The Carbon Trust: Emissions Accomplished?

Last month, retail giant Tesco became the world’s first supermarket to stick carbon impact labels on its own-brand products.
Who's behind it all?
The UK's Carbon Trust, with its proprietary carbon-labeling scheme that it brought to market in 2007.
The ubiquitous "Carbon Trust" name has been bouncing around the Web for ages.
So who are they exactly -- and what else are they doing?
The Carbon Trust was set up by the British government in 2001, and its charge was huge: to speed the UK's move to a low-carbon economy.
Since then, it's been doing so by helping organizations chop their CO2 emissions and develop low-carbon technologies.
A November '07 report by the UK's spending watchdog revealed the results. The major one: The Carbon Trust saved businesses some 2 million tons of CO2 in '06. That's equivalent to a financial saving of about $700 million in future reduced energy costs.
And here's how they're doing it. A partial list of some of the Trust's most recent initiatives:
Energy Efficiency
- Created an accreditation, called the Energy Efficiency Accreditation Scheme (EEAS), to recognize achievements by organizations in managing energy use and slashing emissions. To date, over 230 organizations are EEAS accredited.
- Signed up over 106 universities to its Higher Education Carbon Management (HECM) program. The project's ultimate goal is to cut higher education's carbon footprints by 72,000 tons and energy costs by $16 million, largely through efficiencies.
Offshore Wind Power
- Worked with the Energy Technologies Institute in an $80 million initiative to cut the costs of offshore wind power and increase its distribution across the UK.
Solar Power
- Supported research to unlock the potential of organic photovoltaic (PV) technology to deliver solar energy at radically lower costs within ten years. The project aims to deploy more than 1GW of organic PV by 2017, which could deliver more than 1 million tons of carbon savings per year.
Next-Generation Biofuels
- Invested in the development of a next-gen biofuel called Butafuel,™ derived from waste plant material, or biomass -- a supposedly "superior and more sustainable" liquid biofuel for transportation.
It's estimated now that the Trust is on track to save British companies 4.4 million tons of CO2 each year by 2010 -- and between 13.7 and 20.7 million tons by 2050.
Commendable, but it's worth keeping this in mind: The UK government's total reduction goal is 118 tons of CO2 by 2010 from 1990 levels.
Guess that's why The Carbon Trust has been urged to "raise its game" -- and fast.
And there's certainly room for improvement. The Carbon Trust is still only servicing about 12 percent of UK companies with energy bills over $100,000 a year.











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