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This page outlines item 1 ("Develop a taxonomy of available climate action-related standards in a way relevant to the mission of the CA2SIG") of the scope of the Hyperledger CA2SIG Standards Working Group.

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  • Understanding the physical processes
  • Taking / allocating responsibility for contributions to climate change (regulation and offsetting is a are special case cases of this)
  • Choose between alternative courses of action based on the foreseen outcomes

Classification according to objectives

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A preliminary conceptual map following this approach is being developed at:  https://kumu.io/cjpauw/climate-change-standards#impact-pathway-approach/transactions

Interoperability

Comparing across positions on the impact pathway is difficult (although not in principle inconceivable). It is, for example, difficult to directly compare an action related to a pressure (direct emission like driving  driving a car or operating a power stationstation (a pressure in the DPSEEA framework presented above) with an action aimed at changing the actions of others (such as implementing a policy, providing an incentive or providing information). The

In the DPSEEA framework, the first type of activity resorts under Pressures while the second addresses Drivers.  

As such it is difficult to compare these two actions directly.  Standard can help making difficult comparisons sich as these easier and consistent between cases (or al least point out what can be compared and what not).  

What is standardised in climate mitigation standards?

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  •  Complete.

Activities and events

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Agency

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Counterfactuals

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  •  [Tom comment: ISO produces many types of standards-related products, however it is mainly known as an SDO that creates auditable  standards for conformity assessment. Such standards are typically relatively short (e.g. 20 pages). In contrast, the GHG Corporate Protocol (2001), which was followed by a suite of GHGPs, started as a "how to guidebook" that are typically relatively long (e.g. 100+ pages). In 2005, the GHGP adopted ISO-style language and requirements content to complement the guidance content. In addition to differentiating protocols and standards (there are several types of standards), CDM Methodologies  and IPCC Guidelines  are additional variations of "standards"]

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