- Created by Martin Wainstein, last modified by Alex Ivan Howard on Jun 02, 2022
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Mission
The mission and goals of the Climate Action and Accounting SIG include "to turn this network into action under a common open source project that defines shared protocols, standards, and platform tools for a globally integrated climate accounting system to be operationalized."
This working group will focus particularly on the "protocols and standards" that will enable consistent climate accounting.
Work plan for 2022
We coordinate most of the work for this working group through the biweekly Standards WG call. The work plan for the year is set out in this document. The most practical way to get involved is to join this call. Please check the calendar for the next call.
The 2022 work plan involves four phases:
A. Conceptualisation of a DLT-enabled standardisation architecture to streamline Climate Action & Accounting.
B. Implementing the result of phase A in three different paradigms: as a relational database, as a Radix-Merkle tree (as is used by Hyperledger Sawtooth), and as a token-and-smart-contract network (possibly DAML).
C. Testing applicability to real-life use cases.
D. Reviewing the results from phase C and revisiting phases A-C as necessary.
Progress and opportunities to contribute
Some results from phase A are taking shape under New ideas, debates and discussions pages. Our first realisation is that climate action and accounting is a particular case of environmental accounting or, even broader, of impact accounting in general (e.g., SDG accounting). We described the basic structure of SDG accounting here. We are in the process of elaborating on the ontology, epistemology and semiology (i.e., the description of the things, event and agents that we account for, how we know about each, and how that is represented.
Please edit the wiki and contribute to our biweekly call.
Clarification
What do we mean by 'standards'?
The term 'standard' is used in a variety of contexts. Even within the scope of the CA2-SIG a variety of things are denoted with the term 'standard'. These include:
Technical standards like those of the W3C
Accounting standards, including:
the standards used for compl;iance purpises in different jurisdictions (e.g. by the UNFCCC (e.g. the CDM project standard, California Air Resources Board (CARB))
voluntary standards like the Verra's Verified Carbon Standard (VCS), the Gold Standard , Social Carbon, American Carbon Registry (ACR), and Climate Action Reserve (CAR), The Plan Vivo Foundation
standards for entity-level accounting within various scopes
standards for local/regional/national inventories
Environmental performance standards like those of the IFC
Standards related to products
Standards for accounting for policy impacts
What are standards used for?
Personal climate footprinting
Product/service footprinting
Entity accounting (scope 1, 2 and 3)
Regional accounting
Policy impact assessments
What will the working group deliver and who will use it?
There are other bodies that create the types of standards mentioned above. This working group will be more concerned with how such standards themselves and compliance to these standards are encoded and captured in a distrubuted ledger and how such representations can be used.
What is standardised?
Entities: This is the problem of identity. We mean the identity of people, organisations and things. It is needed to connect an unambiguous identifier to all the entities involved in the accounting process. In the case of businesses, this may be difficult because businesses may have complicated structures of ownership and control (see for example Chapter 3 of the GHG Protocol: Corporate Accounting Standard.
- Agency: This is the problem of responsibility - how do we show and prove that an entity (be that a person or organisation) is responsible for a certain action or outcome
Activities and events: Agents do things that change certain things and states at some point in time
Counterfactuals: This is the problem of what would have happened if certain decisions had not been taken or certain actions had not been undertaken.
What is the relationship between standards, authority and freedom in the context of the work of the CA2SIG?
The CA2SIG will not act as an authority that compels entities to engage in specific actions.
The standards to be generated by this working group will enable agents to clearly communicate the implications of their actions. This will enable others to have a clear understanding of the state of affairs regarding the activities and states covered by the standards.
How will we translate standards into software?
Find the most generic articulation of what a standard, method and transaction is and develop protobuffer examples of each
Namespaced Merkle tree
Protobuf examples
Get Involved
This is an open source project. Anyone is welcome!
1) Start by subscribing to the Climate SIG mailing list for updates and meeting notifications.
2) Add your name to the active members list below.
3) Join the CA2SIG Standards WG calls that are held on every other Tuesday of the month at 8 AM US Pacific time (UTC-07:00 America/Los Angeles). Please check the calendar for the next call.
Taxonomy of protocols, standards, methodologies and certifications
A. Technical Methodologies
These are "algorithms" for calculating carbon emissions:
- Life Cycle Analysis (LCA) - this is the standard analytical method for calculating the carbon emissions of a product through its lifecycle. OpenLCA is an open source life cycle analysis software.
- Product Category Rules (PCR) - these rules define how life cycle analysis should be performed based on the type of product. See this article for one example of the relationship between LCA, PCR, and EPD.
B. Accounting Standards
These are standards for calculating and disclosing carbon emissions.
General Standards
- Environmental Product Declaration (EPD) - comprehensive disclosure of the full environmental impact of a product, where carbon footprint is just one variable. This seems to be used more commonly in building and construction, for example for LEED certifications, but is referenced as a potential source for the Greenhouse Gas Protocol. See an example of a construction material's EPD and an elevator's EPD.
- Greenhouse Gas Protocol (GHG) - this is a comprehensive set of standards for measuring greenhouse gas emissions for a company or a product. It is the base standard for many "carbon neutrality" certifications.
- Carbon Disclosure Project (CDP) - these are voluntary disclosures that companies could make through a series of surveys. They are used by large companies to disclose carbon emissions to the investor community.
Industry Specific Standards
- Whole Building Lifecycle Assessment - specific to buildings and construction, these standards are used to calculate the carbon content of a building based on its construction and materials. This is important because most of the carbon footprint of buildings is during the construction rather than the operation of the building. Click here for more about embodied carbon.
Certifications based on Accounting standards
These are certifications based on accounting standards, such as the Greenhouse Gas Protocol:
- Carbon Neutral - developed and owned by Natural Capital Partners, which has 20 years of experience and implemented this standard for 300 companies in 33 countries.
- PAS 2060 - developed by the British Standards Institute (BSI) as an open standard.
- Climate Neutral - a new standard developed by entrepreneurs in the fashion industry and currently run by a nonprofit group. Their goal is to make it easier for companies to take climate action and become carbon neutral.
C. Carbon Offsets
These are standards for carbon offsets and could in turn be divided into sub-categories:
Mandatory
Mandatory offsets are those based on international treaties such as the Kyoto Protocol or the Paris Agreement, or by government regulations such as those in the European Union or California. (I'll leave this category to someone who has more expertise.)
Voluntary
Voluntary offsets are those purchased by companies and individuals to offset their emissions. There are many standards that govern voluntary offsets – some of the best known ones include:
D. Renewable Energy Certificates
Some background information about Renewable Energy Certificates from PJM.
Glossary and definitions
Meetings
All Hyperledger meetings are run covered by the following Antitrust Policy.
Meeting Agendas
Meeting Notes
Communication Channels
These are the mechanisms that this working group uses to communicate.
Mailing List
Chat Channel
Links to Ongoing Work
Links to Completed Work
Links to External Resources
Active Members
Name | Company |
---|---|
Christiaan Pauw | Nova Institute |
Alex Howard | Nova Institute |
Tom Baumann | Climate Chain Coalition |
Martin Wainstein | Yale Openlab |
Si Chen | Open Source Strategies, Inc. |
Sherwood Moore | ICANN |
John Barassi | Ohvation |
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