OfficerThe Carbon Neutral Company
Edward Hanrahan Chief Executive OfficerClimateCare
Peter Castellas Chief Executive OfficerCarbon Market Institute
Arnaud Herrmann Vice President Sustainable Development Accor Group Hotels
Renat HeubergerChief Executive OfficerSouth Pole Group
With carbon offsetting often seen as an additional cost burden to business, we explore the latest trends of developing carbon projects within corporate supply chains as an effective tool to managing supply chain emissions whilst contributing to supply chain resilience.
From the Crowd to the Base: Crowdfunding-enabled Climate Business for SMEs Moderator: Malek DrifChief Executive OfficerCrowd2Win
Sven PluutFounderWeShareSolar
Hong Sin KwekChief Executive OfficerPhoenixict
Konrad RitterDirectorKritter Advisory Services
Patrick SchroederProject ManagerSWITCH Asia
Chiara CandeliseChief Executive OfficerEcomill
Access to finance is still highly constrained for climate technologies. Crowdfunding constitutes an enormous opportunity to leverage and scale up finance for green businesses. Several types of crowdfunding have developed over recent years. This session will focus on global experiences on how crowdfunding has been employed for technology deployment and green innovations. It will also include discussions on partnership solutions in scaling up crowdfunding in developing countries.
13:00
13:15
Moderator: Karl Upston HooperGeneral CounselGreenstream
Eric BoonmanHead of Carbon OriginationStatkraft
Xing’an GeETS Task ForceChina Emissions Exchange-Shenzhen
The Partnership for Market Readiness (PMR) is a special grant-funding initiative of the World Bank to help countries prepare for carbon pricing policies. The Business Partnership for Market Readiness (B-PMR) is a special initiative of IETA that helps companies in PMR and other countries prepare for carbon pricing policies. This session will highlight the important and effective work these initiatives are doing to help shape the next generation of carbon markets and carbon pricing around the world.
Xueman WangPMR Team LeadThe World Bank Group
Tony GaiHead of EmissionsPetroChina
Buffet Lunch & Vsit the Trade Fair
Special Dialogue 3: Special PMR/BPMR Dialogue
15:00 Short Break
Room 3, Level 2
Room 3, Level 2Room 5, Level 3 Room 6, Level 3
22 CARBON EXPO • Trade Fair and Congress Guide
DAY 3 - THURSDAY - 28 MAY
15:15
16:30
Moderator: Vikram WidgeManager, Climate and Carbon Finance International Finance Corporation (IFC)
Andrei MarcuSenior AdvisorCenter for European Policy Studies (CEPS)
Peter EigenCo-Founder and Chair of Governance Projects Humboldt-Viadrina Governance Platform
Around the world, countries are unilaterally developing domestic ways to fight climate change. These actions have the potential to collectively overcome the current international regulatory gap. Since they are motivated by domestic decision making, however, there is great regulatory variation among them. As a result, it has become increasingly complex for stakeholders (governments, private sector and civil society) to compare, contrast and track progress of climate actions across jurisdictions. This plenary will consider existing efforts to compare and track progress of climate actions and explore the challenges and opportunities for enhancing their impact in incentivizing effective and ambitious climate action, toward and beyond Paris 2015.
John KilaniDirector, Sustainable Development Mechanisms programme, UNFCCC
Surabi MenonDirector, Advisory & ResearchClimateWorks Foundation
Alvaro UmanaFormer Minister of Energy & Environment and Senior Research Fellow at CATIERepublic of Costa Rica
Sonia MedinaDirector, Climate ChangeChildren’s Investment Fund Foundation (CIFF)
Ashley N. AllenOffice of Global ChangeU.S. Department of State
Plenary 8: Climate Transparency: Comparing and Tracking Progress Toward and Beyond Paris 2015
Closing Addresses
Auditorium, Level 3
Auditorium, Level 3
23
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SPANISH CLIMATE CHANGE OFFICE(MAGRAMA)
PLAZA SAN JUAN DE LA CRUZ S/N, MADRID28071, MADRID, SPAIN
Phone: 34914361546
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CLIMATE RESOURCES EXCHANGE
MATACCA CENTRE, 20 MALACCA STREET, 07-00SINGAPORE, 043979, SINGAPURE
Phone: 6593840166
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GENERALITAT DE CATALUNYA
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Phone: 34934958000
Email: [email protected]: www.gencat.cat
24 CARBON EXPO • Trade Fair and Congress Guide
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SideEvents
26 CARBON EXPO • Trade Fair and Congress Guide
Side Events Overview
TIME
TIME
TIME
ROOM 4 , LEVEL 2
ROOM 4 , LEVEL 2
ROOM 4 , LEVEL 2
ROOM 11, LEVEL 0
ROOM 11, LEVEL 0
ROOM 11, LEVEL 0
ROOM 12, LEVEL 0
ROOM 12, LEVEL 0
ROOM 12, LEVEL 0
DAY 1 - TUESDAY - 26 MAY
DAY 2 - WEDNESDAY - 27 MAY
DAY 3 - THURSDAY - 28 MAY
09:30
13:30
10:30
10:30
13:00
14:15
16:45
11:45
13:00
15:30
10:30
14:30
11:30
11:30
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17:45
12:45
14:00
16:30
The Spanish Ministry of Agriculture, Food and Environment together with the Prince of Wales Corporate Leaders GroupThe Transition to a Low Carbon Economy: How to use partnerships to unlock pricing and other solutions for decarbonisation?
ENECO
This house believes that CDM still has an important role to play in the EU’s climate policy
Baker&McKenzie
From INDCs To ROI: The Future Of Carbon Mar-kets and Emerging Opportunities Post-Paris
Federal Ministry for the Environment, Nature Conservation, Building and Nuclear Safety, Germany (BMUB) Raising ambition for climate change objectives Challenges and Chances on the road to Paris
The World Bank Group
Climate Smart Initiatives in Sri Lanka
Global Alliance for Clean Cookstoves
Unlocking new sources of finance for clean cookstoves by quantifying emissions reductions from black carbon and other short-lived climate pollutants
Federal Ministry for the Environment, Nature Conservation, Building and Nuclear Safety, Germany (BMUB)Current status of the CDM and its relevance for the new climate agreement - Results from latest climate policy research
Factor CO2
Green Growth Strategies – Public-Private Partner-ships For Climate Change Mitigation”
Gas Natural
Public-Private Partnership in the development of NAMAs*in Spanish, translated to English
Federal Ministry for the Environment, Na-ture Conservation, Building and Nuclear Safety, Germany (BMUB)
The CDM Sustainable Development Tool – Assess-ment and Options for Improvement
Ministry of Agriculture, Food andEnvironment, Spain (MAGRAMA) and Spanish Export and Investment (ICEX)Spanish Public and Private Sector: New Approaches to Address Climate Change and the Spanish Green Growth Group
Fundacion Empresa y Clima
2013 Report of CO2 Emissions in Spain, Europe and Worldwide
The Shift Project
Putting Price on Carbon is Not Enough: Long Term Predictability Would Switch from a Speculative Market to a Low Carbon Investment Incentive
China Emissions Exchange
New Investment and Finance Opportunities at Shenzhen Carbon Market of China
Oficina Catalana Cambio Climático(Generalitat)
Practical Approach to Climate Finance
IETA
Addressing the risk of carbon leakage: what are the pros and cons of a dynamic allocation of allowances?
InclamCO2
SMART CLIMATE: Artificial Intelligence Applied to Climate Change Adaptation and Mitigation
ICIS
Analyst insight – carbon price forecasting for the different schemes around the world
Carbon Trade Exchange
Managing the overlap between compliance and voluntary corporate action on climate change
The World Bank Group
Integrated Landscape Management: Opportunities in Africa
The World Bank Group
Toward a Clean Development Path in Haiti: Structural Challenges and Leapfrog Opportunities
The World Bank Group
Enabling Comparability of Mitigation Efforts for a Networked Carbon Market
The World Bank Group
Pilot Auction Facility for Methane and Climate Change Mitigation. Plans for the First Auction and Beyond
The World Bank Group
The Landscape Approach to Low Carbon Rural Development
The World Bank Group
MRV-ing to support carbon pricing
The World Bank Group
Seeking Insights on ETS Design and Operation
The World Bank Group
Economics of Green Growth Learning Network: Collaboration and Partnering into the Future
27
Side Events Program
TIME DESCRIPTION/CONTACT
DAY 1 - TUESDAY - 26 MAY
09:30 10:30
13:3014:30
13:3014:30
13:3014:30
Room 11, Level 0
Room 4, Level 2
Room 11, Level 0
Room 12, Level 0
THE SPANISH MINISTRY OF AGRICULTURE, FOOD AND ENVIRONMENT TOGETHER WITH THE PRINCE OF WALES CORPORATE LEADERS GROUP
The Transition to a Low Carbon Economy: How to use partnerships to unlock pricing and other solutions for decarbonisation?
CARBON TRADE EXCHANGE
Managing the overlap between compliance and volun-tary corporate action on climate change
FEDERAL MINISTRY FOR THE ENVIRONMENT, NATURE CONSERVATION, BUILDING AND NUCLEAR SAFETY, GERMANY (BMUB)
Current status of the CDM and its relevance for the new climate agreement - Results from latest climate policy research
MINISTRY OF AGRICULTURE, FOOD AND ENVI-RONMENT, SPAIN (MAGRAMA) AND SPANISH EXPORT AND INVESTMENT (ICEX)
Spanish public and private sector:new approaches to address Climate Change and the Spanish Green Growth Group
The Spanish Ministry of Agriculture, Food and Environment together with the Prince of Wales Corporate Leaders Group is organising a High Level Panel discussion. Invited speakers will address questions such as: i) How to leverage new public-private partnerships for greater impact; ii) How can these partnerships be replicated for effective action in countries/regions; and iii) National experiences around carbon pricing which are useful and should be replicated or tailored for other countries.
Contact: [email protected]
As emissions trading schemes expand globally to cover more businesses and sectors, there is increasing recognition that businesses need an integrated approach to their compliance and voluntary action on climate. Representatives from the Climate Markets & Investment Association, CTX, the European Bank for Reconstruction & Development and Qantas will share perspectives on the policies in different regions; the importance of business leadership; the strategies being used and the associated opportunities for business, technology and those seeking support for domestic and overseas climate projects.
