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a brief assessment by the German Environment Agency
Herausgeber
Quelle
Schlagwörter
Kohlenstoffzyklus, Carbon Sequestration, certification framework, carbon cycle, climate protection architecture
Förderkennzeichen (FKZ)
Forschungskennzahl
Zitation
Bretschneider, L., Balzer, F., Erxleben, F., Döring, U., Hipt, K. o. d., Köder, L., Hipt, K. o. d., Marx, M., Ruddigkeit, D., & Voß-Stemping, J. (2022). Regulatory framework for the certification of carbon removals - remarks on the EU commission’s roadmap (Deutschland. Umweltbundesamt, ed.). Umweltbundesamt. https://doi.org/10.60810/openumwelt-3796
Zusammenfassung englisch
On 15.12.2021, the European Commission announces to create a legal framework in a communication on "Sustainable carbon cycles" according to which procedures for natural carbon sequestration and technical CO2 extraction and storage can be certified. By the end of 2022, the European Commission wants to make a legislative proposal. In this short position, the German Environment Agency points to gaps in the European Commission's proposal, refers to essential minimum requirements for the certification of carbon sequestrations and calls for a clearer integration of the certification framework with regard to its steering effect and its steering objective in the climate protection target architecture of the European Union. Quelle: www.umweltbundesamt.de
Organisationseinheiten
Übersetzungen
Verbundene Publikation
Assumptions on potentials for Carbon Dioxide Removals in the EU
(German Environment Agency, 2024)
This report analyses and critically reviews assumptions on natural carbon dioxide removal (CDR) and storage potentials with a view to the objectives of the EU Land Use, Land-Use Change and Forestry (LULUCF) and Carbon Removal Certification Framework (CRCF) legislation agreed until February 2024.Therefore, EU impact assessment reports that were published over a period of eight years were analysed and compared with estimates in the scientific literature. It shows that potentials from the impact assessments are rather at the lower end of the range. While highest CDR potentials for 2050 in studies underlying the EU legislation assume -400 to -500 Mt CO2eq, literature studies often operate in the range of -500 to -600 Mt CO2eq, with one estimate reaching almost -800 Mt CO2eq.
Sustainability criteria for carbon dioxide removals
(Umweltbundesamt, 2024)
In November 2022, the European Commission put forward a proposal for a regulation for a Carbon Removal Certification Framework (CRCF). The principles laid out in the CRCF proposal of the European Commission and the proposed amendments by Council and European Parliament set minimum sustainability criteria. They are vague and require specification into executable criteria for certification. This report examines the robustness of the sustainability criteria included in the CRCF proposal and discuss different concepts for sustainability criteria. Quelle: www.umweltbundesamt.de
