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newsrel -- Air Resources Board approves rice cultivation carbon offset protocol, expands forestry offset protocol

Posted: 25 Jun 2015 16:07:14
Please consider the following news release from the California
Air Resources Board: http://bit.ly/1dj0BqU

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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

June 25, 2015

NEWS RELEASE 15-35

CONTACT:

Dave Clegern
(916) 322-2990
dave.clegern@arb.ca.gov


Air Resources Board approves rice cultivation carbon offset
protocol, expands forestry offset protocol

Rice protocol offers agriculture another opportunity to benefit
from cap-and-trade, reduce greenhouse gases


SACRAMENTO — The Air Resources Board today approved a new carbon
offset protocol that will allow rice farmers to receive credit
for using best practices for rice cultivation. The Rice Offset
Protocol joins five other offset protocols developed under
California’s cap-and-trade program.

“This protocol provides rice growers an opportunity to do
something good for the environment as well as save water, and
benefit financially from those efforts,” said Air Resources Board
Chairman Mary D. Nichols. “The protocol is designed to be used
not only in California but all rice-growing states, sharing the
benefits with growers there while providing another
cost-effective way for companies in the program to comply with
cap-and-trade.”

Carbon offsets come from greenhouse gas emission reductions in
sectors that are not regulated by the cap-and-trade program. 

Under the protocol, growers who use approved methods for dry
seeding, drainage practices, and handling rice straw receive
credits based on avoided emissions of methane. The Cap-and-Trade
Program evaluates methane as being 21 times more potent than
carbon dioxide for trapping heat in the atmosphere. 

Each credit a grower receives is the equivalent of a metric ton
of carbon dioxide. The grower can sell those credits to companies
regulated by the cap-and-trade program. 

In California, growers can receive credit through practices such
as dry seeding and early drainage of fields in preparation for
harvest. These growing practices allow for continued use of
flooded fields as winter bird habitat, but reduce the amount of
rice straw left to decompose in the water.

The rice protocol has been designed with additional
region-specific practices to allow credit generation in other
rice growing parts of the country.

The Air Resources Board also approved amendments to the Forestry
Offset Protocol which will allow development and crediting of
projects in the state of Alaska that are not in National Forests.
Previously the cap-and-trade regulation restricted offset
development to the contiguous 48 states. 

The forestry protocol allows companies to purchase offsets
generated through forest management that increases the amount of
carbon stored in a specific project site above what would have
been there without the prescribed management in place. 

The carbon offset protocols used by California and its
cap-and-trade partner, Québec, are the most stringent in the
world. All projects are subject to annual audits, performed by
specially trained, accredited, third-party verifiers and Air
Resources Board staff. Each project then undergoes a separate
evaluation by Air Resources Board staff before any credits can be
issued.

You can find the Rice Offset Protocol and other offset protocols
here: http://www.arb.ca.gov/cc/capandtrade/offsets/offsets.htm



California is in a drought emergency.
Visit www.SaveOurH2O.org for water conservation tips.

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