Contact: Georgie Whitford, [email protected]
This side event presents recent research findings commissioned by the German govern- ment. The NewClimate Institute analysed the current situation of a large representative sample of more than 1300 registered CDM projects worldwide. The results allow to close major gaps in the current understanding regarding the status of individual CDM projects worldwide, as well as barriers and means for supporting their continuation. The statistically sound approach allows for individually extracted insights and lessons for national situations, technology-spe-cific considerations, and the CDM as a whole. Perspectives Climate Change analyses how Clean Development Mechanism reform has evolved. CDM Programme of Activities have begun to facilitate access to UNFCCC-backed carbon markets for activities with high sustainable devel-opment impacts. Standardizing baselines and additionality continue the process of reforming the CDM to better reflect the circumstances of underrepresened countries. Meanwhile, the first Nationally Appropriate Mitigation Actions (NAMA) are transitioning from a conceptual readiness stage towards implementation. As both the CDM and NAMAs are expected to play important roles for pre-2020 mitigation action as well as in the new climate agreement, it is important to understand how these instruments can best complement each other.Contact: Christopher Stolzenberg, [email protected]
The Spanish Green Growth Group is a solid platform between the Public Administration and the private sector with the aim to collect the input and advice of the private sector on how to proceed to transform the current economy into a low-carbon economy that contributes to the fight against climate change while, at the same time, guarantees a sustainable job-creating economic growth.The Spanish GGG, a group of 35 leading companies, will present its views on green growth as a driver of new business opportunities, as their input to support the Spanish position towards COP 21 in Paris.During this side event The Group will analyze the policy framework vital to invest in a low carbon economy in Spain identifying key sectors. Furthermore, they will present success stories of green growth in Spain.
Contact: Rebeca Sainz [email protected]
28 CARBON EXPO • Trade Fair and Congress Guide
TIME DESCRIPTION/CONTACT
DAY 2 - WEDNESDAY - 27 MAY
10:3011:30
10:3011:30
10:3011:30
11:4512:45
Room 4, Level 2
Room 11, Level 0
Room 12, Level 0
Room 4, Level 2
THE WORLD BANK GROUP
Enabling Comparability of Mitigation Efforts for a Net-worked Carbon Market
ENECO
This house believes that CDM still has animportant role to play in the EU’s climate policy
CHINA EMISSIONS EXCHANGE
New Investment and Finance Opportunities at Shen-zhen Carbon Market of China
THE WORLD BANK GROUP
Integrated Landscape Management:Opportunities in Africa
Around the world, countries are developing different ways to fight climate change. These domestic actions are crucial to lowering greenhouse gas emissions. However, since each is being designed individually and using a different rulebook, it has become increasingly complex to measure, compare, and track progress of climate mitigation efforts, across countries. Comparability is crucial for many reasons, including for enabling a connected international carbon market that can offer a broader pool of abatement options, increased market liquidity, reduced price volatility, and the foundation for a long term stable price on carbon. This side-event shall provide an opportunity to discuss the World Bank Group’s proposal for ‘Networked Carbon Markets’ and its long term vision to ensure that all climate action is accounted for, comparable and accommodated by a more efficient and connected carbon market.
Contact: Bianca Sylvester, [email protected]
We are looking for a proposer of the motion and someone to argue against it, which would be great if it would be Bas. We will follow the ‘Oxford-Style debate’, so to begin with the audience will make a pre-debate vote on the motion: for, against or undecided. Then each speaker will make a 7 minute opening statement after which someone (meprobably) will moderate by taking questions from the audience and challenges to the speak-ers. To close, each speaker will make a 2 minute closing statement, and there will be a 2nd vote on the motion at the end – at which point we will compare the voting from before the debate, and after – and declare a winner! That vote should, for the purposes of this event, be decided by the power of each speakers argument – rather than a pre-conceived position, and I’ll make that clear.Given the venue and context, the speaker against the motion needs to be able to argue his/her points well in order to make a compelling case. Indeed, so does the speaker for the motion – but his/hers task is likely to be easier.The aim is not to be overly serious, but certainly to be factual, cogent, provocative – and fun.
Contact: Mark Meyrick [email protected]
Shenzhen officially launched the ETS as the first one among seven pilots on June 18th, 2013. One year later (August 8th, 2014), the State Administration of Foreign Exchange approved foreign institutional investors participating in Shenzhen carbon market, making Shenzhen carbon market the first and only one open to foreign institutional investors in China carbon market.
This side event will give you an insight about China pilot carbon market, especially focused on Shenzhen market with detailed policy, guidance and practical procedures to instruct the foreign institutional investors get to understand and enter into Shenzhen carbon market.
Contact: Maria WANG, Email: [email protected]; Ceci JIANG, Email: [email protected]
In light of the climate change challenge, many African countries have recognized the need to increase the multifunctionality of landscapes to promote agricultural productivity, livelihood improvement and ecosystem conservation. As a response, an increasing number of countries have been pursuing Integrated Landscape Management Approaches that promote sustainable land uses and addresses intertwined issues of rural poverty, deforestation, and environmental degradation. In this session, African countries will showcase initiatives currently being pursued with a particular focus on initiatives on REDD+ and green supply chains that integrate small-holder farmers into supply chains for local, regional and global markets for attractive crops such as cashew nuts, coffee, cotton and cocoa. These initiatives present the opportunity to reduce emissions and sequester carbon, while enhancing economic development for local communities and countries and attract private and international climate finance.
Contact: Tambi Motambo, Email: [email protected]
29
TIME DESCRIPTION/CONTACT
DAY 2 - WEDNESDAY - 27 MAY
11:4512:45
11:4512:45
13:00 14:00
13:00 14:00
Room 11, Level 0
Room 12, Level 0
Room 4, Level 2
Room 11, Level 0
FACTOR CO2
Green Growth Strategies – Public-PrivatePartnerships For Climate Change Mitigation
FUNDACION EMPRESA Y CLIMA
2013 Report of CO2 Emissions in Spain, Europe and Worldwide
THE WORLD BANK GROUP
Seeking Insights on ETS Design and Operation
FEDERAL MINISTRY FOR THE ENVIRONMENT, NATURE CONSERVATION, BUILDING AND NUCLEAR SAFETY, GERMANY (BMUB)
Raising ambition for climate change objectives Chal-lenges and Chances on the road to Paris
Three pillars are key in achieving green growth and sustainable development: ambitious policy regimes, companies able to deliver technological innovation, and new cooperation models between the public and the private sector. Reflecting on initiatives such as Europe’s Green Growth Groups, this session will discuss the enabling conditions that allow public-private partnerships to spur economic activity, create jobs and reduce GHG emissions.
Contact: Iker Larrea, Email: [email protected]
Presentation of the analysis of 2013 CO2 emissions published by Spanish organizations under European Directive 2003/87/CE. Data are analyzed by sector and from regional perspective, even at province level. The study also includes an European analysis, by country and sector, together with an approach of total Global emissions by geographical macro zones (North America, Southeast Asia, etc.). A hard or electronic copy of the report will be distributed to all attendees
Contact: Elvria Carles, Email: [email protected]
The World Bank’s Partnership for Market Readiness (PMR) and the International Carbon Action Partnership (ICAP) are jointly developing a ‘how to’ handbook on the practicalities of establishing and operating an Emissions Trading System (ETS). The Handbook will capture the substantial experience accumulated around the world including in the EU, China, Kazakhstan, North America, New Zealand, Republic of Korea, and Australia. Come and discuss with policy makers and representatives from the private sector about the key lessons learned from existing ETS which are relevant to ETS country and sub-national aspirants.
Contact: Pierre Guigon, [email protected]
Carbon market mechanisms can contribute to a fast and cost-effective achievement of international and national climate change objectives. However, the carbon market, its in-struments and stakeholders need clear political actions as well as reliable demand. Therefore stronger international and national ambitions depend very much on assuming greater levels of responsibility by industrialized countries and emerging economies. But where do we stand at the moment? What has been achieved so far? What does it take to raise ambition in Paris and beyond and what are challenges and expectations of industrialized and developing countries? Which role will take market mechanisms to close the emission gap and beyond 2020? Can climate finance play a role in recreating markets?The panel aims to discuss these questions with several carbon market advocates and their perspectives and experiences, like the World Bank, UNFCCC and representatives from devel-oping countries. A panel of experts will present on innovative developments and engage the audience in a discussion.
Contact: Christopher Stolzenberg, [email protected]
30 CARBON EXPO • Trade Fair and Congress Guide
TIME DESCRIPTION/CONTACT
DAY 2 - WEDNESDAY - 27 MAY
13:00 14:00
15:3016:30
15:3016:30
15:3016:30
Room 12, Level 0
Room 4, Level 2
Room 11, Level 0
Room 12, Level 0
ICIS
Analyst insight – carbon price forecasting for the differ-ent schemes around the world
THE WORLD BANK GROUP
The Landscape Approach to Low-Carbon Development
FEDERAL MINISTRY FOR THE ENVIRONMENT, NATURE CONSERVATION, BUILDING AND NUCLEAR SAFETY, GERMANY (BMUB)
The CDM Sustainable Development Tool – Assessment and Options for Improvement
IETA
Addressing the risk of carbon leakage: what are the pros and cons of a dynamic allocation of allowances?
The side event will guide participants in an interactive session through our price forecasting model approach by explaining the key factors driving carbon price developments. The focus of the event will be to look at the overall functions and key design features of emission trading systems around the world, including the European, Californian, RGGI, Chinese and South-Korean markets and how those impact the price forecasting approach. For instance:
· Supply – what’s the market impact of auctions versus allocation?· Demand – what’s the market impact of spot versus forward demand?· Strategy – what’s the difference between big and small companies?
The session will allow active participation of the audience to the debate, so be prepared to share your views.
Contact: Phillipp Ruf, Email: [email protected]
Healthy forests and landscapes are seen as critical to cutting greenhouse gas emissions to net zero before 2100. Working at the landscape level is critical for low-carbon development that doesn’t come at the expense of forests. However, the scale of landscape-level work, which often constitutes between 10-25% of a country’s total area, faces challenges by near-term economic considerations of land for industrial growth, income and tax revenues. The panel will discuss about potential transformational development models that may be offered to appeal to ministers of finance and other economic actors to balance economic growth, nutrition and food security while preserving and restoring healthy landscapes.
Contact: Anita Tung, Email: [email protected]
The Clean Development Mechanism (CDM) has been criticized for neglecting its second aim of contributing to sustainable development (SD). Responding to the critique, the CDM Executive Board developed upon request of the CMP the voluntary tool to highlight the projects’ sustainable development co-benefits. The German Emissions Trading Authority (DEHSt) has commissioned a research project on analysing and evaluating the usability of the CDM EB’s SD Tool. Results of the project will be presented and discussed at this side event by a diverse panel of speakers incl. host country and project developer perspectives, DEHSt, UNEP DTU Partnership & Wuppertal Institute. The discussion will focus on options to improve the tool and strengthen SD assessment also beyond CDM to other mitigation actions such as NAMAs and the NMM/FVA.
