Carbon Neutral Events

Getting Your Point Across

Organizations are increasingly offsetting high-profile meetings and events, both as a step forward for the environment and to take a leadership position in their industries — a visible way to walk the talk. For the Association of Corporate Travel Executives, Alexandria, Va., it's all that and a way to raise attendee awareness.

“For us, it's an education tool,” says ACTE Executive Director Susan Gurley. “Europeans were talking about this much earlier than the U.S., and now China is getting more interested.”

ACTE, which has 2,500 corporate travel members in 50 countries (and is increasingly addressing meeting-management topics), first brought social responsibility and environmental issues to its 2005 general session in Vancouver. The reception, says Gurley, was tepid at best. “I was asked, ‘Why is ACTE talking about this? It's not in my job.’ People felt that we'd gone off our mission as an industry organization,” she says.

Despite the feedback, Gurley and the ACTE board persevered, offering several sessions on social and environmental responsibility at its Global Education Conference in Barcelona in October 2006. “One of the things we provide as an industry organization is a view of trends. And we believe this is coming,” Gurley says. Taking its commitment a step further, the association decided to offset the CO2 from the Barcelona event, calculating energy use in detail. It has a record not just of room nights, meeting space use, and where attendees flew from, but also motor coach use, including how many attendees per coach and how many minutes each way. Working with New York and London-based offset provider Climate Warehouse Ltd., 730 tons of CO2 were offset from the Barcelona event.

Gurley says she still got some resistance from attendees in Barcelona, but at the ACTE conference in Miami in early May, the complaints didn't come up. The sessions included “Sustainable Procurement: What Is the Green Question?” and “Carbon Emissions and Managed Travel: Cutting Through the Smog.” She says ACTE has tracked an increase in attendance at these sessions as well as a greater diversity of attendees. “In the beginning, it was mostly Europeans,” she says, “but that's changed in just the past year.”

Perhaps what's most interesting about ACTE's offsets is that they're sponsored by British Airways. The sponsorship allows British Airways to be in front of the ACTE audience in a positive light and allows ACTE to further its goal of greening its meeting, without dipping into association revenues.

Tier 1 Offset Providers

“Every organization should think about what they can do under the rubric of social responsibility,” says Gurley. And for meeting planners, like her corporate travel manage members, she says it's time to raise awareness. “This is business. You're going to have to deal with this.”

Source: Clean Air-Cool Planet, A Consumer's Guide to Retail Carbon Offsets Providers, www.cleanair-coolplanet.org

Offsets and How to Buy Them

While environmentalists remind us that carbon offsets won't stop global warming and that the first line of defense is to reduce carbon emissions in the first place, no one is suggesting that we stop driving cars and sit in the dark. Offsets are a way to mitigate the effects of the greenhouse gas emissions that can't be eliminated.

The carbon offset process works like this: A company or individual tracks CO2-producing activities — driving, flying, heating and cooling buildings, and so on — which can then be translated into a specific volume of CO2. Most offset providers have “carbon calculators” on their Web sites that show how much CO2 is generated by our everyday activities.

For example, one 2,000-mile airplane flight has been calculated to emit 1,000 tons of CO2, according to Clean Air-Cool Planet, a Portsmouth, N.H.-based nonprofit. Carbon offsetting is the process of balancing the greenhouse gases produced by the energy you use by reducing an equal amount of carbon elsewhere. That 1,000 tons of CO2 could be offset by protecting an acre of tropical rain forest from deforestation or running one 600 kw wind turbine for one year, again according to Clean Air-Cool Planet.

Several dozen organizations are out there to help you through the process and sell you the carbon offsets, but observers uniformly advise potential buyers to do their homework and shop around. It can be challenging to understand what you're buying and what to look for in a provider.

Craig Coulter, partnerships director at Carbonfund.org, Silver Spring, Md.-based, suggests three key criteria to look for in an offset provider:

  • The Quality of the Offset

    How do you know that an emission-reduction project is really effective? Does your provider have strict criteria for selecting its offset projects? The Gold Standard Foundation, www.cdmgoldstandard.org, and Green-e, www.green-e.org, are two groups that offer offset project certification.

  • The Professionalism of the Offsetter

    How much of your money is going to overhead versus green projects? Ask the off-setter for verification. Some companies in this emerging marketplace can provide audit information.

  • The Price of the Offset

    The price per ton of CO2 reduction ranges from $4 to $35. If you're satisfied with the quality of the offset and the quality of the organization providing the offset, Coulter says that this is the third criteria to look at. In a report from Clean Air-Cool Planet called A Consumer's Guide to Retail Carbon Offsets Providers, the authors warn against buying on price. “There is no necessary correlation,” they write, “between the price and quality of retail offsets. One can develop and procure offsets that are quite inexpensive yet credible. One can also do exactly the opposite. … Consumers should think first about the quality of the offset they are purchasing.”

The Carbon Lexicon

GLOBAL WARMING is mostly caused by the buildup of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere from human activity, primarily the burning of fossil fuels to provide the energy and services that we use every day.

CARBON NEUTRAL means calculating your total climate-damaging carbon emissions, reducing them where possible, and then balancing your remaining emissions, often by purchasing a carbon offset. “Carbon-neutral” implies that all greenhouse gas emissions are offset and is often used inaccurately to describe a company or project, when “low-carbon” is the more correct term.

CARBON OFFSETS allow individuals and businesses to reduce the CO2 emissions they are responsible for by reducing or displacing the CO2 in another place. Carbon offsets typically include renewable energy, energy efficiency, and reforestation projects.

CARBON OFFSET PROJECTS usually fall into two camps. Emission-reduction projects drive the adoption of new technologies that reduce greenhouse gas emissions; forestry projects absorb CO2 already in the atmosphere.

GREEN TAGS, also known as Renewable Energy Certificates or Renewable Energy Credits, are sometimes sold as part of a carbon offset. RECs are the legal representation of a measured amount of renewable energy (wind or solar) entering the energy grid and displacing energy that would have been produced through burning fossil fuels (such as coal or natural gas). REC buyers pay a voluntary premium to support more renewable energy in the system. As a result, buyers get to claim the legal credit for supporting the environmental results associated with their purchases.

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© 2008 Penton Media Inc.

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