Cooking the books: Pervasive over-crediting from cookstoves offset methodologies

Author:

Gill-Wiehl Annelise1ORCID,Kammen Daniel1ORCID,Haya Barbara2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. University of California, Berkeley

2. Goldman School of Public Policy & California Institute for Energy and Environment, University of California, Berkeley

Abstract

Abstract Carbon offsets from improved cookstove projects could advance Sustainable Development Goals 13 (climate), 7 (energy), 5 (gender), and 3 (health). To legitimately "offset" emissions, methodologies must accurately or conservatively quantify climate impact. We conduct the first comprehensive, quantitative over/under crediting analysis of five cookstove methodologies, comparing them against published literature and our own analysis. We find misalignment, in order of importance, with: fraction of non-renewable biomass, fuel consumption, stove adoption, usage, and stacking, emission factors, rebound, and firewood-charcoal conversion factor. Additionality and leakage require more research. We estimate that our project sample, on average, is over-credited by 6.3 times. Gold Standard’s Metered and Measured methodology, which directly monitors fuel use, is most aligned with our estimates (only 1.3 times over-credited) and is best suited for fuel switching projects which provide the most abatement potential and health benefit. We provide specific recommendations for aligning all methodologies with current science.

Publisher

Research Square Platform LLC

Reference118 articles.

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4. The carbon footprint of traditional woodfuels;Bailis R;Nat. Clim. Change,2015

5. United Nations. Transforming our world: the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development. https://sdgs.un.org/goals (2015).

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