Contact: Christopher Stolzenberg, Email: [email protected]
Concerns over industrial competitiveness have led to transitional assistance, via free allocation, being provided to industry participants in emissions trading systems. Discussions are taking place in the EU to revise the carbon leakage provisions after 2020 and the idea of a ‘dynamic’ ex-post allocation has attracted much attention.There are diverging views about the introduction of a dynamic allocation of free allowances to reduce the risk of carbon leakage for industry. The panel will highlight the various consequences of such an approach for different sectors covered by cap-and-trade systems. A discussion with the audience will follow, to evaluate whether such an approach should be pursued by policy makers.
Contact: Sarah Deblock, Email: [email protected]
31
TIME DESCRIPTION/CONTACT
DAY 2 - WEDNESDAY - 27 MAY
16:45 17:45
16:45 17:45
16:45 17:45
Room 4, Level 2
Room 11, Level 0
Room 12, Level 0
THE WORLD BANK GROUP
MRV-ing to support carbon pricing
GLOBAL ALLIANCE FOR CLEAN COOKSTOVES
Unlocking new sources of finance for clean cookstoves by quantifying emissions reductions from black carbon and other short-lived climate pollutants
INCLAMCO2
SMART CLIMATE: Artificial Intelligence Applied to Climate Change Adaptation and Mitigation.
Come and celebrate the launch of the “Design Guide for Mandatory GHG Reporting Programs” with the World Bank’s Partnership for Market Readiness (PMR) and the World Resources Institute (WRI). The Guide provides step-by-step guidance for policy makers and experts who are involved in the design and implementation of GHG reporting programs that collect emissions data at the facility or corporate level. This event will provide participants an opportunity to learn more about the Guide and to hear the latest developments from PMR Implementing Countries who are in the process of designing and implementing emission reporting programs.
Contact: Pauline Kennedy, Email: [email protected]
Nearly three billion people globally cook their food on open fires or traditional cookstoves fueled by burning wood, crop residues, dung, coal, and charcoal. These stoves produce smoke that kills more than four million people annually and emit the major contributors to climate change, including carbon dioxide, methane and black carbon. Clean cookstoves and fuels reduce these emissions, as well as save lives, improve livelihoods and empower women. This side event will discuss how a first of its kind Gold Standard methodology to quantify emissions reductions from black carbon and other co-emitted species could help unlock results-based finance to scale-up clean cookstove and fuel adoption.
Contact: Jennifer Tweddell, Email: [email protected]
Information Technologies (IT) and Artificial Intelligence (AI) are part of the solution to climate change challenges. Find out some success cases
Contact: Miriam Puya, Email: [email protected]
32 CARBON EXPO • Trade Fair and Congress Guide
TIME DESCRIPTION/CONTACT
DAY 3 - THURSDAY 28 MAY
10:30 11:30
10:30 11:30
10:30 11:30
13:00 14:00
Room 4, Level 2
Room 11, Level 0
Room 12, Level 0
Room 4, Level 2
THE WORLD BANK GROUP
Pilot Auction Facility for Methane and Climate Change Mitigation Plans for the First Auction and Beyond
BAKER & MCKENZIE
From INDCs to ROI: The Future of CarbonMarkets and Emerging Opportunities Post-Paris
CATALAN OFFICE FOR CLIMATE CHANGE
Practical approach to climate finance
THE WORLD BANK GROUP
Toward a Clean Development Path in Haiti:Structural Challenges and Leapfrog Opportunities
The World Bank Group plans to conduct the first auction for the Pilot Auction Facility for Methane and Climate Change Mitigation (PAF) in the coming weeks. The auction will offer put options to private firms to guarantee a minimum price on carbon credits. This floor price guarantee is designed to be higher than today’s carbon credit market price. Specifically, this auction will target solid waste, waste water treatment and agricultural waste management (including biogas) projects. The side event will review the design of the PAF and preparation for the first auction. Additionally, planning for the second auction will be discussed, including possible changes to the targeted sectors, use of carbon credit standards and auction format. Participants will be encouraged to ask questions and provide feedback on key design issues.
Contact: Scott Cantor, Email: [email protected]
In the new bottom up paradigm that will likely emerge from Paris, capitalizing on investable opportunities in the carbon markets and other low-carbon regimes will require both deep local knowledge and an informed global perspective. This presents new challenges, but also creates unique opportunities for those who can navigate this emerging dual landscape. Leaders of Baker & McKenzie’s Global Climate Change and Environmental Markets Practice will provide an up-to-date assessment on what these new market opportunities might look like across key jurisdictions, such as the US, EU, Mexico, China, Canada and Australia. They will be joined by guest speaker David Hone, Chief Climate Change Adviser, Shell International who will provide an industry perspective on the likelihood of a durable price on carbon to emerge from Paris under the new bottom up world.
Contact: Marisa Chiarella, [email protected]
Climate finance refers to financing to be channelled by national, regional and international entities for climate change mitigation and adaptation projects and programs that spur and enable the transition towards low-carbon, climate-resilient growth and development through capacity building, R&D and economic development. Many developing countries are working on programs that address these objectives. The idea of the side event is to show some practical examples and underline the business opportunities raised by these initiatives.
Contact: Salvador Samitier, Email: [email protected]
In a global context of climate change and seek for energy security, Haiti is facing major de-velopment challenges but also has many opportunities when it comes to Energy. To reach its development objective of becoming an emerging nation by 2030, the Government of Haiti has committed to tackle very important energy issues such as wood fuels alleviation, energy access expansion and reliable electricity services for all. Adopting a green and inclusive growth pathway requires stronger sustained effort to transi-tion from a underserved, high-cost and fuel-oil based electricity mix to a cleaner and more reliable electricity for all. Can a small and fragile nation like Haiti afford addressing this chal-lenge, and what would be the costs and benefits from an ‘energy leapfrog’ policy?
Contact: Carlos Cordova, Email: [email protected]
33
TIME DESCRIPTION/CONTACT
DAY 3 - THURSDAY 28 MAY
13:00 14:00
14:15 15:15
13:00 14:00
14:15 15:15
Room 11, Level 0
Room 4, Level 2
Room 4, Level 2
Room 11, Level 0
GAS NATURAL
Public-Private Partnership in the development of NAMAs
THE WORLD BANK GROUP
Economics of Green Growth Learning Network:Collaboration and Partnering into the Future
THE SHIFT PROJECT
Putting Price on Carbon is Not Enough: Long Term Predictability Would Switch from a Speculative Market to a Low Carbon Investment Incentive
THE WORLD BANK GROUP
Climate Smart Initiatives in Sri Lanka
The objective of this Side Event is to stimulate the discussion of public-private partnership between the different actors involved in the development of NAMAs.The interventions of the speakers will be directed towards: the role of NAMAs and their current situation; a better understanding of the needs and expectations of stakeholders, including public and private sectors; and the discussion of possible strategies and actions to promote the implementation of NAMAs.Recent developments of mitigation policies and their relationship to NAMAs and INDCs will be treated based on the experience of MAPS in Brazil, Chile, Colombia and Peru; identifying investment opportunities and implementation challenges.
Contact: Alicia Ramos, Email: [email protected]
*note that this side event will be featured in Spanish, translated to English
EGGPAL is a regional network for peer learning and technicalcooperation among senior technical specialists on the economics of climatechange and green growth in governments in Europe and Central Asia, whichprovides a forum and resources to discuss challenges and solutions for a broadrange of green growth challenges. Key members of the EGGPAL network and WorldBank experts reflect on the third year of the EGGPAL network and its future insupporting climate action and green growth analysis-based policymaking as theworld moves towards Paris.
Contact: Erika Jorgensen, [email protected]
Pricing Carbon in the context of the EU ETS Structural reform. Carbon Markets gain momentum worldwide, to tackle climate change by putting a price on carbon dioxide (CO2) and other greenhouse gases. The EU ETS has been an early mover, but faces structural challenges (environmental efficiency and cost efficiency, low price, equity, long term credibility…) leading the European Commission to reform the structure of this market. Putting a price on carbon with an ETS : what do we expect, what do we get, and finally, who pays ? Saving the ETS or saving the climate: issues and options on the table. Quantities and prices: brothers, or enemies ? Is there still some room for project-based mechanisms?
Contact: Frédéric Dinguirard, [email protected]
Sri Lanka is on the path towards an internationally competitive middle-income country. The government’s efforts of promoting climate smart initiatives across various sectors is aligned with the country’s development strategy and has been contributing to boosting Sri Lanka’s economy in a more sustainable and resilient way in addition to minimizing negative impacts on climate. Sri Lanka aims at becoming an energy self-sufficient nation by 2030 which re-quires tremendous work including but not limiting to promoting energy conservation, re-newable energy and other clean energy technologies. The country has been dedicated to ac-celerating policy formulation and research related to climate change policy and in the past five years it has released its National Climate Change Policy and National Climate Change Adaptation Strategy, and started preparing and implementing NAP, Technology Need Assess-ment and Technology Action Plan, climate vulnerability assessment for seven sectors, as well as NAMAs for energy generation & end-user and transport sector.
Contact: Zhuo Cheng, [email protected]
34 CARBON EXPO • Trade Fair and Congress Guide
FEDERAL MINISTRY FOR THE ENVIRONMENT, NATURE CONSERVATION, BUILDING AND NUCLEAR SAFETY (BMUB)
STRESEMANNSTRAßE 128-130, BERLIN10117, GERMANY
Phone: 49 (030) 18305-0
Email: [email protected]: www.bmub.bund.de/themen/klima-energie/emissionshandel/Booth B202
ICEX SPAIN TRADE AND INVESTMENT
PASEO DE LA CASTELLANA 278,MADRID, 28046, MADRID, SPAIN
Phone: 34913491807
Email: [email protected]: www.icex.esBooth B211
WE WOULD LIKE TO THANK OUR GOVERNMENT PARTNERS
MINISTERIODE ECONOMÍAY COMPETITIVIDAD
35
BAKER & MCKENZIE
LEVEL 28, AMP BUILDING, 50 BRIDGE STREET,SYDNEY, NSW, 2000, AUSTRALIA
Phone: 61289225503
Email: [email protected]: www.bakermckenzie.comBooth B220
REPSOL
MENDEZ ALVARO 44, MADRID28045, MADRID, SPAIN
Phone: 34917538100
Internet: www.repsol.comBooth C300
WE WOULD LIKE TO THANK OUR PLATINUM SPONSORS
36 CARBON EXPO • Trade Fair and Congress Guide
ALSTOM
3 AVENUE ANDRE MALRAUX,92300, LEVALLOIS PERRET, FRANCE
Phone: 33141492000
Email: [email protected]: www.alstom.com
ICIS TSCHACH SOLUTIONS
QUADRANT HOUSE, THE QUADRANTSUTTON, SM2 5AS UK, UNITED KINGDOM
Phone: 442086523335
Email: [email protected]: www.icis.comBooth A125
GAS NATURAL FENOSA
PLAÇA DEL GAS 1, BARCELONA,08003, BARCELONA, SPAIN
Phone: 34934025100
Internet: www.gasnatural.comBooth B210
WE WOULD LIKE TO THANK OUR GOLD SPONSORS
37
AITHER CO2
VIA TRIVULZIO, 320146 MILAN, ITALY
Phone: 390236586600
Email: [email protected]: www.aitherco2.comBooth A104
UNITED NATIONS FOUNDATION ON BEHALF OF GLOBAL ALLIANCE FOR CLEAN COOKSTOVES
1750 PENNSYLVANIA AVENUE NW, SUITE 300WASHINGTON, DC, 20006, UNITED STATES
Phone: 12028645469Email: [email protected]: www.cleancookstoves.orgBooth C310
SILVER EXTRA VISIBILITY EXHIBITOR
38 CARBON EXPO • Trade Fair and Congress Guide
39
Orientation Trade FairExhibitorsMedia PartnersSupporting Organizations
40 CARBON EXPO • Trade Fair and Congress Guide
ORIENTATION TRAID FAIR
CARBON EXPO PLATINUM SPONSORS
CARBON EXPOGOVERNMENT SPONSORS
CARBON EXPO SILVER EXTRA VISIBILITYCARBON EXPO GOLD SPONSORS
MINISTERIODE ECONOMÍAY COMPETITIVIDAD
41
EXHIBITORS LIST
A
ACCIONA ENERGÍA
ADELPHI CONSULT GMBH
AENOR
AITHER CO2 SPA
ALSTOM
ALTHELIA ECOSPHERE
AMERICAN CARBON REGISTRY (ACR)
APPLUS+ CERTIFICATION
ARGUS MEDIA LTD.
ATAG
B
BAKER & MCKENZIE
BELEKTRON
BLOOMBERG NEW ENERGY FINANCE
C
CAF - DEVELOPMENT BANK OF LATIN AMERICA
CALIFORNIA ACTION RESERVE (CAR)
CARBON CREDIT CAPITAL
CARBON GREEN AFRICA
CARBON MARKET INSTITUTE (CMI)
CARBON TRADE EXCHANGE
CITIES TODAY
CLIMATE INVESTMENT FUND - WBG
CLIMATE RESOURCES EXCHANGE
CLIMATE TECHNOLOGY CENTER AND NETWORK (CTCN)
CLIMATECONNECT
CONESTOGA-ROVERS & ASSOCIATES
COP21 PARIS
D
DELAGUA HEALTH
DEUTSCHE GESELLSCHAFT FÜR INTERNATIONALE ZUSAMMENARBEIT (GIZ)
E
ECOACT
ECONOMICS OF GREEN GROWTH PEER-ASSITED LEARNING NETWORK (EGGPAL)
ECOZOOM
EDF PENÍNSULA IBÉRICA
EDISON ELECTRIC INSTITUTE
EFET
ENAGAS
ENECO ENERGY TRADE
ENERGIE AGENTUR.NRW
ENVIROFIT INTERNATIONAL
ENVIROMENTAL FINANCE
EURELECTRIC
EUROPEAN ENERGY EXCHANGE (EEX)
EUROPEAN INVESTMENT BANK
FACTOR CO2
FEDERAL MINISTRY FOR THE ENVIRONMENT, NA-TURE CONSERVATION, BUILDING AND NUCLEAR SAFETY (BMUB)
FEDERATION GERMAN INDUSTRY (BDI)
F
FERROVIAL
FIELD GIBSON MEDIA
FONAM PERU
FUNDACIÓN EMPRESA Y CLIMA
FUTURE CAMP CLIMATE
G
GAS NATURAL FENOSA
GENERALITAT DE CATALUNYA
GERMAN EMISSIONS TRADING AUTHORITY (DEHSt)
GLOBAL CCS INSTITUTE (GCCSI)
GREEN CLIMATE FUND (GCF)
GREENING KENYA INITIATIVE TRUST (GKIT)
H
HENERGY PUBLIKATIONEN GMBH
I
ICE FUTURES EUROPE
ICEX SPAIN TRADE AND INVESTMENT
ICIS TSCHACH SOLUTIONS
IETA
INCLAM CO2
INSTITUT DEVELOPPEMENT DURABLE ET RELATIONS INTERNATIONALES (IDDRI)
INTERNATIONAL CHAMBER OF COMMERCE (ICC)
INTERNATIONAL ENERGY AGENCY (IEA)
INTERNATIONAL INSTITUTE FOR SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT (IISD)
K
KEMCO
L
LEXXION VERLAGSGESELLSCHAFT MBH
M
MINISTRY OF ENVIRONMENT AND SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT – DEMOCRATIC REPUBLIC OF THE CONGO
MINISTRY OF ENVIRONMENT OF ECUADOR
N
NATIONAL COUNCIL FOR CC & CDM OF THE DOMINICAN REPUBLIC
NORDIC ENVIRONMENT FINANCE CORPORATION (NEFCO)
NOVADAYS
P
PERSPECTIVES CLIMATE CHANGE
PSA PEUGEOT – CITROËN
R
RENAULT
REPSOL
RTTC TV STUDIO
RWE
S
SAINT-GOBAIN
SCHNEIDER ELECTRIC
SENDECO2
SERVICE POUR LA SCIENCE ET LA TECHNOLOGIE – AMBASSADE DE FRANCE
SICASOFT
SOUTH POLE CARBON
SPANISH CLIMATE CHANGE OFFICE (MAGRAMA)
STATKRAFT
SUSTAINABLE AG
T
THAILAND GREENHOUSE GAS MANAGEMENT ORGANIZATION
THE BUSINESS CONCIL FOR SUSTAINABLE ENERGY
THE CARBON TRUST
THE GOLD STANDARD FOUNDATION
THE PARADIGM PROJECT
THE UNIVERSITY OF CAMBRIDGE
THE WORLD BANK GROUP
THE WORLD BANK GROUP – CF-ASSIST KNOWLEDGE CORNER
THOMSON REUTERS
U
UGANDA CARBON BUREAU
UNITED NATIONS FOUNDATION ON BEHALF OF GLOBAL ALLIANCE FOR CLEAN COOKSTOVES
UNITED NATIONS FRAMEWORK CONVENTION ON CLIMATE CHANGE
V
VCS (VERIFIED CARBON STANDARD)
W
WE MEAN BUSINESS
WINDPOWER NEPAL
WORLD BUSINESS COUNCIL FOR SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT (WBCSD)
B211
B202
B211
A104
-
A102
D208
B211
D210
D208
B220
B226
D210
A114
D208
D210
B231
D208
A100
D210
A131
B200
D208
D208
A127
B214
C310
B202
A115
A128
C310
B214
D208
D208
B211
A110
B202
C310
D210
D208
A106
A124
B211
B202
D208
B211
D210
C328
D208
B202
B210
C327
B202
D208
D208
C332
D210
C305
B211
A125
A101
B209
D208
D208
D208
D208
C301
D210
A228
A130
A133
A120
B211
B211
B214
B214
C300
A117
B202
B214
B214
B224
B214
D211
A129
B211
A112
-
B229
D208
D210
C310
C310
A101
B227
B233
A111
C331
C310
C303
B201
D208
C329
D208
EXHIBITORS EXHIBITORS EXHIBITORSBOOTH BOOTH BOOTH
42 CARBON EXPO • Trade Fair and Congress Guide
GOVERNMENT PARTNERS
BOOTH B202 FEDERAL MINISTRY FOR THE ENVIRONMENT, NATURE CONSERVATION, BUILDING AND NUCLEAR SAFETY (BMUB)
STRESEMANNSTRAßE 128-130, BERLIN10117, GERMANY
Phone: 49 (030) 18305-0
Email: [email protected]: www.bmub.bund.de/themen/klima-energie/emissionshandel/
The Federal Ministry for the Environment, Nature Conservation, Building and Nuclear Safety (BMUB) is within the Federal German government responsible for a wide range of environmental and building related issues. It comprises responsibilities for climate policy, nuclear safety, waste and resources, air pollution control and safety of chemicals, nature conservation, as well as urban planning and building.
In the field of climate change policies it deals with challenges on the national, European and international level. Supporting and further advancing the global carbon market in the context of a global climate regime is therefore a central issue. The Ministry’s mandate includes the provision of the German legal frame-work in Germany, cooperation with host countries, conceptual developments of the Clean Development Mechanism (CDM) and Joint Implementation (JI) as well as New Market Mechanisms and emission trading systems at European and international level.
The Federal Environment Ministry’s international cooperation on carbon markets focuses on one hand on large emerging economies with very high mitigation potentials, such as China and India. On the other hand, it cooperates with middle income countries in Middle East and North Africa and has a growing portfolio of activities in Least Developed Countries (LDCs), mostly in Sub-Saharan Africa. Activities range from the support for applying a reformed CDM in Least Devel-oped Countries to the conceptual development of New Market Mechanisms in upper middle income countries and emerging economies. BMUB supports the reform of the Clean Development Mechanism, inter alia through programmatic approaches and the standardization of approaches and baselines. It sees these advancements as important steps towards new and ambitious sectoral market mechanisms for climate change mitigation.
In this context, the German government is working to create networks with partner countries, the aim being to nurture close and regular contacts with govern-ment agencies, private sector representatives and other stakeholders. A wide range of bilateral projects both under the German government’s CDM/JI-Initiative and its International Climate Initiative (IKI) support this aim. On the multilateral level, BMUB is committed to bring the international negotiations for a Post-2015 climate change agreement forward, including on the specific modalities and procedures for new market mechanisms. Through its active membership in the multi-country Partnership for Market Readiness (PMR) it supports countries in developing and testing these new mechanisms.
43
GOVERNMENT PARTNERS
MINISTERIODE ECONOMÍAY COMPETITIVIDAD
BOOTH B211 ICEX SPAIN TRADE AND INVESTMENT
PASEO DE LA CASTELLANA 278,MADRID, 28046, MADRID, SPAIN
Phone: 34913491807
Email: [email protected]: www.icex.es
ICEX Spain Trade and Investment is a public business organization which works worldwide with the objective of promoting the internationalization of Spanish companies, such as companies working in climate change related sectors, in order to improve their competitiveness, as well as boosting foreign investment in Spain. ICEX offers its services through over 100 Economic and Commercial Offices worldwide, the largest foreign network, 31 Provincial and Territorial Trade Offices in Spain and 17 Business Centres abroad keeping close contact with Spanish companies. Every year, ICEX organizes around 1,200 promotional activities in foreign markets and answers over 90,000 queries on internationalization.
ICEX Spain Trade and Investment is deepening its efforts in the promotion of opportunities around climate change related sectors. In particular, ICEX´s objective is to serve as a catalyst to seize the opportunities for public-private alliances through the implementation of low carbon and climate related projects that countries are undertaking. ICEX is working with the Spanish private sector and national institutions responsible for the design and implementation of these projects to connect them with the financial and cooperation instruments and with the technological solutions offered by companies. Spanish companies are leaders and have a long tradition in most of the climate change related sectors, especially in engineering and consultancy, energy, clean transport, waste management etc. Information on Spanish companies working on climate change and low carbon related sectors will be offered at the Spanish Pavilion
44 CARBON EXPO • Trade Fair and Congress Guide
PLATINUM EXHIBITORS
BOOTH B220 BAKER & MCKENZIE
LEVEL 28, AMP BUILDING, 50 BRIDGE STREET,SYDNEY, NSW, 2000, AUSTRALIA
Phone: 61289225503
Email: [email protected]: www.bakermckenzie.com
Baker & McKenzie was the first law firm to recognise the importance of global efforts to address climate change, and the significance of related developments in law and policy for our clients. For more than seventeen years our lawyers have acted on numerous pioneering deals, including working on the first carbon contracts, the first carbon fund, the first structured derivate transaction and the first REDD project. From governments to financial and multilateral institutions — including the World Bank, Asian Development Bank, EU, and UN — we continue to advise the world’s climate change policy makers and market makers.
Our practice is driven by climate mitigation, environmental enhancement and the development of low carbon economies. We advise on programmes, projects and incentive schemes across global, regional and national economies for emissions reductions, clean and renewable energy, bio-energy, biodiversity enhance-ment and environmental infrastructure. Our legal expertise helps clients structure, finance, develop, implement, commercialise, monetise or comply with the economy-changing activities that these programmes, projects and incentive schemes are designed to deliver.
Examples of our recent work include working with governments to design and develop emissions trading schemes. we work with corporations and intuitions on compliance with emissions trading laws, on ground-breaking climate finance transactions, climate bonds avoided deforestation projects, post-2012 emission reduction projects, environmental markets trading agreements, carbon disputes, electric vehicle programmes and carbon capture and storage.
Our expertise is reflected by the quality of our clients and the quantity of our work-flow, earning us the “Top Legal Advisor on CDM/JI Projects by Number of Deals” award from Bloomberg New Energy Finance from 2007-2009. We are the only firm repeatedly recognised by Environmental Finance’s Market Survey as a legal leader in the carbon market, naming us the Best Law Firm for GHG Emissions Kyoto Project Credits (JI and CDM); Best Law Firm GHG Emissions Voluntary Markets; Best Law Firm GHG Emissions EU ETS; Best Law Firm GHG Emissions Australasian Markets; Best Law Firm GHG Emissions China; Best Law Firm: California; Best Law Firm: North American Markets in 2013. With our exhaustive knowledge and successful track record, Chambers Global Legal Directory has ranked our practice as the top global climate practice for the last seven years.
With unrivalled experience and knowledge, our team is able to assist regulators and institutions develop capacity-building tools and market infrastructure, including the United Nations Environment Program’s CDM and JI legal guidebooks (www.cdmrulebook.org and www.jirulebook.org respectively) and the EU Commission’s carbon trading registry. In 2008, we partnered with publishers CCH/Wolters Kluwer to produce the Emissions Trading and New Energy Global Law Guide, the world’s first online subscription service on emissions trading and new energy law (www.emissionstradingandnewenergy.com).
We employ a holistic approach to environmental markets transactions, combining our capabilities in securities, finance, tax, M&A and public law to ensure efficient solutions for our clients. Our global team collaborate seamlessly across borders and practices, delivering innovative yet pragmatic advice and helping first-to-market clients on creative and pioneering deals.
Our lawyers are involved in many other initiatives including the Renewable Energy and Energy Efficiency Partnership (REEEP), the Renewable Energy and International Law (REIL) Project and International Emissions Trading Association (IETA) and Australia’s Clean Energy Finance Corporation to name but a few.
Climate change issues know no boundaries. You need legal advisers whose knowledge and footprint span 77 locations in 47 countries. www.bakermckenzie.com/climatechange
45
PLATINUM EXHIBITORS
Repsol is an integrated oil and gas company based in Spain. The company has exploration and production projects in every continent, boasting one of the world’s fastest-growing portfolios in terms of production and refining assets that are amongst the most efficient in Europe. Repsol has for the last five years spent more on exploration per barrel produced than any of its competitors, resulting in an average reserve replacement ratio of almost 200% for the period. The company’s technology programs have resulted in world-class innovation in every area, from exploration and reserve modeling to the development of advanced fuels and lubricants.
Repsol has a workforce of 27,000 people, and operates projects on every continent with a total production of more than 650,000 barrels of oil equivalent per day. Repsol also operates five refineries in Spain and one in Peru, giving it a total distillation capacity of almost a million barrels a day. Repsol has a worldwide lubricants business and owns and operates service 4,600 stations in Southern Europe and Peru.
Repsol promotes a low carbon strategy, fostering initiatives that reduce energy intensity throughout the entire lifecycle of our products and therefore avoid greater emissions of greenhouse gases into the atmosphere.
This commitment is articulated through Repsol’s carbon strategy and the goal of reducing CO2 by 1.9 million tons for the period 2014-2020. The plan includes reducing energy intensity and emissions by developing energy efficiency and energy conservation actions and by continuing to search for sustainable business opportunities related to renewable generation and electric mobility. During 2014 Repsol has demonstrated its commitment to continuous improvement and has promoted actions that have reduced about 0.5 million tons of CO2 equivalent, all of them verified under the standard ISO 14064.
We believe the way forward involves operational excellence in energy terms, making it crucial to measure and track our carbon inventories and energy maps. Each year we verify our greenhouse gases inventories through an external company to meet the most demanding in quality and accuracy standards. In 2014 progress was made in CO2 emissions inventories, verifying about 98% of these emissions according to international standard ISO 14064.
Repsol continues to implement an Energy Management System at its facilities according to the requirements of the international standard ISO 50001. During 2014 the Upstream asset in Ecuador Block 16 has been certified, bringing the number of facilities currently certified to eight, while work continues on the progressive implementation of the system in all our different business units. This allows the company’s energy policy and vision to be formalised, as well as establishing and tracking short, medium and long-term goals and objectives, as part of a continuous improvement process.
Elsewhere, Repsol is working on understanding and reducing the greenhouse gases emissions of its products. In this vain, it is developing initiatives to quantify and verify carbon footprints under the ISO 14067 technical standard.
Repsol also continues different offsetting activities during 2014; these include offsetting the emissions from the shareholders’ Annual Meeting and those generated by the Repsol team in the MotoGP World Championship.
Repsol promotes electrical mobility through IBIL. We have more than 450 operational public and private charging points, and we continue to consolidate the fast-charging infrastructure for electric vehicles in Repsol Group service stations. As part of the CLIMA projects, we have managed to document reduction of CO2 emissions for the second consecutive year and the Repsol CLIMA Electric Car Project has been selected for the third consecutive year by the Ministry of Agriculture, Food and the Environment. During 2014, electrical mobility has been also incorporated to the Repsol paddock of Moto GP circuits, owing to the collaboration of Scutum (electric motorbike supplier) and of IBIL, which is responsible for managing the charging terminal. Repsol develops a corporate car-sharing program, a new and innovative form of mobility that allows for reducing the use of private vehicles. The 225 users registered in the service in 2014 have traveled more than 45,000 kilometers with no contaminant emissions.
BOOTH C300 REPSOL
MENDEZ ALVARO 44, MADRID28045, MADRID, SPAIN
Phone: 34917538100
Internet: www.repsol.com
46 CARBON EXPO • Trade Fair and Congress Guide
GOLD EXHIBITORS
Alstom is a global leader in the world of power generation, power transmission and rail infrastructure and sets the benchmark for innovative and environmentally friendly technologies. Alstom builds the fastest train and the highest capacity automated metro in the world, provides turnkey integrated power plant solutions and associated services for a wide variety of energy sources, including hydro, nuclear, gas, coal and wind, and it offers a wide range of solutions for power transmission, with a focus on smart grids. The Group employs 88,000 people in around 100 countries.
Gas Natural Fenosa is the largest integrated gas and electricity company in Spain and Latin America, with over22,652 employees throughout the world, where it is present in over 30 countries, has over 23 million customers and has assets amounting to over €50 billion. Gas Natural Fenosa is a benchmark operator in the Atlantic and Mediterranean basins, with an LNG and natural gas supply portfolio of 30 bcm. It is one of the largest global LNG operators, with a fleet of 9 LNG ships and holdings in 4 regasification plants in Spain, Chile and Puerto Rico.The Mission of Gas Natural Fenosa is to meet society’s energy needs, therefore providing our customers with quality services and products that are environmentally friendly and providing our shareholders with growing and sustainable returns.Its Vision is to be a leading energy and services group with continuous growth and a multinational presence, a group that is distinguished by providing its customers with excellent quality service, by providing its shareholders with sustainable returns, by providing our employees with broader opportunities for personal and professional development and by making a positive contribution to society through its commitment to global citizenry. The basis of our company’s business is in the regulated and deregulated gas and electricity markets, where it makes a growing contribution to international business activity.
The main areas in which we operate are the following:
• Gas supply and transport • Gas and electricity distribution • Electricity generation • Gas and electricity commercialisation
ALSTOM
3 AVENUE ANDRE MALRAUX,92300, LEVALLOIS PERRET, FRANCE
Phone: 33141492000
Email: [email protected]: www.alstom.com
BOOTH B210 GAS NATURAL FENOSA
PLAÇA DEL GAS 1, BARCELONA,08003, BARCELONA, SPAIN
Phone: 34934025100
Internet: www.gasnatural.com
47
GOLD EXHIBITORS
ICIS Tschach Solutions provides information and intelligence to the carbon markets, utilizing a unique combination of quantitative and qualitative research as well as expert opinion to deliver detailed insight into emissions and carbon trading schemes. Our Timing Impact Model is the cornerstone of our analysis. It provides clients with a more rounded perspective than conventional approaches and helps create a competitive advantage for them. We offer products covering the EU, California/Quebec, RGGI, China and South Korea carbon markets.
In the EU market, ICIS offers the EU ETS Portal, providing our complete suite of tools designed to help traders, analysts and risk managers interpret the impact of policy and regulatory developments while identifying risks and opportunities in the market. ICIS also offers the EU ETS Insight, providing the highlights of the ICIS EU carbon market analysis. It is ideal for stakeholders who need to stay in touch with key developments in the EU ETS and want to have an overview of the market impact of those developments. ICIS offers up-to-date news and analysis in each market ICIS participates in, equipping you with a clear understanding of the market impact.
ICIS has more than 30 years’ of experience in providing pricing information, news, analysis and consulting to buyers, sellers and analysts in the energy, chemicals and fertilizers markets. With a global staff of more than 800, ICIS has employees based in Houston, Washington, New York, London, Montpellier, Dusseldorf, Karlsruhe, Milan, Mumbai, Singapore, Guangzhou, Beijing, Shanghai, Yantai, Tokyo and Perth. ICIS is a division of Reed Business Information, part of Reed Elsevier Plc.
BOOTH A125 ICIS TSCHACH SOLUTIONS
QUADRANT HOUSE, THE QUADRANTSUTTON, SM2 5AS UK, UNITED KINGDOM
Phone: 442086523335
Email: [email protected]: www.icis.com
48 CARBON EXPO • Trade Fair and Congress Guide
AitherCO2 is a provider of financial services to the world’s environmental and energy markets offering consultancy and trading solutions to companies subject to compliance in the EU ETS as well as in the voluntary sector. We assist our clients dealing with administration, deadlines, registries, regulation changes and balance sheet optimization of allocated units.We provide market access to our clients on the regulated exchanges and on the OTC as well through our vast counterparty network.AitherCO2 is also active in energy efficiency being the first operator in Italy in relation to volumes exchanged and number of clients. We follow the whole process from project inception up to the final stage of trading the certificates on the market platform.AitherCO2 is leader in the aviation sector having organized the first Italian conference about air carriers in CO2 market and it’s been the first company to sign a contract for carbon services and consultancy with a commercial airline in Italy.
The Global Alliance for Clean Cookstoves (Alliance) is a public-private partnership, hosted by the United Nations Foundation, with a mission to save lives, improve livelihoods, empower women, and protect the environment by creating a thriving global market for clean and efficient household cooking solutions. The Alliance’s ten-year goal calls for 100 million households to adopt cleaner and more efficient cookstoves and fuels by 2020. We are working in collaboration with over 1000 partners to help overcome the market barriers that hinder the production, distribution, and adoption of clean cookstoves and fuels in the developing world. The Alliance supports the use of carbon finance to fund the adoption of clean cooking solutions at scale. The sale of carbon offsets can generate significant revenue for clean cookstove and fuels businesses, providing options for keeping prices low for consumers. In addition to providing a commercial pathway to generate revenues to scale clean cookstove and fuels distribution, carbon finance incentivizes monitoring, increased usage and adoption, as well as fostering improvements in fuel efficiency and durability.
BOOTH C310 UNITED NATIONS FOUNDATION ON BEHALF OF GLOBAL ALLIANCE FOR CLEAN COOKSTOVES
1750 PENNSYLVANIA AVENUE NW, SUITE 300WASHINGTON, DC, 20006, UNITED STATES
Phone: 12028645469
Email: [email protected]: www.cleancookstoves.org
SILVER EXTRA VISIBILITY EXHIBITOR
BOOTH A104 AITHER CO2
VIA TRIVULZIO, 320146 MILAN, ITALY
Phone: 390236586600
Email: [email protected]: www.aitherco2.com
49
EXHIBITORS
BOOTH B211
BOOTH B211
BOOTH B202
BOOTH A104
ACCIONA ENERGÍA
AVDA. CIUDAD DE LA INNOVACION 5SARRIGUREN, 31621, NAVARRA, SPAIN
Phone: 34948006000
Email: [email protected]: www.acciona-energia.com
AENOR
GENOVA 6 MADRID, 28004MADRID, SPAIN
Phone: 34914326000
Email: [email protected]: www.aenor.es
ADELPHI CONSULT GMBH
Caspar-Theyss-Strasse 14a14193 Berlin
Phone: 49308900068
Email: [email protected]: www.adelphi.de
AITHER CO2
VIA TRIVULZIO, 320146 MILAN, ITALY
Phone: 390236586600
Email: [email protected]: www.aitherco2.com
ALSTOM
3 AVENUE ANDRE MALRAUX,92300, LEVALLOIS PERRET, FRANCE
Phone: 33141492000 Email: [email protected]
Internet: www.alstom.com
50 CARBON EXPO • Trade Fair and Congress Guide
EXHIBITORS
BOOTH B211
BOOTH B220
BOOTH B226
BOOTH D210
APPLUS+ CERTIFICATION
CAMPUS UAB .BELLATERRA (BARCELONA), 08193BARCELONA, SPAIN
Phone: 34935672008
Email: [email protected]: www.appluscertification.com
BAKER & MCKENZIE
LEVEL 28, AMP BUILDING, 50 BRIDGE STREET,SYDNEY, NSW, 2000, AUSTRALIA
Phone: 61289225503
Email: [email protected]: www.bakermckenzie.com
BELEKTRON
V KARLOVCE 33/A PODMOLNIKLJUBLJANA, 1261, ESLOVENIA
Phone: 38616208854
Email: [email protected]: www.belektron.si
BLOOMBERG NEW ENERGY FINANCE
39-45 FINSBURY SQUAREEC2A 1PQ, LONDON, UK
Phone: +44 203 216 4700
Email: [email protected]: www.about.bnef.com
BOOTH A102 ALTHELIA ECOSPHERE
115 BAKER STREET, LONDON - GREATER LONDON,W1U 6RT, UNITED KINGDOM
Phone: 442072299551
Email: [email protected]: www.althelia.com
51
EXHIBITORS
BOOTH A114 CAF - DEVELOPMENT BANK OF LATIN AMERICA
AV. LUIS ROCHE, TORRE CAF, ALTAMIRA,CARACAS, 69011, VENEZUELA
Phone: 582122092147
Email: [email protected]: www.caf.com
BOOTH D210
BOOTH B231
BOOTH B208
BOOTH A100
CARBON CREDIT CAPITAL
561 BROADWAY, SUITE 6ANEW YORK, USA 10012
Phone: +1 212 925 5697
Email: [email protected]: www.carboncreditcapital.com
CARBON GREEN AFRICA
32, DOMBOSHAWA ROAD, HELENSVALE,HARARE, ZIMBABWE
Phone: 263774567729
Email: [email protected]: www.carbongreenafrica.net
CARBON MARKET INSTITUTE (CMI)
LEVEL 1, 486 ALBERT STREETEAST MELBOURNE VIC 3002 AUSTRALIA
Phone: +61 3 9245 0900
Email: [email protected] Internet: www.carbonmarketinstitute.org
CARBON TRADE EXCHANGE
LEVEL 6, 50 KING STREETSYDNEY, 2000, AUSTRALIA
Phone: 61280903434
Email: [email protected]: www.ctxglobal.com
52 CARBON EXPO • Trade Fair and Congress Guide
EXHIBITORS
BOOTH A131
BOOTH B200
BOOTH A127
BOOTH B214
CLIMATE INVESTMENT FUND - WBG
1818 H STREET NW,WASHINGTON, DC, 20433, USA
Phone: 12024734486
Email: [email protected]: www.climateinvestmentfunds.org
CLIMATE RESOURCES EXCHANGE
MATACCA CENTRE, 20 MALACCA STREET, 07-00SINGAPORE, 043979, SINGAPURE
Phone: 6593840166
Email: [email protected]: www.climateresources.net
CONESTOGA-ROVERS & ASSOCIATES
651 COLBY DRIVE, WATERLOO, ONTARIO,N2V 1C2, CANADA
Phone: 15198840510
Email: [email protected]: www.craworld.com
COP21 PARIS
5 PRESCOT STREET LONDON,E1 8PA, UNITED KINGDOM
Phone: 442078710173
Email: [email protected]: www.cop21paris.org
BOOTH D210 CITIES TODAY
PFD PUBLICATIONS LTD.,165 THE BROADWAYLONDON SW19 1NE, UNITED KINGDOM
Phone: +44 203 286 5209
Email: [email protected]: www.cities-today.com
53
EXHIBITORS
BOOTH C310 DELAGUA HEALTH
THE OLD DAIRY, LOWER FYFIELD S/NMALBOROUGH, SN81PY, UNITED KINGDOM
Phone: 441672861198
Email: [email protected]: www.delagua.org
BOOTH A115
BOOTH C310
BOOTH A128
ECOACT
RUE DES PEUPLIERS 63BISBOULOGNE-BILLANCOURT, 92100, FRANCE
Phone: 33183640870
Email: [email protected]: www.eco-act.com
ECOZOOM
209/362 LEANA ROAD S/NNAIROBI, 00100, KENYA
Phone: 14233147306
Email: [email protected]: www.ecozoomstove.com
ECONOMICS OF GREEN GROWTH PEER-ASSITED LEARNING NETWORK (EGGPAL)
1818 H STREET, WASHINGTON, 20433,UNITED STATES
Phone: 12024735343
Phone: 1 (202) 4735343Email: [email protected]
BOOTH B202 DEUTSCHE GESELLSCHAFT FÜR INTERNATIONALE ZUSAMMENARBEIT (GIZ)
FRIEDRICH-EBERT-ALLEE 40BONN, 53113, GERMANY
Phone: 496196791224
Email: [email protected]: www.giz.de
54 CARBON EXPO • Trade Fair and Congress Guide
EXHIBITORS
BOOTH A110
BOOTH B202
BOOTH C310
ENECO ENERGY TRADE
MARTEN MEESWEG 5, ROTTERDAM - ZUID,3068 AV, NETHERLANDS
Phone: 31651705738
Email: [email protected]: www.eneco2.com
ENERGIE AGENTUR.NRW
ROBSTR 92, DUSSELDORF,40476, GERMANY
Phone: 4921186642281
Email: [email protected] Internet: www.energieagentur.nrw.de
ENVIROFIT INTERNATIONAL
109 NORTH COLLEGE AVENUE SUITE 200,FORT COLLINS, COLORADO, 80526, UNITED STATES
Phone: 19703722874
Email: [email protected]: www.envirofit.org
BOOTH B211
BOOTH B214
ENAGAS
PASEO DE LOS OLMOS 19MADRID, 28005, MADRID, SPAIN
Phone: 34917099508
Email: [email protected]: www.enagas.es
EDF PENÍNSULA IBÉRICA
CALLE VELÁZQUEZ, 150, 3ª DERECHA,28002, MADRID, SPAIN
Phone: 34911 250 829
Email: [email protected]: www.feniceiberica.es
55
EXHIBITORS
BOOTH A106 EUROPEAN ENERGY EXCHANGE (EEX)
AUGUSTUSPLATZ 9, LEIPZIG, 04109, GERMANY
Phone: 4934121560
Email: [email protected] Internet: www.eex.com
BOOTH A124 EUROPEAN INVESTMENT BANK
BOULEVARD KONRAD ADENAUER 98-100,LUXEMBOURG, 2950, LUXEMBURG
Phone: 352437922000
Email: [email protected] Internet: www.eib.org
BOOTH B211
BOOTH B202
BOOTH B211
FACTOR CO2
CALLE COLON DE LARREATEGUI 26 1º, BILBAO48009, BIZKAIA, SPAIN
Phone: 34944240563
Email: [email protected]: www.factorco2.com
FEDERAL MINISTRY FOR THE ENVIRONMENT, NATURE CONSERVATION, BUILDING AND NUCLEAR SAFETY (BMUB)
STRESEMANNSTRAßE 128-130, BERLIN10117, GERMANY
Phone: 49 (030) 18305-0
Email: [email protected]: www.bmub.bund.de/themen/klima-energie/emissionshandel/
FERROVIAL
QUINTANAVIDES 21, MADRID28050, MADRID, SPAIN
Phone: 34915862500
Internet: www.ferrovial.com
56 CARBON EXPO • Trade Fair and Congress Guide
EXHIBITORS
BOOTH B202
BOOTH B210
BOOTH C327
FUTURE CAMP CLIMATE
ASCHAUER STR. 30, MÜNCHEN81549, GERMANY
Phone: 49894522670
Email: [email protected]: www.future-camp.de
GAS NATURAL FENOSA
PLAÇA DEL GAS 1, BARCELONA,08003, BARCELONA, SPAIN
Phone: 34934025100
Internet: www.gasnatural.com
GENERALITAT DE CATALUNYA
AVDA. DE JOSEP TARRADELLAS 2-4-6,BARCELONA, 08029, BARCELONA, SPAIN
Phone: 34934958000
Email: [email protected]: www.gencat.cat
BOOTH C328
BOOTH D210
FONAM PERU
2657 GARCILASO DE LA VEGALIMA, PERU
Phone: 514496200
Email: [email protected]: www.fonamperu.org
FIELD GIBSON MEDIA
THAMES HOUSE, 18 PARK STREETLONDON, SE1 9EL, UK
Phone: +44 203 651 7216
Email: [email protected] Internet: www.environmental-finance.com
57
EXHIBITORS
BOOTH B202 GERMAN EMISSIONS TRADING AUTHORITY (DEHST)
BISMARCKPLATZ 1, BERLIN14193, GERMANY
Phone: 403089035050
Email: [email protected]: www.dehst.de
MINISTERIODE ECONOMÍAY COMPETITIVIDAD
BOOTH C332
BOOTH D210
BOOTH C305
BOOTH B211
GREENING KENYA INITIATIVE TRUST (GKIT)
P.O. BOX 40168, NAIROBI00100, KENYA
Phone: 254722984992
Email: [email protected]
HENRICH PUBLIKATIONEN GMBH
TALHOFSTRASSE 24 B82205 GILCHING
Phone: +49 8105 3853-37
Email: [email protected] Internet:www.energiespektrum.de; www.verlag-henrich.de
ICE FUTURES EUROPE
CHISWELL STREET 60LONDON EC1Y 4SA, UNITED KINGDOM
Phone: 442070657755
Email: [email protected]: www.theice.com
ICEX SPAIN TRADE AND INVESTMENT
PASEO DE LA CASTELLANA 278,MADRID, 28046, MADRID, SPAIN
Phone: 34913491807
Email: [email protected]: www.icex.es
58 CARBON EXPO • Trade Fair and Congress Guide
EXHIBITORS
BOOTH A101
BOOTH B209
BOOTH C301
BOOTH A228
IETA
24, RUE MERLE D’AUBIGNE, GENEVE1207, SWITZERLAND
Phone: 41227370502
Email: [email protected]: www.ieta.org
INCLAM CO2
CALLE SAMARIA 4, MADRID28009, MADRID, SPAIN
Phone: 34915749107
Email: [email protected]: www.inclam.com
KEMCO
388, POEUN-DAERO, SUJI-GU, YONGIN-SI,GYEONGGI, 449-994, REPUBLIC OF KOREA
Phone: 82312604882
Email: [email protected]: www.kemco.or.kr
MINISTRY OF ENVIRONMENT AND SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENTDEMOCRATIC REPUBLIC OF THE CONGO
15, PAPA LLEO C/ GOMBEKINSHASA, CONGO
Phone: 243999989917
Email: [email protected]: www.medd.gouv.cd/v2
BOOTH A125 ICIS TSCHACH SOLUTIONS
QUADRANT HOUSE, THE QUADRANTSUTTON, SM2 5AS UK, UNITED KINGDOM
Phone: 442086523335
Email: [email protected]: www.icis.com
59
EXHIBITORS
BOOTH A130 MINISTRY OF ENVIRONMENT OF ECUADOR
MADRID 1159 Y ANDALUCIA, PICHINCHA (QUITO)170517, ECUADOR
Phone: 59323987600
Internet: www.ambiente.gob.ec
BOOTH A133
BOOTH A120
BOOTH B211
BOOTH B211
NATIONAL COUNCIL FOR CC & CDM OF THE DOMINICAN REPUBLIC
AV. WINSTON CHURCHILL 77 EDIF.GRUCOMSA, 5TO PISO,DISTRINO NACIONAL (SANTO DOMINGO), 10205, DOMINICAN REPUBLIC
Phone: 8094720537
Email: [email protected]: www.cambioclimatico.gob.do
NORDIC ENVIRONMENT FINANCE CORPORATION (NEFCO)
FABIANINKATU 34 P.O.BOX 249,HELSINKI, FI 00171, FINLAND
Phone: 35810618003
Email: [email protected]: www.nefco.org
NOVADAYS
AVENIDA DE MANOTERAS 32 (EDIFICIO B), MADRID28050, MADRID, SPAIN
Phone: 34917672167
Email: [email protected]: www.novadays.es
PERSPECTIVES CLIMATE CHANGE
PINTOR APARICIO 16 B 3º 1ª. ALICANTE03003, ALICANTE, SPAIN
Phone: 34966083216
Email: [email protected]: www.perspectives.cc
60 CARBON EXPO • Trade Fair and Congress Guide
EXHIBITORS
BOOTH B214
BOOTH C300
BOOTH B202
BOOTH B214
RENAULT
AVENIDA DE BURGOS 89, MADRID28050, MADRID, SPAIN
Phone: 34913741084
Email: [email protected]: www.renault.es
REPSOL
MENDEZ ALVARO 44, MADRID28045, MADRID, SPAIN
Phone: 34917538100
Internet: www.repsol.com
RWE
ZENTRALER RECHUNGSEINGANG,TRIER54189, GERMANY
Phone: 492011220242
Email: [email protected]: www.rwe.com/carbon
SAINT-GOBAIN
PRINCIPE DE VERGARA, 132, MADRID28002, MADRID, SPAIN
Phone: 34913972000
Email: [email protected]: www.saint-gobain.es
BOOTH B214 PSA PEUGEOT – CITROËN
PUERTO DE SOMPORT 8, MADRID28050, MADRID, SPAIN
Phone: 34915851234
Email: [email protected]: www.madrid.psa-peugeot-citroen.com
61
EXHIBITORS
BOOTH B214 SCHNEIDER ELECTRIC
BAC DE RODA 52 EDIF A, BARCELONA08019, BARCELONA, SPAIN
Phone: 34934843100
Internet: www.schneider-electric.com/es
BOOTH B224
BOOTH B214
BOOTH A129
SENDECO2
PASSEIG DE GRACIA 19 3RD FLOOR, BARCELONA08007, BARCELONA, SPAIN
Phone: 34932414723
Email: [email protected]: www.sendeco2.com
SERVICE POUR LA SCIENCE ET LA TECHNOLOGIE – AMBASSADE DE FRANCE
MARQUES DE LA ENSENADA 10, MADRID, 28004,MADRID, SPAIN
Phone: 34917007755
Email: [email protected]: www.ambafrance-es.org
SOUTH POLE CARBON
TECHNOPARKSTRASSE 1, ZURICH8005, SWITZERLAND
Phone: 41435013550
Email: [email protected]: www.southpolecarbon.com
BOOTH B211 SICASOFT
CALVO SOTELO 19 BAJOA CORUÑA, 15004, A CORUÑA, SPAIN
Phone: 34981160310
Email: [email protected]: www.sicasoft.com
62 CARBON EXPO • Trade Fair and Congress Guide
EXHIBITORS
BOOTH A112
BOOTH B229
BOOTH C310
BOOTH C310
STATKRAFT
GUSTAV MAHLERPLEIN 100, NOORD HOLLAND (AMSTERDAM)1082 MA, NETHERLANDS
Phone: 31207957800
Email: [email protected]: www.statkraft.com
THAILAND GREENHOUSE GAS MANAGEMENT ORGANIZATION
THE GOVERNMENT COMPLEX, BUILDING B, 9TH FLOOR, CHAENGWATTANA RD.,BANGKOK (LAKSI), 10210, THAILAND
Phone: 6621419790
Email: [email protected]: www.tgo.or.th
THE GOLD STANDARD FOUNDATION
AVENUE LOUIS CASAI 79, GENEVA-COINTRIN1216, SWITZERLAND
Phone: 41227887080
Email: [email protected]: www.goldstandard.org
THE PARADIGM PROJECT
165 PINEWOOD LOOP S/N, MONUMENT80132, UNITED STATES
Phone: 7194330639
Email: [email protected]: www.theparadigmproject.org
MINISTERIODE AGRICULTURA, ALIMENTACIÓNY MEDIO AMBIENTE
GOBIERNODE ESPAÑA
BOOTH B211 SPANISH CLIMATE CHANGE OFFICE (MAGRAMA)
PLAZA SAN JUAN DE LA CRUZ S/N, MADRID28071, MADRID, SPAIN
Phone: 34914361546
Email: [email protected]: www.magrama.gob.es
63
EXHIBITORS
BOOTH A101 THE UNIVERSITY OF CAMBRIDGE
1 TRUMPINGTON STREET,CAMBRIDGE, CB2 1QA, UNITED KINGDOM
Phone: 4401223768850
Email: [email protected]: www.cisl.cam.ac.uk
BOOTH B227
BOOTH A111
BOOTH B233
BOOTH C331
THE WORLD BANK GROUP
1818 H STREET NW WHASHINGTONDC, 20433, USA
Phone: 1 202-473-6231
Email: [email protected]: www.worldbank.org
THOMSON REUTERS
30 SOUTH COLONNADE, LONDONE14 5EP, UNITED KINGDOM
Phone: 447990565790
Email: [email protected]: www.thomsonreuters.com
THE WORLD BANK GROUP – CF-ASSIST KNOWLEDGE CORNER
1818 H STREET NWWASHINGTON, DC 20433, USA
Phone: 1 202-473-6231
Email: [email protected]: www.worldbank.org/climatechange
UGANDA CARBON BUREAU
PLOT 15 LUBOWA ESTATE , BOX 70480KAMPALA,UGANDA
Phone: 256752644611
Internet: www.ugandacarbon.org
64 CARBON EXPO • Trade Fair and Congress Guide
EXHIBITORS
BOOTH B201
BOOTH C329
VCS (VERIFIED CARBON STANDARD)
ONE THOMAS CIRCLE, NW, SUITE 1050WASHINGTON, D.C., 20005, UNITED STATES
Phone: 2024705670
Email: [email protected]: www.vcs.org
WINDPOWER NEPAL
JHAMSHIKEL 2, LALITPUR (BAGMATI)00977, NEPAL
Phone: 0097715524646
Email: [email protected]: www.windpowernepal.com
BOOTH C310
BOOTH C303
UNITED NATIONS FOUNDATION ON BEHALF OF GLOBAL ALLIANCE FOR CLEAN COOKSTOVES
1750 PENNSYLVANIA AVENUE NW, SUITE 300WASHINGTON, DC, 20006, UNITED STATES
Phone: 12028645469
Email: [email protected]: www.cleancookstoves.org
UNFCCC
UN CAMPUS, PLATZ DER VEREINTEN, NATIONEN 1BONN, 53113, GERMANY
Phone: 492288151000
Email: [email protected]: www.unfccc.int
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MEDIA PARTNERS
ARGUS MEDIA LTD.
ARGUS HOUSE 175, ST. JOHN STREETEC1V 4LW LONDON, UNITED KINGDOM
Phone: +44 207 780 420
Email: [email protected] Internet:www.argusmedia.com
BLOOMBERG NEW ENERGY FINANCE
39-45 FINSBURY SQUAREEC2A 1PQ, LONDON, UK
Phone: +44 203 216 4700
Email: [email protected] Internet: www.about.bnef.com
CARBON CREDIT CAPITAL
561 BROADWAY, SUITE 6ANEW YORK, USA 10012
Phone: +1 212 925 5697
Email: [email protected] Internet: www.carboncreditcapital.com
THE CARBON TRUST
DORSET HOUSE, 27-45 STAMFORD STREETLONDON SE1 9NT, UK
Phone: +1 44 20 7170 7000
Email: [email protected] Internet: www.carbontrust.com
CITIES TODAY
PFD PUBLICATIONS LTD.,165 THE BROADWAYLONDON SW19 1NE, UNITED KINGDOM
Phone: +44 203 286 5209
Email: [email protected] Internet: www.cities-today.com
66 CARBON EXPO • Trade Fair and Congress Guide
MEDIA PARTNERS
HENRICH PUBLIKATIONEN GMBH
TALHOFSTRASSE 24 B82205 GILCHING
Phone: +49 8105 3853-37
Email: [email protected] Internet:www.energiespektrum.de; www.verlag-henrich.de
LEXXION VERLAGSGESELLSCHAFT MBH
GÜNTZELSTR. 6310717 BERLIN
Phone: +49 30-814506-23
Email: [email protected] Internet: www.lexxion.de
THOMSON REUTERS
30 SOUTH COLONNADECANARY WHARF, E14SEP UNITED KINGDOM
Phone: +44 20 75427284
Email: [email protected] Internet: www.thomsonreuters.com
FIELD GIBSON MEDIA
THAMES HOUSE, 18 PARK STREETLONDON, SE1 9EL, UK
Phone: +44 203 651 7216
Email: [email protected] Internet: www.environmental-finance.com
67
SUPPORTING ORGANIZATIONS
AMERICAN CARBON REGISTRY (ACR)
2121 CRYSTAL DRIVE, SUITE 500ARLINGTON, VA 22202
Phone: +1 703-302-6500
Email: [email protected] Internet: www.americancarbonregistry.org
“AIR TRANSPORT ACTION GROUP (ATAG)
33 ROUTE DE L’AÉROPORT1215 GENEVA 15 AIRPORT, SWITZERLAND
Phone: +41 22 770 2672
Email: [email protected] Internet: www.atag.org
THE BUSINESS COUNCIL FOR SUSTAINABLE ENERGY (BCSE)
505 9TH STREET NW SUITE 800WASHINGTON, DC, USA 20004
Phone: +1 202-785-0507
Email: Internet: www.bcse.org
CARBON MARKET INSTITUTE (CMI)
LEVEL 1, 486 ALBERT STREETEAST MELBOURNE VIC 3002 AUSTRALIA
Phone: +61 3 9245 0900
Email: [email protected] Internet: www.carbonmarketinstitute.org
CLIMATE ACTION RESERVE (CAR)
601 WEST 5TH STREET, SUITE 650LOS ANGELES, CA 90071
Phone: +1 213-891-1444
Email: [email protected] Internet: www.climateactionreserve.org
68 CARBON EXPO • Trade Fair and Congress Guide
SUPPORTING ORGANIZATIONS
CLIMATECONNECT
207 REGENT STREETLONDON W1B 3HH, UNITED KINGDOM
Phone: +44 207 193 8996
Email: [email protected] Internet: www.climate-connect.com
CLIMATE TECHNOLOGY CENTER AND NETWORK (CTCN)
CTCN, UN CITY, MARMORVEJ 51, 2100 COPENHAGEN, DENMARK
Phone: +45 4533 5372
Email: [email protected] Internet: www.ctc-n.org
EDISON ELECTRIC INSTITUTE
701 PENNSYLVANIA AVENUE, N.W.WASHINGTON, D.C. 20004-2696
Phone: +1 202-508-5000
Email: [email protected] Internet: www.eei.org
EURELECTRIC
BLD DE L’IMPERATRICE 661000 BRUSSELS, BELGIUM
Phone: +32 2 515 10 00
Email: [email protected] Internet: www.eurelectric.org
EUROPEAN FEDERATION OF ENERGY TRADERS (EFET)
AMSTELVEENSEWEG 9981081 JS AMSTERDAM, THE NETHERLANDS
Email:[email protected] Internet: www.efet.org
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SUPPORTING ORGANIZATIONS
FEDERATION GERMAN INDUSTRY (BDI)
BREITE STRASSE 2910178 BERLIN, GERMANY
Phone: +49 30 2028-0
Email: [email protected] Internet: www.bdi.eu
FUNDACIÓN EMPRESA Y CLIMA
FUNDACIÓN EMPRESA & CLIMAC/ MALLORCA, 277, 4º - A, 08037 BARCELONA
Phone: +93 004 75 17
Email: [email protected] Internet: www.empresaclima.org
GLOBAL CCS INSTITUTE (GCCSI)
LEVEL 6, 707 COLLINS STREET DOCKLANDS VIC 3008 AUSTRALIA
Phone: +61 3 8620 7300
Email: [email protected] Internet: www.globalccsinstitute.com
GREEN CLIMATE FUND (GCF)
20-22 BEDFORD ROWLONDON WC1J 4JS UNITED KINGDOM
Phone: +82 32 458 6059
Email: [email protected] Internet: http://news.gcfund.org/
INSTITUT DEVELOPPEMENT DURABLE ET RELATIONS INTERNATIONALES (IDDRI)
27 RUE SAINT-GUILLAUME 75337 PARIS CEDEX 07 - FRANCE
Phone: +33 1 45 49 76 60
Email: [email protected] Internet: www.iddri.org
70 CARBON EXPO • Trade Fair and Congress Guide
SUPPORTING ORGANIZATIONS
INTERNATIONAL CHAMBER OF COMMERCE (ICC)
38 COURS ALBERT 1ER75008 PARIS, FRANCE
Phone: +33 149 53 28 28
Email: [email protected] Internet: www.iccwbo.org
INTERNATIONAL ENERGY AGENCY (IEA)
9, RUE DE LA FÉDÉRATION75739 PARIS CEDEX 15
Phone: +33 1 40 57 65 00
Email: [email protected] Internet: www.iea.org
INTERNATIONAL INSTITUTE FOR SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT (IISD)
INTERNATIONAL ENVIRONMENT HOUSE 29 CHEMIN DE BALEXERT, 1219 CHÂTELAINE
Phone: +41 022 917 86 83
Email: [email protected] Internet: www.iisd.org
THE PRINCE OF WALES’S CORPORATE LEADERS GROUP (CLG)
1 TRUMPINGTON STREET CAMBRIDGE, CB2 1QA, UK
Phone: +44 1223 76885
Email: [email protected] Internet: www.cisl.cam.ac.uk
UNFCCC
UN CAMPUS, PLATZ DER VEREINTEN, NATIONEN 1BONN, 53113, GERMANY
Phone: 492288151000
Email: [email protected]: www.unfccc.int
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SUPPORTING ORGANIZATIONS
WE MEAN BUSINESS
2ND FLOOR, RIVERSIDE BUILDING, COUNTY HALL, BELVEDERE RD LONDON, SE1 7PB, UK
Phone: +44 7734 399994
Email: [email protected] Internet: www.wemeanbusinesscoalition.org
WORLD BUSINESS COUNCIL FOR SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT (WBCSD)
MAISON DE LA PAIX CHEMIN EUGÈNE-RIGOT2CASE POSTALE 246 CH-1211. GENEVA 21
Phone: +41 (22) 839 3100
Email: [email protected] Internet: www.wbcsd.org/home.aspx
72 CARBON EXPO • Trade Fair and Congress Guide
“MEET THE CARBON & ENERGY MARKET” Evening Reception
The Unique CARBON EXPO 2015 Party
On the first day of CARBON EXPO, exhibitors and visitors traditionallycelebrate the beginning of the Trade Fair and Conference together anduse the evening to go on exchanging information and networking in arelaxed atmosphere.
This year, the “Meet the Carbon & Energy Market” is returning to theMNAC (Museu Nacional d’Art de Catalunya), one of the mostemblematic spaces of Barcelona with a panoramic view of the city. This is a spectacular venue conveniently located minutes walking distance from the CARBON EXPO 2015 Montjuic grounds.
How to arrive:
On foot:From Hall 5 – Palau de CongressosAv. Rius i Taulet- turn right to Av. Maria Cristina and go straightby the escalator up to the museum.
From Plaça Espanya Av. Maria Cristina – go straight by the escalator up to the museum.
MNAC(Museu Nacional d'Art de Catalunya)
Tuesday 26th, 20:00h
MNAC (Museu Nacional d’Art de Catalunya)
Palau Nacional, Parc de Montjuïc, Barcelona
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YOUR NOTES
74 CARBON EXPO • Trade Fair and Congress Guide
YOUR NOTES
75
YOUR NOTES
We would like to thank all sponsor partners who help make this event a success:
26-28 May 2015Barcelona, Spain
Jointly oraginzed by:
Our Government Sponsors:
MINISTERIODE ECONOMÍAY COMPETITIVIDAD
Our Platinum Sponsors:
Our Gold Sponsors: